In Switzerland, physical education was as important as it was in other European countries during the last decades of the nineteenth century. Different visions of physical education were adapted to the Swiss context to promote national citizens that were strong and healthy and thus capable of protecting their fatherland. Discussions of Per Henrik Ling’s “Swedish system” and Friedrich Ludwig Jahn’s “Deutsche Turnkunst,” both of which were adapted in the francophone and the germanophone parts of Switzerland, dominated the discourse. Until the end of the nineteenth century, patriotic ideals permeated the army-ruled physical education, although methodology and health topics were discussed as well. The national and civic aims of physical education were the same for girls and boys, with one very important exception: boys were prepared for military service, whereas girls were primarily prepared to be good future mothers.
This article examines public education and the establishment of the
nation-state in the first half of the nineteenth century in Switzerland. Textbooks,
governmental
decisions, and reports are analyzed in order to better understand
how citizenship is depicted in school textbooks and whether (federal) political
changes affected the image of the “imagined citizen” portrayed in such texts. The
“ideal citizen” was, first and foremost, a communal and cantonal member of a twofold
society run by the church and the secular government, in which nationality was
depicted as a third realm.
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