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Formal and Informal Education During the Rise of Greek Nationalism
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Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. Family, Community, and Childhood in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century Greece.- Chapter 3. The School and the Textbook.- Chapter 4. Greek Children’s Literature.- Chapter 5. Learning Informally Through Story, Song, and Children’s Shadow Theater.- Chapter 6. Lives of Informal Learning.- Chapter 7. Conclusion.  

Promotional Information

"This most welcome volume traces the history of education in Greece during the age of romantic nationalism. Education was central in the Greek nation-building process. By placing the case of Greece into a broader comparative context, the book marks an important intervention into the history of education as a whole." (Thomas W. Gallant, Nicholas Family Endowed Chair and Professor of Modern Greek History & Archaeology, University of California, San Diego, USA, and Social Sciences Editor, Journal of Modern Greek Studies) "How do children become members of a nation? Most of our answers have focused upon the school, where the modern nation-state socializes its new citizens. But a host of informal institutions--families, folklore, theater, and more--have also played significant roles in in the process, as Zervas reminds us. Educating the nation's young was never just about schools, so scholars of education--and of nationalism--need to look beyond them." (Jonathan Zimmerman, Professor of History of Education, University of Pennsylvania, USA)

About the Author

Theodore G. Zervas is Associate Professor of Education at North Park University, USA.  

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