Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Foreword by His Excellency Bernard Emié
- Foreword by Sir Peter Westmacott
- Preface
- Part I Teaching and Training Partnerships
- Part II Research Partnerships
- 12 Franco-British Academic Partnership: Perspective from Imperial College London
- 13 Sorbonne University's Franco-British Partnerships
- 14 The École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Paris: Research Collaboration Between Britain and France
- 15 International University Partnerships and the Role of the French Connection: The Experience of a London College
- 16 Maison Française d'Oxford: A Hub of Academic Cooperation for the Humanities and Social Sciences in Oxford
- 17 Multicultural London English/Multicultural Paris French
- 18 Franco-British Cooperation in the Social Sciences During a Period of Structural Reform: Current Positions and Prospects
- 19 The Publishing Industry and Research Perspectives
- Part III Broader Perspectives
- Appendices: Addresses and Speeches at the Franco-British Academic Partnerships Seminar, French Institute, London, 5 February 2010
- Index
14 - The École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Paris: Research Collaboration Between Britain and France
from Part II - Research Partnerships
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Foreword by His Excellency Bernard Emié
- Foreword by Sir Peter Westmacott
- Preface
- Part I Teaching and Training Partnerships
- Part II Research Partnerships
- 12 Franco-British Academic Partnership: Perspective from Imperial College London
- 13 Sorbonne University's Franco-British Partnerships
- 14 The École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Paris: Research Collaboration Between Britain and France
- 15 International University Partnerships and the Role of the French Connection: The Experience of a London College
- 16 Maison Française d'Oxford: A Hub of Academic Cooperation for the Humanities and Social Sciences in Oxford
- 17 Multicultural London English/Multicultural Paris French
- 18 Franco-British Cooperation in the Social Sciences During a Period of Structural Reform: Current Positions and Prospects
- 19 The Publishing Industry and Research Perspectives
- Part III Broader Perspectives
- Appendices: Addresses and Speeches at the Franco-British Academic Partnerships Seminar, French Institute, London, 5 February 2010
- Index
Summary
Before discussing the current place of Britain in the international strategy of the École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE) and its possible evolution in the near future, it may be useful to start by highlighting a few of the EPHE's specificities against the general background of French higher education institutions.
The École Pratique des Hautes Études ‘At a Glance’
An explanation of the word pratique in the name of the school will serve as a good introduction to the motives behind the creation of the EPHE in the late 1860s and also to what it is today.
Until 1868, all teaching at the University of Paris's most prestigious Sorbonne was in the form of ex cathedra lectures delivered by the most distinguished of professors. The transmission of knowledge was, by ancient tradition, a top-down, one-way process, with the Sorbonne as the symbol of the preeminence of French science. Yet some felt that France needed to match the increasingly remarkable achievements of German academia. The rivalry between France and Germany, which originated in Prussian national resistance to Napoleonic conquest, was a key element of European politics throughout the nineteenth century and also a major source of wars (this is why historians regard the year 1914 as the true end of the nineteenth century in Europe). In an age of exacerbated nationalisms, this rivalry was very much alive in academic matters and French scholars were very much aware of their German counterparts' achievements in many fields, ranging from philosophy to history to basic and life sciences.
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- Franco-British Academic PartnershipsThe Next Chapter, pp. 110 - 116Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2011