scholarly journals (Inter)nationalistisk folkbildning: Säkerhetspolitik, nationalism och opinionsbildning i den svenska folkhögskolans mobilisering för utvecklingsfrågor 1950–1969

2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-72
Author(s):  
Sofia Österborg Wiklund

(Inter)nationalist Popular Education: Security Policy, Nationalism and Advocacy in the Swedish Folk High Schools’ Action on Development Issues 1950-1969Folk High Schools in Sweden have a long history of engaging internationally, especially as regards courses on development studies (u-landslinjer) that emerged in the late sixties. The purpose of this article is to track some of the discourses about internationalisation, development and aid that preceded those courses, as well as to scrutinise ideas of the role of the Folk High School (folkhögskola) in the emerging field of development aid. Analysing material from Tidskrift för svenska folkhögskolan (Journal of the Swedish Folk High School) between 1950 and 1969, the study shows that the discourse on internationalism takes its starting point from an already established nationalism and nordism. National security also arises as an argument for engaging in development issues. The analysis also shows that there is a shift in the role of the Folk High School in the evolving development work; from “helping” to “advocating.” The results raise questions about how we can understand today’s Folk High School courses on global development against the background of the debates of the fifties and sixties.

1948 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-97
Author(s):  
Fridlev Skrubbeltrang

Review of Roar Skovmand’s ”Folkehøjskolen i Danmark, 1841— 1892“. By Fridlev Skrubbeltrang. Skovmand claims that the development of the Danish people in the second half of the 19th century can only be understood in connection with the Folk High-School movement. This is true, but only if we are speaking of rural, peasant Denmark, for it is not until the 20th century that the Folk High-Schools gained any considerable ground in the towns and among the workers. Historically there is nothing surprising in this development. The idea of educating the country youth sprang from the fruitful soil of the great land reforms ; and Grundtvig as a young man dreamt of “ sacrificing everything for the enlightenment of the peasants” . But in the 1840’s it was chiefly R. Sørensen’s plans for agricultural schools for the peasants that were being discussed, and only after 1864 did it become clear that it was Grundtvig’s Folk High-School idea that would triumph. Most of those who have previously written the history of the High-Schools have done so on the basis of their own personal experiences in the High-School movement. Skovmand has done it from a more scientific standpoint. He is less interested in the Folk High-School idea than in the way in which ideas and plans were carried into effect, and modified in the light of practical realities. He gives full place to the influence of the leading High-School personalities, and much of his book is based on their private papers, to which he has had access, as well as on the records of government departments. We learn much about the work of the High-Schools and its guiding tendencies, but comparatively little about its effect upon the students. The High-School’s fruits cannot be weighed or measured; but it opened new horizons and new worlds of thought and feeling to the young people of the country districts. From the rationalist point of view it was criticised as too fantastically idealistic, and likely to pervert the sound practical sense of the peasants. But the history of the rise of the Danish co-operative movement proved that the former students of the High- Schools by no means lacked realism and practical sense, and the High-Schools reaped much of the credit for its material success. Jakob Knudsen, friend and most exacting critic of the Folk High-School, demanded that it should be truly “ folkelig” and should develop the best characteristics of the peasants themselves, at a time when they were taking an increasingly prominent part in public life. But most of the leading High-School teachers came from other social classes; and it was hard for them to develop a genuine “ peasant culture” . The High-Schools gave many of their students a new joy in life, and a new desire to achieve something of value in co-operation with their fellows; but in some cases the enthusiasm they aroused was only transitory. It is not easy to measure the influence of the Folk High-School apart from that of the revival in the Church, with which it was closely connected. Many clergymen and teachers in children’s schools throughout the country shared with the High-School teachers in the work of enlightenment. Skovmand obviously knows the High-School from within, but he is less familiar with the life of the peasants in general. Much of the material which Skovmand uses to illustrate the attitude of the Government and Parliament to the High-Schoools is new, and throws fresh light on the position of the High-Schools in the political life of the country and on government policy with regard to grants, inspection, etc. Skovmand describes the attitude of the High-School to contemporary tendencies of thought (religious, political and national) as being “ as open as it could be if it were not to be wholly carried away by them” . In another little book (“Højskolen gennem 100 Aar” ) Skovmand brings the history of the High-School up to date. Denmark might have had good “ higher schools for peasants” and a co-operative movement even if Grundtvig had never lived, but there is no doubt that from him came the central driving force of the Folk High-School movement, which has won world fame. Skovmand strongly opposes Vilhelm la Cour’s suggestion that in the period after 1870 the High-School movement abandoned many of its original ideas, and lost much of its power. “The power was not lost, but had found a broader channel”, is his verdict. His book is the product of conscientious research combined with a real love for his subject.


2004 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jørn Hansen

Idrætsfaciliteters og forsamlingshuses rolle og betydning for idrætten i Sønderjylland fra ca. år 1890 og frem.From resistance and struggle to welfare. Village halls, Folk high schools and sports halls in Southern Jutland Village halls and the gymnastics associated with them were established in the first instance as part of a cultural reaction against the attempt to extend the activities of German associations in Northern Schleswig. It is scarcely surprising, therefore, that they started in those areas with the strongest Danish affiliations close to Rødding Folk High School and the Kongeå border with, for instance, the first Danish village hall being built in Skrave. In the second phase, after the drawing up of the new border, it was important for Danish culture to get a foothold in those new areas of Southern Jutland with predominantly German affiliations, and an example of this was the construction of the Danish village hall in Jyndevad. In the third phase, when differences between those with German and those with Danish affiliations were resolved by cooperation, sports halls gradually took over the role of village halls, but there was an attempt, similar to that in the first two phases, to retain a principal of proximity in relation to the development of sport. The construction of the sports hall in Tønder is an exemplary expression of sport’s incursion into the welfare state, while the construction of the hall in Agerskov provides an example of the attempt on the part of popular forces to retain the same principal of proximity that applied to village halls.


Author(s):  
Julia Wesely ◽  
Adriana Allen ◽  
Lorena Zárate ◽  
María Silvia Emanuelli

Re-thinking dominant epistemological assumptions of the urban in the global South implies recognising the role of grassroots networks in challenging epistemic injustices through the co-production of multiple saberes and haceres for more just and inclusive cities. This paper examines the pedagogies of such networks by focusing on the experiences nurtured within Habitat International Coalition in Latin America (HIC-AL), identified as a ‘School of Grassroots Urbanism’ (Escuela de Urbanismo Popular). Although HIC-AL follows foremost activist rather than educational objectives, members of HIC-AL identify and value their practices as a ‘School’, whose diverse pedagogic logics and epistemological arguments are examined in this paper. The analysis builds upon a series of in-depth interviews, document reviews and participant observation with HIC-AL member organisations and allied grassroots networks. The discussion explores how the values and principles emanating from a long history of popular education and popular urbanism in the region are articulated through situated pedagogies of resistance and transformation, which in turn enable generative learning from and for the social production of habitat.


2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 86
Author(s):  
Eljana Brahja

The purpose of this study is to determine the role of high school in managing conflicts between teenagers in the rural areas between Tirana and Elbasan. Conflicts among teenagers are always present. They can happen in families, at school, and in the community, but our focus will be the conflicts generated in school premises. It is concerning that teenagers are seeing school as a battlefield where they can fight away from their parents' eyes. The research will shed light on how the aid offered by the high school social services, impact teenagers’ conflict management. This study uses Psychoanalytic, Humanist and Behavioral Directions to explain the source of violent behavior among students in schools located in rural areas. The study is based on the Positive Paradigm. The research method used for collecting data is the quantitative one. The population of this study is the teenagers of high schools located in rural areas between Tirana and Elbasan. The sample of the study is the students of "Krrabë" and "Ibrahim Hasmema" high schools and the instrument used is the sociological questionnaire. Data analysis will show whether teenage conflicts exist and how schools located in rural area manage these conflict cases. The document argues that conflicts between teenagers are present at school premises and the latest rarely use the social services provided at their school. The teachers' staff should be trained on identifying young people who tend to conflict and to have violent behavior. Teachers should be also trained on the ways to treat those teenagers who are victims of violence.


2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-63
Author(s):  
R. Watling

A brief history of the early days of mycology in Scotland is given to act as a starting point from which to view the fungal records made in the gardens at Sandyford and Kelvinside. The former was vacated in 1842 and the garden transferred to the present site at Kelvinside under the authority of the Glasgow City Council. The role of J.F. Klotzsch in generating the earliest records is emphasised and the compilation of fungal records, mainly of macrofungi, until the present day is discussed. A short account of the microfungi is given. A complete list of the fungi recorded from the two gardens is provided.


2018 ◽  
Vol 39 (12) ◽  
pp. 3324-3359
Author(s):  
Shu Hu

Using both quantitative and qualitative data collected in a migrant-sending county from 2012 to 2013, this article examines the mechanisms through which parental migration could shape adolescents’ transition to high school in rural China. Though parental migration improves children’s educational outcomes via social remittance of education value, it also leads to a decline in children’s educational achievements by increasing the odds of parental divorce. The likelihood of divorce rises with the migration of mother or both parents, and this significantly increases the risks of discontinuing schooling and transitioning to vocational high schools, relative to attending academic high schools. In contrast to the conventional explanations of economic resources and psychological health, this article emphasizes the significant role of marital instability in the link between parental migration and children’s educational outcomes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 377-382
Author(s):  
Dunja Fehimović ◽  
Ruth Goldberg

Carlos Lechuga’s film Santa y Andrés (2016) has enjoyed worldwide acclaim as an intimate, dramatic portrayal of the unlikely friendship that develops in rural Cuba between Andrés, a gay dissident writer, and Santa, the militant citizen who has been sent to surveil him. Declared to be extreme and/or inaccurate in its historical depictions, the film was censored in Cuba and was the subject of intense controversy and public polemics surrounding its release in 2016. Debates about the film’s subject matter and its censorship extend ongoing disagreement over the role of art within the Cuban Revolution, and the changing nature of the Cuban film industry itself. This dossier brings together new scholarship on Santa y Andrés and is linked to an online archive of some of the original essays that have been written about the film by Cuban critics and filmmakers since 2016. The aim of this project is to create a starting point for researchers who wish to investigate Santa y Andrés, evaluating the film both for its contentious initial reception, and in terms of its enduring contribution to the history of Cuban cinema.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 15-44
Author(s):  
Anne E. Jones ◽  
S.P. Henzi ◽  
Louise Barrett

The purpose of this study was to understand typically developing children’s repetitive behavior in a free-play, daycare setting. By studying repetition in a non-Montessori setting, we tested the assumption that repetition is a characteristic behavior of all young children and not limited to the Montessori environment. Although Maria Montessori identified repetition during her observations, there is little empirical evidence to support her claim: most research has considered repetition in terms of psychopathology. We collected naturalistic observational data on 31 3- to 6-year-old children for a total of 101 hours to investigate the frequency, contexts, and structure of repetitive bouts. Multilevel model results suggest the ubiquity of repetition, as all children in the study engaged in motor repetition. Furthermore, repetition occurred throughout all free-play activities (construction, animation, fantasy play, rough-and-tumble play, and undirected activity), although repetition was not equally distributed across activities. Motor repetition was not equal across ages either; younger children engaged in more motor repetition than did older children. To understand the structure of repetition, our study also looked at the length of repetition bouts, which ranged from 2 to 19 repetitions and averaged 2.86 repetitions per bout. This natural history of repetition is an influential starting point for understanding the role of repetition in development and is informative to both Montessori and non-Montessori early childhood educators.


2017 ◽  
Vol 56 (3) ◽  
pp. 605-628 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margery Masterson

AbstractThis article takes an unexplored popular debate from the 1860s over the role of dueling in regulating gentlemanly conduct as the starting point to examine the relationship between elite Victorian masculinities and interpersonal violence. In the absence of a meaningful replacement for dueling and other ritualized acts meant to defend personal honor, multiple modes of often conflicting masculinities became available to genteel men in the middle of the nineteenth century. Considering the security fears of the period––European and imperial, real and imagined––the article illustrates how pacific and martial masculine identities coexisted in a shifting and uneasy balance. The professional character of the enlarging gentlemanly classes and the increased importance of men's domestic identities––trends often aligned with hegemonic masculinity––played an ambivalent role in popular attitudes to interpersonal violence. The cultural history of dueling can thus inform a multifaceted approach toward gender, class, and violence in modern Britain.


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