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Literacy and Demographic Behavior: Evidence from Family Reconstitution in Nineteenth-Century France
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
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An important part of historians' view of the process of social change is the role assigned to the spread of literacy and education. The contrast between tranditional societies, one of whose characteristics is limited literacy and educational opportunities, and modern society with high levels of literacy and widespread education, has shaped both social history and development policy. For some, the acquisition of literacy exposes people to new ideas, makes them more rational, and, ultimately, changes their behavior. People “become modern” at least partially through education and learning to read and write. In this vein Francois Furet and Jacques Ozouf have emphasized the introspection and access to written culture that came with literacy in France, and Michel Vovelle has spoken of a possible “cultural revolution” accompanying spreading literacy in eighteenth-century Provence. Thus, the democratization of literacy meant far more than just more people knowing how to read and write; it made people more logical and philosophical.
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1. Inkeles, Alex and Smith, David, Becoming Modern (Cambridge, 1974), pp. 15–24 lists characteristics of “modern” societies. Furet, Francois and Ozouf, Jacques, Lire et écrire: l'alphabétisation des francais de Calvin a Jules Ferry (Paris, 1977), Vol. 1, pp, 358–359; Vovelle, Michel, “Y a-t-il une révolution culturelle au XVIIIe siècle? A propos de l'education populaire en Provence,” Revue d'histoire moderne et contemporaine, 32 (1975):89–141.Google Scholar
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