Сorporeality and bodily practices in educational projects of the pre-war USSR and Nazi Germany

 
PIIS023620070018015-3-1
DOI10.31857/S023620070018014-2
Publication type Article
Status Published
Authors
Affiliation: HSE-University
Address: Russian Federation, Moscow
Journal nameChelovek
EditionVolume 32 Issue №6
Pages150-165
Abstract

This article examines the practices associated with corporeality and movement, which were an important part of the upbringing of the young generations in the USSR and the Third Reich. A comparative analysis of both educational projects shows that the Soviet one provided more opportunity for schoolchildren to model their corporeality than the Nazi one. The Soviet teachers tried to channel the hyperactivity of students into extracurricular study groups (kruzhki, studii, sektsii), into some kinds of social responsibility, competitions, performances, proms, and other events that allowed them to master different cognitive and motor skills. The pre-war Soviet schools provided greater sensory-motor experience and neural plasticity, which led to the high learning ability of young Soviet conscripts and the variability of their actions in the war compared to the Nazis. If the Soviet project of creating a new person was addressed to individuality, soul and will, the Nazi one was based on the barbaric romanticization of the right of the strongest and was predominantly biotechnological. It was initially aimed at raising a person with an iron will in a magnificent body and was against intellectualism—which could weaken conviction and the desire for power. For this reason the main educational functions were delegated to the Hitler Youth. Built on paramilitary activity (sports and drills, hiking, campfires and songs, and participation in Nazi party celebrations), the HY practice could provide limited and only monotonous military training which was insufficient in the space of total war.

Keywordsсorporeality, sensory-motor experience, neural plasticity, learning ability, variability of actions
Received27.12.2021
Publication date27.12.2021
Number of characters23819
Cite  
100 rub.
When subscribing to an article or issue, the user can download PDF, evaluate the publication or contact the author. Need to register.

Number of purchasers: 0, views: 460

Readers community rating: votes 0

1. Belyaev V.I. Savchenko T.A. Vospitatel'nye sistemy mira: stanovlenie i osnovnye kontseptsii [Educational systems of the world: formation and basic concepts]. Moscow: Argamak-Media Publ., 2017.

2. Bekhtereva N.P. Magiya mozga i labirinty zhizni [The magic of the brain and the labyrinths of life]. Moscow–St. Petersburg: AST Publ., 2007.

3. Vakser A.Z. Zhizn', lyudi, epokha. [Life, people, epoch]. St. Petersburg: Nestor-istoriya Publ.,2013.

4. Vintser B. Soldat trekh imperii [Soldier of three Empires]. Moscow: Veche Publ., 2010.

5. Vol'f M. Druz'ya ne umirayu [Friends do not die]. Moscow: Mezhdunarodnye otnosheniya Publ., 2009.

6. Gorman I. Dnevnik (1939–1941) [Diary 1939–1941]. URL: https // prozhito.org.

7. Gus'kov S. Esli ostanus' zhiv… [If I stay alive]. Moscow: Politizdat Publ.,1972.

8. Degrell' L. Lyubimets Gitlera. Russkaya kampaniya glazami generala SS [Hitler's Favorite. The Russian campaign in the eyes of the SS General]. Moscow: Algoritm Publ., 2013.

9. Dmitrieva N. Vospitatel'naya rabota v teatral'nom kruzhke [Educational work in the theater group]. Sovetskaya pedagogika.1939. N 5. P. 82–89.

10. Dubrovin A. Ego trud – voodushevlenie i prazdnik [His work is an inspiration and a celebration]. Arbatskii arkhiv. Istoriko-kraevedcheskii al'manakh. 1997. Vyp. 1. P. 432–437.

11. Dnevnik Peti Sagaidachnogo, uchenika moskovskoi shkoly № 211 [Diary of Petya Sagaidachny, a student of Moscow school N 211]. Moscow: Akademiya pedagogicheskikh nauk RSFSR Publ., 1963.

12. Zametki o voine na unichtozhenie. Vostochnyi front 1941-1942 gg. v zapisyakh generala Kheinritsi [Notes on the war of annihilation. The Eastern Front 1941–1942 in the records of General Heinrici], ed by. I. Khyurtera. St. Petersburg: Evropeiskii universitet Publ., 2018.

13. Zinov'ev A. Russkaya sud'ba. Ispoved' otshchepentsa [Russian fate. Confessions of a derelict]. Moscow: Tsentrpoligraf Publ., 2000.

14. Klark K. Stalinskii mif o “velikoi sem'e” [The Stalinist myth of the "great family”]. Sotsialisticheskii kanon, ed by Gyunter Kh. Dobrenko E. St. Petersburg: Akademicheskii proekt Publ., 2000. P.785–796.

15. Korshunov M., Terekhova V. Tainy i legendy Doma na naberezhnoi [Secrets and legends of the House on the embankment]. Moscow: Slovo Publ., 2002.

16. Kulinich N.G. Fizicheskaya kul'tura v zhizni gorozhan sovetskogo Dal'nego Vostoka [Physical culture in the life of citizens of the Soviet Far East]. Vestnik TOGU. 2011. N 1. P. 267–272.

17. Levinskii D. My iz sorok pervogo…Vospominaniya [We are from the forty-first…Memoirs]. Moscow: Slovo Publ., 2005.

18. Lefevr A. Proizvodstvo prostranstva [Production of space]. Moscow: Ctrelka Publ., 2015.

19. Moss M. Tekhniki tela [Techniques of the body]. Obshchestva. Obmen. Lichnost'. Trudy po sotsial'noi antropologii, compil. A.B. Gofman. Moscow, 2011. P. 304–322.

20. Naimark E.A. Pod tvoei bessmertnoi sen'yu [Under your immortal shadow]. St. Petersburg: Svet Publ., 2017.

21. O’Makhokuni M. Sport v SSSR: fizicheskaya kul'tura – vizual'naya kul'tura [Sport in the USSR: physical culture-visual culture]. Moscow: Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie Publ., 2010.

22. Pabst G. Dnevnik nemetskogo soldata. Voennye budni na Vostochnom fronte. 1941–1943 [Diary of a German soldier. Military everyday life on the Eastern Front. 1941–1943]. Moscow: Tsentrpoligraf Publ., 2008.

23. Posherstnik L. Dnevnik (1941) [Diary (1941].URL: http. prozhito. org. European University, St.-Petersburg.

24. Rakitina E. (compil.) Vse o Gule Korolevoi [All about Gul Koroleva]. Moscow–St. Petersburg: Rech' Publ., 2019.

25. Fuko M. Nadzirat' i nakazyvat'. Rozhdenie tyur'my [To supervise and punish. The birth of a prison]. Moscow: Ad Marginem Publ.,1999.

26. Khannaford K. Mudroe dvizhenie. My uchimsya ne tol'ko golovoi [Smart Moves: why learning is not all in your head]. Moscow: Voskhozhdenie Publ., 1999.

27. Khokhof K. Russkii dnevnik soldata vermakhta. Ot Visly do Volgi 1941–1943 [The Russian diary of a Wehrmacht soldier. From the Vistula to the Volga 1941–1943]. Moscow: Tsentrpoligraf Publ., 2017.

28. Chernyaev A. Moya zhizn' i moe vremya [My life and my time]. Moscow: Mezhdunarodnye otnosheniya Publ.,1995.

29. Shvarts V. Odna zhizn' [One Life]. Zhurnal “Samizdat″. 2005. URL: https://samlib.ru/n/nikolaj_b_d/nnikolaj_b_dschwarz.shtml

30. Shtridter Yu. Mgnoveniya. Iz stalinskoi Sovetskoi Rossii v Velikogermanskii Reikh Gitlera. Vospominaniya o detstve i yunosti (1926–1945) [Moments. From Stalinist Soviet Russia to Hitler's Great German Reich. Memories of childhood and youth (1926–1945)]. Moscow: AIRO Publ., 2012.

31. Efron G. Dnevniki: v 2 t. [Diaries in 2 volumes]. T.1. 1940–1941 gg. Moscow: Vagrius Publ., 2005.

32. Yuing T. Uchitelya epokhi stalinizma: vlast', politika i zhizn' shkoly 1930-kh gg. [Teachers of the Stalinist era: Power, Politics and school life of the 1930s]. Moscow: ROSSPEN Publ., 2011.

33. Alkemeyer T. Aufrecht und biegsam: eine politische Geschichte des Körperkults. Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte. 2007. N 18. P. 6–18.

34. Birdsall C. Earwitnessing: Sound Memories of the Nazi Period. Sound Souvenirs. Audio Technologies, Memory and Cultural Practice. Bijsternfeld K., van Dijck Y. (eds). Amsterdam University Press, 2009. P.169–181.

35. Blackburn G.W. Education in the Third Reich: Race and History in Nazi Textbooks. State University of New York Press, 1985.

36. Cocks G. Sick Heil: Self and Illness in Nazi Germany. Osiris. 2007. Vol. 22, N 1. P. 93–115.

37. Eggermont B. The choreography of Schooling as Site of Struggle: Belgian Primary Schools.1880–1940. History of Education. 2001.Vol. 30, N 2. P.129–140.

38. Fritzsche P. Hellbeck I. The New Man in Stalinist Russia and Nazi Germany. Beyond Totalitarinism. Stalinism and Nazism Compared. Geyer M. Fizpatrick Sh. (eds). Cambridge University Press, 2009. P. 302–342.

39. Holmes L.E. Power, Privilege, and Excellence in the Provinces, 1933–1945. Kirov, TO «Avtor» KOO OOO SPR, 2008.

40. Jaraucsh K. H. Broken Lives. How Ordinary Germans Experienced the 20-th Century. Princeton University Press, 2018.

41. Kaganovsky L. How the Soviet Man was Unmade: Cultural Fantasy and Male Subjectivity under Stalin. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2008.

42. Kaznelson M. Remembering the Soviet State: Kulak Children and Dekulakisation. Europe-Asia Studies.2007. Vol. 59, N 7. P.1163–1177.

43. Livschiz A. Growing Up Soviet: Childhood in the Soviet Union.1918–1958. A Dissertation, Submitted to the Department of History… of Stanford University for the Degree of Doctor Philosophy, 2007.

44. Malendorf U. The Shame of Survival. Working Through a Nazi Childhood. Penn State University Press, 2009.

45. Merridale S. Ivan’s War. Inside the Red Army 1939–1945. New York, Metropolitan Book, Henry Holt and Company, 2006.

46. Pagaard St. Teaching the Nazi Dictatorship: Focus on Youth. The History Teacher. 2005.Vol. 38, N 2. P.189–207.

47. Peukert D. Youth in the Third Reich. Life in the Third Reich. Bessel R.(ed). Oxford University Press, 1987. P. 25–40.

48. Pine L. Education in Nazi German. Berg, Oxford, New York, 2010.

49. Ponzio A. Shaping the New Man. Youth Training Regimes in Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany. University of Wisconsin press, 2015.

50. Reese R. Why Stalin’s Soldiers Fought: The Red Army’s Military Effectiveness in World War II. University Presso of Kansas, Lawrence, 2011.

51. Shell M. Talking the Walk and Walking the Talk. Fordham University Press, 2015.

52. Wunderlich F. Education in Nazi Germany. Social Research. 1937. Vol. 4, N 3. P. 347–360.

Система Orphus

Loading...
Up