Marc Depaepe, Lieven D'hulst, Met medewerking van: Maartje Theuninck
Reference : 29964
, uni pers leuven, 2011 Text; English/ French, paperback Aantal pagina's: 240, 132 cm x 210cm. ISBN 9789058678751.
Travel Diary of Raymond Buyse, 1922. Carnet de voyage de Raymond Buyse, 1922. In 1922, a young Belgian ?pedologist' named Raymond Buyse accompanied the famous Dr. Ovide Decroly on a study tour of the United States of America. They met with well-known American professors to learn more about the ?scientific' study of the child and especially about applied American psychology. Buyse noted his impressions of the trip in a diary. These are scribbles, sometimes difficult to decipher, written on loose sheets, held together by a ring binder. They reflect the culture shock experienced by Buyse in confronting this dazzling nation. The young scholar writes in a lively style and with humour about his meetings with the ?great' psychologists and educationalists of that time, visualizing his impressions of the land and the people with little drawings in the text. Here the record of this fascinating scholarly and cultural encounter is published for the first time, both in the original French with an English translation. In their exhaustive introduction Marc Depaepe and Lieven D'hulst explain the historical context of this both personal and intellectual journey to the present-day reader. Livre imprime tete-beche! Volume reversible avec la version originale francaise d'un cote et la traduction anglaise de l'autre. En 1922, Raymond Buyse, un jeune ? pedologue ? belge, entreprend, en compagnie du celebre docteur Ovide Decroly, un voyage d'etude aux Etats-Unis. Ils y rencontrent des professeurs americains de renom et se familiarisent avec l'etude scientifique de l'enfant et avec la psychologie americaine appliquee en particulier. Buyse note ses impressions de voyage dans un carnet. Ce sont des gribouillis, parfois difficiles a dechiffrer, rediges sur des feuilles volantes reunies dans un classeur. Elles temoignent du choc culturel que la confrontation avec le pays du progres suscite en lui. Le jeune chercheur narre avec humour ses rencontres et dresse un portrait vivant d'illustres psychologues et pedagogues de cette epoque. Le texte est entrelace de petits dessins.