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A FAREWELL TO ‘RURAL BLISS’
Authors:Astri Andresen
Institution:Department of Archaeology , History , Cultural Studies and Religion , University of Bergen , P.O. Box 7805, 5020 Bergen, Norway E-mail: astri.andresen@ahkr.uib.no
Abstract:The article discusses health policies towards school children in Norway from 1900 until the Second World War. It is concerned with dominant definitions of health threats against children and the variables used in defining the groups conceived as most vulnerable to poor health. A distinct change took place in the period. Whereas in the early 1900s poor and working‐class children in urban surroundings were considered to be under severe threats, in the 1920s a less specific category of ‘children’ were conceived as threatened. Eventually rural children were singled out as the important target group for health measures. The shifts had medical as well as political motivations. Another prominent feature in the period was that poverty took on a new meaning in the dominant medical discourse on children: from having been conceived as a material reality impinging upon health, it came to be considered mainly a cultural problem. Especially medical officers within the social democratic camp contested this argument although they did not rule out education and cultural transformation as a means to promote children's health. Despite the conceptual shift, however, social benefits and equal access to health services – measures that lay at the heart of the post‐war welfare state – remained in the 1930s an essential part of promoting children's health.
Keywords:school meals  school medical services  urban‐rural divide  tuberculosis  nutrition  poverty
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