Portraying Science as Humanism – A Historical Case Study of Cultural Boundary Work from the Dawn of the ‘Atomic Age’ |
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Authors: | Kristine Hays Lynning |
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Institution: | (1) History of Science Department, The Steno Institute, University of Aarhus, Aarhus, 8000, Denmark |
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Abstract: | In the late 1950s, when a new curriculum for the Danish upper secondary school was under construction, the reform debates
on science were strongly concerned with the scarcity of technologically and scientifically educated labour, and thus relations
between science, technology and welfare were stressed. Simultaneously however, the relationship between science and humanism
was likewise emphasised and discussed. It is this latter issue that is the subject of analysis here. I argue that describing
science as a form of humanism served a number of different purposes both within and without a narrow school context. It was
far from clear what the practical consequences of this rhetorical figure was to be, although some attempts were made within
the new curriculum plan to break down the boundaries between the sciences and the humanities. However, picturing science as
humanism also served legitimising functions both with regards to the new science curriculum and with regards to a general
political program of progress and welfare through support of science and education. Thus, the curriculum debates on science
education were part of a much broader cultural and political debate in which the image of science was negotiated and transformed.
Such curriculum debates can, I argue, be understood as cultural boundary work in Thomas Gieryn’s sense. |
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Keywords: | Curriculum reform liberal education history of science education mid-twentieth century humanism |
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