Working class adult education in Yorkshire, 1918-1939
This thesis considers the place of workers’ adult education in the world of the British labour movement, and what impact it may have had on worker-students as citizens. It concentrates on three voluntary working class adult education organisations – the Workers’ Educational Association (WEA), The Na...
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ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7397822019-03-05T15:48:14ZWorking class adult education in Yorkshire, 1918-1939Kumbhat, Christine PushpaWhiting, Richard ; Chase, Malcolm2017This thesis considers the place of workers’ adult education in the world of the British labour movement, and what impact it may have had on worker-students as citizens. It concentrates on three voluntary working class adult education organisations – the Workers’ Educational Association (WEA), The National Council of Labour Colleges (NCLC), and the Co-operative. The WEA delivered an impartial, non sectarian, non-political programme of education in the liberal arts and humanities with the support of universities and Local Education Authorities. The NCLC promoted a programme of Marxist education, and accepted support only from working class organisations, predominantly trade unions. The Co-operative wished to develop ‘Co operative character’ through education as a means to building a ‘Co-operative Commonwealth.’ This thesis explores the extent to which each organisation made an impact in Yorkshire between the wars. It does this in a variety of ways; by analysing the diversity of thought on socialism and democracy in the intellectual world of the labour movement during the inter-war era; presenting a historiographical context of workers’ adult education in Yorkshire from the nineteenth to the twentieth century; evaluating the Co operative’s success at establishing a Co-operative Commonwealth through education; exploring the relationship between the trades councils of Yorkshire and the three adult education organisations; researching the biographies of municipal public students known to have been worker-students; analysing the value of workers’ adult education from the perspective of the regional press; and studying the lived experience of workers’ adult education from the perspective of worker-students, tutors and administrators. The resounding theme that emerges by the end of the thesis is how working class adult education was connected consistently with democracy – that workers’ adult education, whatever form it took, supported a democratic model of active participatory citizenship based on idealism, as well as ethical and moral interpretations of social democracy.900University of Leedshttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.739782http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/19923/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
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900 Kumbhat, Christine Pushpa Working class adult education in Yorkshire, 1918-1939 |
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This thesis considers the place of workers’ adult education in the world of the British labour movement, and what impact it may have had on worker-students as citizens. It concentrates on three voluntary working class adult education organisations – the Workers’ Educational Association (WEA), The National Council of Labour Colleges (NCLC), and the Co-operative. The WEA delivered an impartial, non sectarian, non-political programme of education in the liberal arts and humanities with the support of universities and Local Education Authorities. The NCLC promoted a programme of Marxist education, and accepted support only from working class organisations, predominantly trade unions. The Co-operative wished to develop ‘Co operative character’ through education as a means to building a ‘Co-operative Commonwealth.’ This thesis explores the extent to which each organisation made an impact in Yorkshire between the wars. It does this in a variety of ways; by analysing the diversity of thought on socialism and democracy in the intellectual world of the labour movement during the inter-war era; presenting a historiographical context of workers’ adult education in Yorkshire from the nineteenth to the twentieth century; evaluating the Co operative’s success at establishing a Co-operative Commonwealth through education; exploring the relationship between the trades councils of Yorkshire and the three adult education organisations; researching the biographies of municipal public students known to have been worker-students; analysing the value of workers’ adult education from the perspective of the regional press; and studying the lived experience of workers’ adult education from the perspective of worker-students, tutors and administrators. The resounding theme that emerges by the end of the thesis is how working class adult education was connected consistently with democracy – that workers’ adult education, whatever form it took, supported a democratic model of active participatory citizenship based on idealism, as well as ethical and moral interpretations of social democracy. |
author2 |
Whiting, Richard ; Chase, Malcolm |
author_facet |
Whiting, Richard ; Chase, Malcolm Kumbhat, Christine Pushpa |
author |
Kumbhat, Christine Pushpa |
author_sort |
Kumbhat, Christine Pushpa |
title |
Working class adult education in Yorkshire, 1918-1939 |
title_short |
Working class adult education in Yorkshire, 1918-1939 |
title_full |
Working class adult education in Yorkshire, 1918-1939 |
title_fullStr |
Working class adult education in Yorkshire, 1918-1939 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Working class adult education in Yorkshire, 1918-1939 |
title_sort |
working class adult education in yorkshire, 1918-1939 |
publisher |
University of Leeds |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.739782 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT kumbhatchristinepushpa workingclassadulteducationinyorkshire19181939 |
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1718997221177819136 |