The socialisation of educational problems and the rise of illiteracy in Mexico at the turn of the twentieth century

被引:0
|
作者
Noriega, Marino Miranda [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wisconsin, Dept Curriculum & Instruct, 544 Teacher Educ Bldg,225 North Mills St, Madison, WI 53706 USA
关键词
Society; social history of education; social problems; illiterate; illiteracy; LITERACY;
D O I
10.1080/00309230.2022.2155976
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
In the past two decades, the interdisciplinary push to denaturalise the concept of society has historicised the very object of social history. In this paper, I propose a way of studying the social history of education that eludes the presupposition of the social as a transcendental or pre-discursive object. My central claim is that it is possible to observe a process of socialisation regarding educational problems. This means that the social and society were not simply concepts that created a new object of knowledge, but rather that they became a visualisation principle that allowed for the abstraction of categories and made observable a set of relationships. These notions are contained and articulated in how social problems were produced, observed, performed, and acted upon by educational and political actors. I will do this by examining the production of illiteracy (analfabetismo in Spanish) as a social problem in Mexico in the first decades of the twentieth century. I argue that two fundamental processes rendered illiteracy a social problem. First, the development of statistical knowledge and methods made it possible to know the number of people who did not read and write, creating the illiterate as a statistical category. The second is the articulation of this statistical reality as a generalised problem by education experts and authorities. In this sense, literacy was abstracted and framed as an essential feature for the proper functioning of a modern society.
引用
收藏
页码:55 / 69
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条