Computing the Nordic Way: The Swedish Labour Movement, Computers and Educational Imaginaries from the Post-War Period to the Turn of the Millennium

Based on empirical material from Swedish reformist labour movement associations, this article illustrates how digital technology has been described as a problem (and sometimes a solution) at different points in time. Most significant, for this article, is the role that non-formal adult education ha...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lina Rahm
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Umeå University 2021-02-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Educational History
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/157
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spelling doaj-e825d5fcb8784e30b2369a0e52a4909c2021-02-20T03:02:22ZdanUmeå UniversityNordic Journal of Educational History2001-77662001-90762021-02-018110.36368/njedh.v8i1.157Computing the Nordic Way: The Swedish Labour Movement, Computers and Educational Imaginaries from the Post-War Period to the Turn of the MillenniumLina Rahm0KTH Royal Institute of Technology Based on empirical material from Swedish reformist labour movement associations, this article illustrates how digital technology has been described as a problem (and sometimes a solution) at different points in time. Most significant, for this article, is the role that non-formal adult education has played in solving these problems. Computer education has repeatedly been described as a measure not only to increase technical knowledge, but also to construe desirable (digital) citizens for the future. Problematisations of the digital have changed over time, and these discursive reconceptualisations can be described as existing on a spectrum between techno-utopian visions, where adaptation of the human is seen as a task for education, and techno-dystopian forecasts, where education is needed to mobilise democratic control over threatening machines. As such, the goal for education has been one of political control—either to adapt people to machines, or to adapt machines to people. https://journals.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/157educational imaginaries popular educationhistorylabour movement historycomputer historyworkers' education history
collection DOAJ
language Danish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lina Rahm
spellingShingle Lina Rahm
Computing the Nordic Way: The Swedish Labour Movement, Computers and Educational Imaginaries from the Post-War Period to the Turn of the Millennium
Nordic Journal of Educational History
educational imaginaries
popular education
history
labour movement history
computer history
workers' education history
author_facet Lina Rahm
author_sort Lina Rahm
title Computing the Nordic Way: The Swedish Labour Movement, Computers and Educational Imaginaries from the Post-War Period to the Turn of the Millennium
title_short Computing the Nordic Way: The Swedish Labour Movement, Computers and Educational Imaginaries from the Post-War Period to the Turn of the Millennium
title_full Computing the Nordic Way: The Swedish Labour Movement, Computers and Educational Imaginaries from the Post-War Period to the Turn of the Millennium
title_fullStr Computing the Nordic Way: The Swedish Labour Movement, Computers and Educational Imaginaries from the Post-War Period to the Turn of the Millennium
title_full_unstemmed Computing the Nordic Way: The Swedish Labour Movement, Computers and Educational Imaginaries from the Post-War Period to the Turn of the Millennium
title_sort computing the nordic way: the swedish labour movement, computers and educational imaginaries from the post-war period to the turn of the millennium
publisher Umeå University
series Nordic Journal of Educational History
issn 2001-7766
2001-9076
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Based on empirical material from Swedish reformist labour movement associations, this article illustrates how digital technology has been described as a problem (and sometimes a solution) at different points in time. Most significant, for this article, is the role that non-formal adult education has played in solving these problems. Computer education has repeatedly been described as a measure not only to increase technical knowledge, but also to construe desirable (digital) citizens for the future. Problematisations of the digital have changed over time, and these discursive reconceptualisations can be described as existing on a spectrum between techno-utopian visions, where adaptation of the human is seen as a task for education, and techno-dystopian forecasts, where education is needed to mobilise democratic control over threatening machines. As such, the goal for education has been one of political control—either to adapt people to machines, or to adapt machines to people.
topic educational imaginaries
popular education
history
labour movement history
computer history
workers' education history
url https://journals.ub.umu.se/index.php/njedh/article/view/157
work_keys_str_mv AT linarahm computingthenordicwaytheswedishlabourmovementcomputersandeducationalimaginariesfromthepostwarperiodtotheturnofthemillennium
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