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Classroom and Empire
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The central challenge to imperial powers entering the modern era was the schooling of their peoples. How could they insure the literacy that modernity required without providing a foundation for na...
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01 November 2000

Classroom and Empire tells the story of the politics of alphabets, languages, and schooling in the eastern empire of Russia from 1860 to 1917. Wayne Dowler presents an intriguing cast of characters, including Nikolai Il'minskii, whose method of schooling non-Russian children lay at the heart of nationalist controversy; Ismail Bey Gaspirali, whose new method schools attempted to reconcile Islam with modern secular philosophy and science; Konstantin Pobedonostsev, procurator of the Holy Synod and éminence grise of the reigns of Alexander III and his son Nicholas II; and Sophia Chicherina, feisty defender of the Il'minskii school. Dowler shows us that the problem of schooling non-Russians was unresolved by the fall of the Romanovs in 1917, smouldered through much of the Soviet period, and has re-emerged today as a major source of divisiveness in the Russian Federation.
Price: $110.00
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date:
01 November 2000
ISBN: 9780773568723
Format: eBook
BISACs:
EDUCATION / General, EDUCATION / Educational Policy & Reform / General
"Dowler recovers for us the ideas and intentions if Il'minskii and the "method" that shaped the efforts to educate non-Russians in eastern borderlands. His general knowledge of Russian history allows him to describe effectively the general Imperial context shaping Il'minskii and expansion in the east. I learned much from Classroom and Empire." Austin Jersild, Department of History, Old Dominion University