This entertaining new account of Cambridge in the later nineteenth century contains the complete text of F.M. Cornford's famous satire of 1908 on University politics, Microcosmographia Academica, together with a full account of the controversies that gave rise to it. Cambridge during that period was being subjected to pressure for reform from within and outside the University, forcing it to radical social and academic change, above all by extending and changing the curriculum and by admitting women. These matters provoked fierce debates and provided a rich context for Cornford's pamphlet.
I read Cornford's bio rather than MICROCOSMOGRAPHIA, ACADEMIA: BEING A GUIDE FOR THE YOUNG ACADEMIC POLITICIAN (do you blame me?) and he was a quirky, interesting character. Read the history of Cambridge University in bits and pieces. It seems to be a place of thought, not action. Quite un-American!