Schooling the Daughters of Marianne

Textbooks and the Socialization of Girls in Modern French Primary Schools

By Linda L. Clark

Subjects: Education
Series: SUNY series in European Social History
Paperback : 9780873957861, 234 pages, June 1984
Hardcover : 9780873957878, 234 pages, June 1984

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Table of contents

List of Tables

Illustrations

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. Girls' Primary Education in the Nineteenth Century: Traditions and Innovations

2. Prescribing Values and Behavior: Feminine Images in Textbooks, 1880-1914

3. The School's Dissemination of Feminine Images and Reactions to Them, 1880-1914

4. From World War I to World War II: Continuity and Change in Curriculum and Textbooks

5. The Feminine Image and Social and Economic Realities, 1880-1940

6. From Vichy through the Fourth Republic

7. The Fifth Republic: Educational Reforms and Reevaluations of Girls' Schooling

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Description

This first book-length study of girls' primary education in France gives a concrete picture of how Frenchwomen were, and are, prepared for their roles in society.

Until the 1960s, the primary school provided the only formal education for the majority of French children. Long recognized as a major inculcator of patriotic and moral values, the French primary school also played the vital role of preparing girls for their expected adult lives.

Linda L. Clark describes in detail this socialization process. By analyzing a wide variety of documents from 1870 to the present—textbooks, curriculum materials, students' notebooks, examination questions, inspectors' reports, and teachers' memoirs—she has uncovered not only what was taught to girls, but the social and political assumptions that lay behind the primary school's messages about feminine personalities and activities.

The book goes on to establish the relationship of feminine images to important aspects of French social, economic, and political life. A chapter on the preparation of girls for the world of work, for example, reveals the discrepancy between formal teaching about "femininity" and women's actual participation in society.

Linda L. Clark is Professor of History at Millersville State College, Pennsylvania. A former Fellow at the Bunting Institute of Radcliffe College, her publications include Social Darwinism in France and studies in history of education and women in French history.