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An Essay on the History and Management of Literary, Scientific, and Mechanics' Institutions

An Essay on the History and Management of Literary, Scientific, and Mechanics' Institutions

An Essay on the History and Management of Literary, Scientific, and Mechanics' Institutions

And Especially How Far They May Be Developed and Combined so as to Promote the Moral Well-Being and Industry of the Country
James Hole
March 2010
Available
Paperback
9781108009379
£20.99
GBP
Paperback

    In this Essay, first published in 1853, the Victorian social activist James Hole offers an impassioned defence of the one of the central products of early Victorian social reformism, the mechanics' institutes. Aimed at improving the education of working-class men, women and youths, the institutes offered basic literacy training as well as higher-level lectures on science, the arts, and industry. This volume, originally a prize-winning essay, outlines Hole's plan for improving the efficacy of the institutes, which he saw as failing in their mission of enlivening the minds of those whose primary labours were physical. The institutes 'have established the right of the people to culture', Hole writes, but they had yet, in his view, to instil it. An important work in the history of education, Hole's Essay provides revealing insights into social reformism and the complexities of class politics within the movement.

    Product details

    March 2010
    Paperback
    9781108009379
    196 pages
    216 × 140 × 11 mm
    0.26kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. History
    • 2. Objects and methods of adult instruction
    • 3. Business management
    • 4. Union of Institutes
    • Appendices.
      Author
    • James Hole