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The history of education in the modern world is a history of
transnational and cross-cultural influence. This collection
explores those influences in (post) colonial and indigenous
education across different geographical contexts. The authors
emphasize how local actors constructed their own adaptation of
colonialism, identity, and autonomy, creating a multi-centric and
entangled history of modern education. In both formal as well as
informal aspects, they demonstrate that transnational and
cross-cultural exchanges in education have been characterized by
appropriation, re-contextualization, and hybridization, thereby
rejecting traditional notions of colonial education as an export of
pre-existing metropolitan educational systems.
In Pliable Pupils and Sufficient Self-Directors, Barnita Bagchi
examines writings that focus on female education and development by
five representative British women writers who flourished between
1778 and 1814 - Lady Mary Hamilton, Clara Reeve, Elizabeth
Hamilton, Mary Brunton, and the early Jane Austen. In a climate in
which female education was a subject of anxiety in print culture
and fiction a site of contestation, and in which women were
emerging as major producers both of educational writing and
heroine-centered, ostensibly didactic fiction, these writers
produced fictions of female education that were pioneering
Bildungsromans. Highly gendered, these fictions explore key
tensions generated by the theme of education, including the
dialectics between formal and experiential education, between the
pliable pupil obedient to pedagogical authority-figures and the
more self-sufficient autodidact, and between a desire for greater
institutionalization of education and a recognition of the
flexibility given by distancing from established structures. There
is a congruence between the ambulatory, tension-ridden patterns of
female education found in these fictions and the distinctive,
miscellaneous fictional knowledge they represent - their creators
grappled with the epistemological and ethical status of fiction
which they connected with female experience. The writers of these
fictions held conservative views on national politics, and
categories such as gender, race and class are disturbingly aligned
in many of their works. However, Bagchi argues, these women writers
should not be straitjacketed as subjects of an emergent hegemonic
bourgeois order. Also, the journeys towards emancipation as well as
the starkly disturbing closing off of many such possibilities in
the writings analyzed here remain reflected in the lives of many
women today.
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