<p>â<i>From the Salon to the Schoolroom</i> makes an important and original contribution to the literature on France and French women. Rogers shows that girlsâ education was not so much about girls as about women and the role presumed proper for them. It was about the family and the hopes and anxieties that French men and women placed on the family to reconstruct the nation in the post-Napoleonic era. It was also about men and menâs roles in public and private life; about nation and nationalism; and about race and the âcivilizing mission.ââ</p><p>âClaire G. Moses, University of Maryland</p>
<p>âIn this lively piece of writing, one appreciates the interplay between general theoretical considerations and archival investigation. Rebecca Rogers excels in describing how the structure of schools and their network relates to the formation of social and individual identities.â</p><p>âAlain Corbin, University of Paris, PanthĂŠon Sorbonne</p>
<p>âRogers fills an important gap in French womenâs history between Old Regime salons and the establishment of universal public education for both girls and boys under the Third Republic.â</p><p>âD. A. Harvey <i>Choice</i></p>
<p>âRogers presents her beautifully demarcated argument in three chronologically arranged parts. . . . scholars of girlhood in any nation should find Rogersâ insights helpful and can appreciate her interweaving of bourgeois girlsâ history with national development.â</p><p>âLaureen Tedesco <i>Nineteenth Century Studies</i></p>
<p>âThis is a well-written, well-researched, and well-argued work. Rather than a narrowly conceived institutional history of particular establishments, Rebecca Rogers has produced a far broader, more ambitious analysis of social and familial change during the course of the nineteenth century, as made manifest by changes in the schooling of bourgeois girls.â</p><p>âSharif Gemie <i>American Historical Review</i></p>
<p>âRebecca Rogersâ well-crafted and deeply researched study of the educational institutions available to bourgeois girls in nineteenth-century France intersects with a number of current debates about gender norms and the place of women in public life.â</p><p>âDenise Z. Davidson <i>European History Quarterly</i></p>
<p>âThe book is impressively and imaginatively researched.â</p><p>âJennifer Heuer <i>French Politics, Culture & Society</i></p>
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Rebecca Rogers is Professor in the History of Education at the UniversitĂŠ Paris Descartes. Her first book, Les demoiselles de la LĂŠgion dâhonneur: Les maisons dâĂŠducation de la LĂŠgion dâhonneur au dix-neuvième siècle, was published in France in 1992.