Secular Schooling in the Long Twentieth Century? Christianity and Education in Norway, Sweden, and the Netherlands

Merethe Roos (Editor), Johannes Westberg (Editor), Henrik Edgren (Editor)

Research output: Book/ReportBookAcademic

Abstract

The twentieth-century process of secularization does not mean that institutional church and Christian ideas were irrelevant for twentieth-century societal projects – such as the introduction of democracy, the improvement of school and education, the framing of national identities – or in the establishment of welfare-states. On the contrary, this publication is built on the presupposition that secularization runs parallell with the sacralization of the state. It can be argued that Christianity has been decisive for how the modern European society evolved in the twentieth century, e.g. concerning how Christian history and Christian values were a part of the new national and social imaginary where re-enchantment and re-sacralization of the state were central elements.

In this publication, the aim is to highlight the role of Christianity in the twentieth- and twentyfirst-century welfare-state modernization process with the focus on schooling and education. A central perspective is the impact of cultural Protestantism during the twentieth century. The publication is comparative and will investigate education in Norway, Sweden, and the Netherlands via chapters on curriculums, textbooks, politicians, and political debates.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherDe Gruyter
Number of pages280
ISBN (Electronic)9783111152578
ISBN (Print)9783111082431
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9-Sept-2024

Publication series

NameStudies in the History of Education and Culture / Studien zur Bildungs- und Kulturgeschichte
PublisherDe Gruyter
Volume5
ISSN (Print)2748-9531
ISSN (Electronic)2748-954X

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