published by: popular education for a free society |
Feature Article | Vol. 2, No. 1 Toward a Historical Perspective of Libertarian and Anarchist Education in the United StatesBy Kai Malloy
With such remarkable educational and social visions, it is surprising that anarchist education in the United States has never received a comprehensive historical or philosophical treatment. Indeed, the problems of liberal and progressive educational reformers and their various theories of social change have made up the dominant literature in the history and philosophy of American education. On the other hand, the libertarian tradition in American education has only been briefly acknowledged or examined and as such, mostly in terms of the radical experiments, programs, activities, and schools of the free school movement in the 1960's, and the de-school, un-school, and home-school movements which have followed. Yet, there is a historical tradition of American libertarian education that predates the libertarian educational movements of the last three decades by almost one-hundred and fifty years, and shares with them a common set of assumptions and values, as well as a common desire for radical, if not revolutionary social change. On the broadest level this tradition can be identified by its rejection of the dominant cultural, political, social, economic, and, more recently, ecological relationships, and by its implicit or explicit use of education to alter these relationships.
While what can be included in the libertarian and anarchist traditions has not been expressly defined, and while the boundaries of these theoretical and practical frameworks or world-views have not been clearly drawn, a set of theorists and practitioners has come to be associated with these loosely defined traditions. For the purposes of this and other upcoming articles, however, I have chosen to define the two terms "anarchist" and "libertarian" in what I believe to be their broadest and most general sense. I define an anarchist as one who rejects all forms of external and internal hierarchy and domination, most significantly all forms of government, the State, and capitalism and "believes that society and individuals would function well without them."1 My definition of a libertarian (which I share with historian Peter Marshall) is one who believes liberty is a "supreme value" and "would like to limit the powers of government [and the State] to a minimum compatible with security."2 I would also agree with Marshall's statement that the "line between anarchist and libertarian is thin, and in the past the terms have often been used interchangeably."3 Historically, however, some libertarians have promoted systems of free market capitalism and property-ownership, systems that all anarchists have consistently and emphatically rejected. "Even so, they are members of the same clan, share the same ancestors, and bear resemblances"4, writes Marshall and it is for this reason that I have chosen to include the educational perspectives of both libertarians and anarchists in these articles.
As a result of the disparate array of articles and books I mentioned above, a set of theories and a variety of practices have come to be associated with libertarian education in America. Yet an examination of the literature shows that only the free school movement of the 1960's and 1970's has received a thorough examination. In the traditional and more conventional American educational literature, libertarian educational theories and practices have been isolated and relegated to specific methodologies, specific philosophies, and to a specific historical period: the 1960's and early 1970's. Thus, the analysis and perspective of libertarian education in the United States has remained ahistorical, asocial, and isolated primarily to the confines of the sixties decade. In fact, past libertarian theories and practices and the social, economic, political, and historical conditions surrounding them have seldom been examined. The repercussions on the libertarian educational movement have been that issues and problems are seldom seen in a historical context, and even less frequently understood as problems of what I have called the American libertarian tradition in education. Indeed, the historical tradition of libertarian theories and ideas, as well as experiments, activities, programs, and schools that began as early as the 1820's, has only received minimal attention, if any, in the historical and theoretical writings of educators, or in the scholarly and academic writings on American society. Yet certainly these various educational theories and practices need to be explored and examined if we are to come to an understanding of the libertarian tradition in American education, or gain further knowledge and perspective on the origins, emergence, development, and relationship between the various nineteenth and twentieth century socialist, utopian, and educational traditions, in America, Europe, and throughout the western hemisphere. This also suggests the need for a body of literature that explores, historically and philosophically, the American libertarian educational tradition in order to understand the fundamental relationship between libertarian pedagogy, other radical pedagogies, revolutionary educational transformation, radical school reform, and social, economic, political, and ecological transformation.
In view of these circumstances, I have decided to examine the history of American libertarian and anarchist education in a series of articles to be published by the Institute for Social Ecology in their publication Harbinger over the next couple of years. The purpose of these articles is to broadly narrate the history of the American libertarian educational movement, examine the various theories, practices, and tendencies that make it up, and highlight them. I would also like to demonstrate that there is a historical tradition in American education that can in fact be defined as libertarian, study this tradition's successes and failures, and assess its place in American life. In the next article, I will begin this series by providing readers with a broad overview of anarchist and libertarian education in the United States, so please look for it in the coming months. Notes
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Social Ecology n 1: a coherent radical critique of current social, political, and anti-ecological trends. 2: a reconstructive, ecological, communitarian, and ethical approach to society. |
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