“Little Soldiers” for Socialism: Childhood and Socialist Politics in the British Socialist Sunday School Movement
“Little Soldiers” for Socialism: Childhood and Socialist Politics in the British Socialist Sunday School Movement
Jessica Gerrard
2013
2013
Abstract
This paper examines the ways in which turn-of-the-century British
socialists enacted socialism for children through the British Socialist Sunday School movement. It focuses in particular on the movement’s emergence in the 1890s and the first three decades of operation. Situated amidst a growing international field of comparable socialist children’s initiatives, socialist Sunday schools attempted to connect their local activity of children’s education to the broader politics of
international socialism. In this discussion I explore the attempt to make this connection, including the endeavour to transcend party differences in the creation of a non-partisan international children’s socialist movement, the cooption of traditional Sunday school rituals, and the resolve to make socialist childhood cultures was the
responsibility of both men and women. Defending their existence against criticism from conservative campaigners, the state, and sections of the left, socialist Sunday schools mobilized a complex and contested culture of socialist childhood.
Article
Abstract
This paper examines the ways in which turn-of-the-century British
socialists enacted socialism for children through the British Socialist Sunday School movement. It focuses in particular on the movement’s emergence in the 1890s and the first three decades of operation. Situated amidst a growing international field of comparable socialist children’s initiatives, socialist Sunday schools attempted to connect their local activity of children’s education to the broader politics of
international socialism. In this discussion I explore the attempt to make this connection, including the endeavour to transcend party differences in the creation of a non-partisan international children’s socialist movement, the cooption of traditional Sunday school rituals, and the resolve to make socialist childhood cultures was the
responsibility of both men and women. Defending their existence against criticism from conservative campaigners, the state, and sections of the left, socialist Sunday schools mobilized a complex and contested culture of socialist childhood.
Social Movements
Socialist movements
Keywords
Class, Curriculum, Europe, Gender, Nonformal Education, Pedagogy, Public Schooling
Theme
Popular Education; Adult Education; and Social Movement Learning