Curriculum History in Europe: A Historiographic Added Value

Authors

  • Daniel Tröhler Faculty for Language and Literature, Humanities, Arts and Education, University of Luxembourg

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36368/njedh.v3i1.65

Keywords:

long nineteenth century, nation-state, curriculum, society, citizenship, historiography

Abstract

This article advocates for a particular understanding of curriculum history that enables educational research to emancipate itself from national idiosyncrasies. It suggests focusing, in the frame of a cultural history, on the interrelation between the constitutions, which define the ideal social order and the envisaged ideal citizens, and the curriculum, which provides “educational opportunities” – that is, pre-organised or preconfigured pathways of educational careers. The article thereby stresses that the fundamental notions of this research program – nation, society, and citizen – need to be handled as floating signifiers that are materialised differently in the various individual nation-states. The article argues that against this background, a European education history that respects national or cultural distinctions without getting trapped by national idiosyncrasies is possible.

Author Biography

Daniel Tröhler, Faculty for Language and Literature, Humanities, Arts and Education, University of Luxembourg

Professor of Educational Sciences

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Published

2016-05-24

How to Cite

Tröhler, Daniel. 2016. “Curriculum History in Europe: A Historiographic Added Value”. Nordic Journal of Educational History 3 (1):3-24. https://doi.org/10.36368/njedh.v3i1.65.