Sold My Soul for a Student Loan: Higher Education and the Political Economy of the Future
By (Author) Daniel T. Kirsch
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
10th April 2019
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Educational strategies and policy
Political economy
Higher education, tertiary education
378.38
Hardback
200
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
510g
With unprecedented student debt keeping an entire generation from realizing the "American Dream," this book sounds a warning about how that debt may undermine both higher educationand our democracy. American higher education boasts one of the most impressive legacies in the world, but the price of admission for many is now endless debt. As this book shows, increasing educational indebtedness undermines the real value of higher education in our democracy. To help readers understand this dilemma, the book examines how student debt became commonplace and what the long-term effects of such an ongoing reality might be. Sold My Soul for a Student Loan examines this vitally important issue from an unprecedented diversity of perspectives, focusing on the fact that student debt is hindering the ability of millions of people to enter the job market, the housing market, the consumer economy, and the political process. Among other topics, the book covers the history of consumer debt in the United States, the history of federal policy toward higher education, and political action in response to the issue of student debt. Perhaps most importantly, it explores the new relationship debtor-citizens have to the government as a result of debt, and how that impacts democracy for a new generation.
Daniel T. Kirsch, PhD, is an author who earned his doctorate in political science from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and now teachers at California State University, Sacramento.