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Knowledge is Power!

The Rise and Fall of European Popular Educational Movements, 1848-1939

by Tom Steele (Author)
©2007 Monographs 315 Pages

Summary

This study is the first extensive attempt to chart the rise and fall of popular educational movements across Europe following the 1848 revolutions to their demise at the outbreak of World War Two. It examines in detail the relationships between the educational, political and social aspirations of the emergent nationalist, workers’ and women’s movements, and the challenge to traditional intellectuals and academic knowledge. Following the emergence of the bourgeois public sphere in the early modern period, popular educational movements were central to the pursuit of democratic civil societies and also fertile ground for innovatory subjects of knowledge and interdisciplinary study, which have frequently reshaped the academic curriculum. Radical forms flourished, ranging from civic educational leagues to folk high schools, workers’ study circles, rationalist schools, Volksheims and university settlements that fed the demand for high-quality, socially relevant and politically charged education for adults. These stimulated radical social change, challenging the old empires and clerical domination. The study plots the cross-cultural influences at work and shows why some models were more palatable than others, drawing special attention to the rise of sociological positivism and anti-clericalism. It concludes by considering the contemporary global currents of renewal.

Details

Pages
315
Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039105632
Language
English
Keywords
Arbeiterbildung Public Sphere High School Freemasonry University Proletariat Geschichte 1848-1939
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2007. 315 pp.

Biographical notes

Tom Steele (Author)

The Author: Tom Steele is Principal Research Associate at the Institute of Continuing Education, University of Cambridge, and Senior Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Glasgow. Previously a Tutor Organiser for the Workers’ Educational Association (WEA) in Yorkshire and lecturer at the Dept of Adult and Continuing Education at Leeds, he ended his tenured career as Reader in History and Theory of Adult Education at the University of Glasgow.

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Title: Knowledge is Power!