TY - JOUR PY - 1998// TI - 'There are other evils to be put down': Temperance, eugenics and education in Australia, 1900-1930 JO - Paedagogica historica A1 - Rodwell, G. SP - 179 EP - 199 VL - 34 IS - N2 - During the nineteenth century in Australia, temperance advocates asserted their cause on moral grounds. However, with the surge of progressivist, or vitalist thought through Australian society at the beginning of the twentieth century, under the influence of the demands of national efficiency, the moral dimension of temperance was added to those of eugenics. This occurred at a time when the medical profesdon was beginning to assert its influence over public education with the appointment of medical officers to the State Departments of Education. State schools were an obvious targetfor temperance campaigns. Many of the pioneer school medical officers were eugenic and temperance advocates. The racial suicide scare gripped Australian bourgeois society during the first decade of the twentieth century added point and purpose to the temperance cause. During this time, the temperance cause increasingly became shrouded in eugenic ideals and practices. With the onset of the social and economic crises of World War I many temperance advocates became prohibition advocates. Temperance education accordingly was influenced by these wider social developments. © 1998 Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0030-9230 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00309230.1998.11434914 ID - ref1 ER -