Reading, Reception, and Elite Education

L. Eastlake
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Abstract

This chapter examines representations of identity formation in boys through acts of reading and particularly through acts of learning to grapple with the Latin language. This relationship between manhood and reading is evidenced in both the content and the semantic structures of schoolboy fiction. For Tom Brown, Eric, and Stalky—each of whom attend a different calibre or type of Victorian school—Latin is both the process through which boys become men and the designator of that manliness, with senior male figures like Thomas Arnold often being constructed as Caesar-like figures at the top of an ascending scale of maturity and seniority. Rome is often presented as both the maker and the marker of elite Victorian manliness in both its physical and intellectual varieties. Yet this chapter is also interested in changes and challenges to the classical curriculum in the nineteenth century as competing styles of masculinity emerged in the form of the captains of industry and science.
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阅读、接待和精英教育
本章通过阅读行为,特别是通过学习拉丁语的行为来研究男孩身份形成的表征。这种男子气概与阅读的关系在男生小说的内容和语义结构上都得到了证明。对汤姆·布朗、埃里克和斯塔基来说——他们每个人都上过不同水平或类型的维多利亚式学校——拉丁语既是男孩成长为男人的过程,也是男子气概的象征,像托马斯·阿诺德这样的高级男性人物经常被塑造成凯撒式的人物,在成熟度和资历的上升尺度上处于顶端。罗马经常被认为是维多利亚时代精英男子气概的制造者和标志,无论是在身体上还是在智力上。然而,这一章也对19世纪古典课程的变化和挑战感兴趣,因为在工业和科学的领导者中,男性气概的竞争风格出现了。
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