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The origins of the ‘two cultures’ debate in the adult education movement: the case of the Working Men’s College (c.1854–1914)


Type

Article

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Authors

Sutcliffe, Marcella Pellegrino 

Abstract

Focusing on the Working Men’s College (WMC), this study charts the chequered fortunes of a Victorian project: providing workers with a 'liberal education'. The paper analyses the project’s aim (making 'better citizens'), its disciplinary content (the humanities and/or the sciences) and its challenges (the increasing prestige of vocational studies). It argues that, in an increasingly professionalised society, a 'liberal education' for workers became contentious ground. As the role of the sciences within a 'liberal education' diminished, and the provision of practical skills took precedence in the local-authority-funded courses, Victorian workers' opportunities for education became polarised between 'useful' sciences and 'profitless' humanities. With natural scientists losing the intellectual independence of their discipline to technicians, the WMC Edwardian educators chose to side unequivocally with the humanities. The paper contends that it was in the Edwardian context of the adult education movement that the 'two cultures' debate first emerged in Britain.

Description

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0046760X.2013.844278

Keywords

adult education, Victorian, citizenship, culture, science

Journal Title

History of Education

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0046-760X
1464-5130

Volume Title

43

Publisher

Informa UK Limited
Sponsorship
Marcella Pellegrino Sutcliffe is a post-doctoral Fellow at Clare Hall, University of Cambridge. She has worked on a number of AHRC-funded projects including Active Citizenship, Public Engagement and the Humanities: The Victorian Model (PI Eugenio Biagini) and Historicizing Civic Connections at the University of Strathclyde (PI Mark Llewellyn). Her research has focused on nineteenth-century British radicalism, Victorian civic culture, active citizenship, transnationalism, history of co-operation, Mazzini and the Italian Risorgimento. Her forthcoming monograph, Victorian Radicals and Italian Democrats (Royal Historical Society, 2014) won the 2012 IHR Scouloudi Award. She is the recipient of a British School at Rome Award (2013).