Books about Schoolrooms from Amazon.com



From The Salon To The Schoolroom: Educating Bourgeois Girls In Nineteenth-century France
How a nation educates its children tells us much about the values of its people. From the Salon to the Schoolroom examines the emerging secondary school system for girls in nineteenth-century France and uncovers how that system contributed to the fashioning of the French bourgeois woman.

Rebecca Rogers explores the variety of schools--religious and lay--that existed for girls and paints portraits of the women who ran them and the girls who attended them. Drawing upon a wide array of public and private sources--school programs, prescriptive literature, inspection reports, diaries, and letters--she reveals the complexity of the female educational experience as the schoolroom gradually replaced the salon as the site of French women's special source of influence.

From the Salon to the Schoolroom also shows how France as part of its civilizing mission transplanted its educational vision to other settings: the colonies in Africa as well as throughout the Western world, including England and the United States. Historians are aware of the widespread ramifications of Jesuit education, but Rogers shows how French education for girls played into the cross-cultural interactions of modern society, producing an image of the Frenchwoman that continues to tantalize and fascinate the Western world today..
Price: $25.00 [Notify me when price goes down.]



Create Your Own Schoolroom Sticker Picture: With 44 Reusable Peel-and-Apply Stickers (Sticker Picture Books)
Inside is a scene depicting a classroom with bookcases, blackboard, and bulletin board. Stickers depict toys, books, and class activities
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Price: $4.85 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Reading Victorian Schoolrooms: Childhood and Education in Nineteenth-Century Fiction (Children's Literature and Culture)

This book investigates the portrayal of school life in Victorian literature, which played out a profound cultural debate between the rapid institutionalization of education and the shrinking realm of domestic instruction that was changing the face of Victorian childhood. As schools increasingly mapped out a schema of time schedules, standardized grades or forms, separate disciplines, and standardized hierarchical architectural spaces, childhood development also came to be seen as increasingly regularized and standardized according to clear developmental categories. Elizabeth Gargano situates fictions by Dickens, Carlyle, Bronte, and others within the passionate education debates, and explores how the novelists not only depicted images of rigidly standardized schoolrooms in order to critique them, but also offered alternative educational methods and agendas.

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Price: $69.00 [Notify me when price goes down.]


The Long Schoolroom: Lessons in the Bitter Logic of the Poetic Principle (Poets on Poetry)
Allen Grossman's combined reputation as a poet and as a professor of poetry gives him an unusual importance in the landscape of contemporary American poetry. In this new collection Grossman revisits the "Long Schoolroom" of poetic principle--where he eventually learned to reconsider the notion that poetry was cultural work of the kind that contributed unambiguously to the peace of the world.
The jist of what he learned--of what his "lessons" taught him--was (in the sentence of Oliver Wendell Holmes): "Where most men have died, there is the greatest interest." According to Grossman, violence arises not merely from the "barbarian" outside of the culture the poet serves, but from the inner logic of that culture; not, as he would now say, from the defeat of cultural membership but from the terms of cultural membership itself.
Grossman analyzes the "bitter logic of the poetic principle" as it is articulated in exemplary texts and figures, including Bede's Caedmon and Milton. But the heart of The Long Schoolroom is American, ranging from essays on Whitman and Lincoln to an in-depth review of the work of Hart Crane. His final essays probe the example of postmodern Jewish and Christian poetry in this country, most notably the work of Robert Lowell and Allen Ginsburg, as it searches for an understanding of "holiness" in the production and control of violence.
Allen Grossman is author of The Ether Dome and Other Poems: New and Selected, The Sighted Singer: Two Works on Poetry for Readers and Writers (with Mark Halliday), and most recently, The Philosopher's Window. He is Mellon Professor in the Humanities at The Johns Hopkins University.
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Price: $34.53 [Notify me when price goes down.]


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