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JOANNA BOURKE

Talk on the History of Birkbeck

​"'Nurseries of Disaffection": Birkbeck and Educating Working People'

Join me on Saturday 21st September (14.00-15.00) at the Society of Genealogists (online) where I will be speaking on ​"'Nurseries of Disaffection": Birkbeck and Educating Working People'. I would love to see you! LINK: https://members.sog.org.uk/events/65a7dffadedc55000876242e/description?ticket=65a7dffadedc550008762431

When the London Mechanics’ Institution, now Birkbeck, University of London, was established, there was great hostility to educating working people. Would educated workers become more unruly, demanding greater political and labour rights? Were educational establishments for working men and women “nurseries of disaffection”? This talk examines the early history of adult education in London. Focussing on the London Mechanics’ Institution, established 200 years ago in 1823, it explores why working people and their allies believed that education was important and the resistance they experienced from political and religious elites. It also addresses questions about competing definitions of “useful knowledge”.

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