ABSTRACT

This collection brings together cutting-edge research on the history of embodiment, health and schooling in an international context. The book distinguishes a set of educational technologies, schooling practices and school-based public health programmes that organise and influence the bodies of children and young people, defining the curriculum of the body.

Taking a historical approach, with a focus on the period in which mass schooling became an international phenomenon, the book is organised according to four major themes. The first positions the school as a modern clinical space, followed by the second that explores programmes and curricula which influence the discipline of and care for the body. The third section examines the role of the built environment on the organisation and experience of children’s bodies, and the final section outlines the pedagogies, rules and routines that determine how the body is treated and experienced in school.

International and multidisciplinary in scope, this unique collection is of interest to postgraduate students and researchers in education and public health, as well as history, policy studies and sociology.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

Bodies, health and schooling

part 1|49 pages

Clinical practices

chapter 1|13 pages

Raising a healthy nation

Provisioning public health in English schools, c. 1875–1914

chapter 2|17 pages

Schooling and medical assistance

The school clinics in Rio de Janeiro 1

part 2|63 pages

Programmes and policies

chapter 4|15 pages

Educating the underworked

Dudley Allen Sargent and the influence of the rural worker on American physical culture, 1875–1919

chapter 5|16 pages

Determining biological citizenship

Creating and effacing difference in Puerto Rico's education

chapter 6|15 pages

Home economics as a school subject in Denmark

From disciplining girls in the kitchen to providing general knowledge about public health

chapter 7|15 pages

In the name of health and comprehensive education

Historicising contemporary school health in Chile 1

part 3|68 pages

Architecture and spatialities

chapter 8|19 pages

The classroom as healthy pavilion

Fresh air, natural light and student bodies in 19th- and 20th-century American schools

chapter 9|16 pages

Escaping indoorness

Education and architecture in Italy's summer camps during the Fascist era

chapter 10|16 pages

Architecture of health

Hygiene and schooling in Hong Kong, 1901–1941

chapter 11|15 pages

178Better Towns

Building healthy communities in New Zealand school texts

part 4|45 pages

Routines and disciplinary practices

chapter 12|16 pages

Glimpses into the black box of schooling

Continuities and discontinuities in ‘gymnastics between the desks’, the 1880s–1970s

chapter 13|11 pages

Who owns the body of the child?

Human rights and corporal punishment in 1980s Australia