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Marjorie Lamberti

    The politics of eduaction
    State, society, and the elementary school in imperial Germany
    The Politics of Education
    • 2004

      Arguing that teachers in elementary schools in the big cities of Imperial Germany were in the vanguard of this movement on the European Continent, this narrative sheds new light on the opposition by progressive educators to the Nazi seizure of power.

      The Politics of Education
    • 2002

      "Although the early history of progressive education is often associated with John Dewey in America, the author argues convincingly that the pedagogues in the elementary schools in the big cities of Imperial Germany were in the avant-garde of this movement on the European Continent. Far more than a history of ideas, this study provides the first comprehensive analysis of the culture wars over the schools in Germany in the 1920s. Going up to the Nazi seizure of power, the author's narrative sheds new light on the courageous defense of the republican state by the progressive educators in the 1930s and the relationship between the traditionalists' opposition to school reform and the attraction of certain sections of the teaching profession to the Nazi movement."--Jacket

      The politics of eduaction
    • 1989

      The much admired school system of 19th-century Germany served as a model for the educational systems of many other countries, including Britain and the United States. In this illuminating study of German primary schools, Lamberti examines an educational tradition that was the object of wide emulation, but which was often misinterpreted by its admirers. Lamberti also explores the political significance of German educational policies in the Kulturkampf, in the suppression of Polish nationalism in the eastern provinces, and more generally in the struggle between the competing strands of liberalism and authoritarianism in the German state.

      State, society, and the elementary school in imperial Germany