Inhabiting culture: Spanish anarchists’ vision of cultural learning through aesthetics in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
Data de publicació
2017ISSN
0030-9230
Resum
Revisions of textual and audio-visual materials reveal the educational
vision of Spanish anarchists. Through research, we have discovered
the importance of aesthetical education and art in general for this
protest political party. By studying the three key historical moments
of the movement (1868–1939/ 1901–1910/ 1910–1936–1939) we have
traced the evolution of the concept and practice of cultural learning.
What stands out in the origins of the movement is the concern to
introduce art and culture into school subjects while disseminating
this knowledge to the whole population. Later, when the Modern
School opened, the arts were introduced into the syllabus of teachinglearning.
The aesthetic principles defended in the first period were
turned into literary works with the aim of educating children from
rationalist schools. Finally, we identify a time when the materials
created by the Modern School were disseminated to working-class
schools as a form of resistance against the politics proposed by
government parties. The outbreak of the Civil War turned the corpus
of aesthetical education into a cultural programme of demilitarised
political resistance.
1.
Tipus de document
Article
Llengua
Anglès
Paraules clau
Anarquisme i cultura
Educació -- Història
Anarquisme -- Espanya
Art -- Ensenyament
Pàgines
19 p.
Publicat per
Taylor & Francis
Citació
Collelldemont, E., & Vilanou, C. (2017). Inhabiting culture: Spanish anarchists’ vision of cultural learning through aesthetics in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Paedagogica Historica, 53, (3) 228-245.
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