Democracy, Freedom and Boundaries and History of Capitalism Seminar with Cathie Jo Martin

The research groups Democracy, Freedom and Boundaries and History of Capitalism would like to invite you to a seminar with Cathie Jo Martin who has recently published the book Education for All? Literature, Culture and Education Development in Britain and Denmark

Cathie Jo Martin: Literature, Culture and Education Development in Britain and Denmark (2023).

Why did Denmark develop mass education for all in 1814, while Britain created a public-school system only in 1870 that primarily educated academic achievers? Cathie Jo Martin argues that fiction writers and their literary narratives inspired education campaigns throughout the nineteenth-century. Danish writers imagined mass schools as the foundation for a great society and economic growth. Their depictions fortified the mandate to educate all people and showed neglecting low-skill youth would waste societal resources and threaten the social fabric. Conversely, British authors pictured mass education as harming social stability, lower-class work, and national culture. Their stories of youths who overcame structural injustices with individual determination made it easier to blame students who failed to seize educational opportunities. Novel and compelling, Education for All? uses a multidisciplinary perspective to offer a unique gaze into historical policymaking.

Location: PAM, seminar room 5

Organizer: History of Capitalism

Published July 9, 2024 3:36 PM - Last modified July 10, 2024 12:19 PM