Children’s education and mental health in Spain during and after the Civil Warpsychiatry, psychology and “biological pedagogy” at the service of Franco’s regime
- Amparo Gómez 1
- Antonio Fco. Canales 1
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1
Universidad de La Laguna
info
- McCulloch, Gary (ed. lit.)
- Brewis, Georgina (ed. lit.)
- Pozo Andrés, María del Mar del (coord.)
ISSN: 0030-9230
Ano de publicación: 2016
Título do exemplar: ISCHE (London): education, war and peace
Volume: 52
Número: 1-2
Páxinas: 154-168
Tipo: Artigo
Outras publicacións en: Paedagogica Historica: International journal of the history of education
Resumo
This article analyses the child psychiatry and psychology developed during the Spanish Civil War and immediate postwar period. The aim is to demonstrate that, despite the existence of a certain degree of disciplinary continuity in relation to the pre-war period, both disciplines were placed at the service of Francoism. This meant that the association of psychology and psychiatry with pedagogy in order to educate/cure children played a key role in legitimising the child intervention policies of Franco’s regime, and this strategy was best reflected in Vallejo Nágera’s proposal regarding “biological pedagogy”. Finally, it analyses how psychiatry and psychology were used outside the school context to re-educate and control an infant population trapped between two worlds as the result of the Civil War.
Información de financiamento
This work was supported by the Ministerio de Econom?a y Competitividad of Spain under Grant FFI2012-33998.Financiadores
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Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad
Spain
- FFI2012-33998