Animal magnetism and curriculum history


Autoria(s): Baker, Bernadette
Data(s)

2007

Resumo

This article elaborates the impact that crises of authority provoked by animal magnetism, mesmerism, and hypnosis in the 19th century had for field formation in American education. Four layers of analysis elucidate how curriculum history’s repetitive focus on public school policy and classroom practice became possible. First, the article surveys external conditions of possibility for the enactment of compulsory public schooling. Second, “internal” conditions of possibility for the formation of educational objects (e.g., types of children) are documented via the processes of différance that were generated from within the experiences of confinement. Third, the article maps how these were interpenetrated by animal magnetic debates that were lustered and planished in education’s emerging field, including impact upon behavior management practices, the contouring of expertise and authority, the role of Will in intelligence testing and child development theories, and the redefinition of public and private. Last, the article examines implications for curriculum history, whether policy- or practice-oriented, especially around the question of influence, the theorization of child mind, and philosophies of Being.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/89897/

Publicador

Routledge

Relação

DOI:10.1111/j.1467-873X.2007.00376.x

Baker, Bernadette (2007) Animal magnetism and curriculum history. Curriculum Inquiry, 37(2), pp. 123-158.

Direitos

Published by Blackwell Publishing

Fonte

Faculty of Education

Tipo

Journal Article