Catherine Gidney. Tending the Student Body: Youth, Health, and the Modern University.
Lexier, Roberta
Catherine Gidney. Tending the Student Body: Youth, Health, and the
Modern University. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2015. 304 pp.
Photographs.
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In Canada, there is a relatively large body of scholarly work on
the history of universities and higher education. This literature covers
a variety of topics --institutional evolution, internal governance,
student movements, relations with governments and external forces,
etc.--and approaches these from a range of perspectives--faculty
members, students, administrators, and staff. Catherine Gidney's
well-written and interesting monograph makes a significant contribution
to this literature, as well as making important connections with the
scholarship in a number of different fields.
Tending the Student Body is a history of health services and
physical education programs at Canadian universities from the end of the
19th Century to the 1960s. In particular, Gidney examines the various
values and beliefs that led administrators to implement particular
policies and practices and how these evolved over time in response to
changing societal conceptions of the purpose of the university, the role
of health and physical activity, and definitions of masculinity and
femininity. Her monograph is divided into two main sections: the first
examines the creation and ideological underpinnings of student health
programs from the late nineteenth century until the 1940s, while the
second explores the expansion of these provisions from the 1930s to the
1960s and the larger changes that influenced this evolution. She argues
that, "the concern about study health led to the creation of new
sites through which administrators could exert their moral vision of the
university and shape the student body" (9); this moral vision was
concerned with developing students' character. Throughout the
monograph, she effectively explains the institutional changes occurring
at Canadian universities during this time and connects these to the
larger developments occurring in the fields of medicine, psychology, and
physical education.
One of the great strengths of this book is Gidney's in-depth
and nuanced examination of gender and its relationship to health
services and physical education provisions. Firstly, she explores the
role that evolving conceptions of masculinity and femininity had on the
various programs developed at Canadian universities and how these
differed for men and women. In attempting to build the character of
their students, which was defined in unique ways for men and women,
administrators implemented vastly different services for their students
based on gender. Secondly, Gidney examines the opportunities these
programs created for female administrators. She includes an entire
chapter on female health services and the occupational opportunities
this created for women employed by the university; female administrators
were charged with overseeing the unique programs created for their
female students and thus found new opportunities and a separate space
for themselves and their students. This is an enormous contribution to
the literature, as most histories of Canadian universities overlook the
existence of female administrators and fail to acknowledge the unique
spaces they could create within their institutions.
However, Gidney largely fails to explore the differences that
existed between universities throughout Canada and tells a story that
appears universal. While she provides evidence from a number of
different universities, her focus is largely on Victoria College at the
University of Toronto. This is apparently because of the availability of
archival sources, which limits the work of all historians. However, this
overlooks the importance of region, institutional culture, religion,
etc. to the emergence of programs designed to develop the moral
character of students. She states that, "Central Canadian and
denominational universities were more likely to have developed
compulsory physical training and medical examinations in tandem"
(34); however, this is only briefly mentioned in the conclusion of
Chapter 1 and only serves to highlight an important gap in the analysis
that would add greater complexity to the narrative being presented.
That said, Gidney does an excellent job connecting her discussion
of specific health services and physical education programs to the
larger societal developments occurring throughout the first half of the
twentieth century. She examines, for instance, changing conceptions of
the purpose of the university, which was once focused on developing the
moral character of its students but became engaged in the training of
professionals for participation in the labour market. This had a
tremendous effect, she argues, on the provision of services that were
largely aimed at the former purpose. Moreover, she locates her narrative
within the changing ideas, morals, and values that shaped the wider
Canadian society. This is particularly evident in her discussion of
gender and the evolving conceptions of masculinity and femininity that
influenced programs and services within universities. It is also
evident, though, in her discussion of "character" and the ways
this changed over the decades. Finally, she also makes a significant
contribution to scholarly work related to the history of medicine by
exploring the ways that administrators were influenced by shifting
notions of health, the rise of psychology as a field of study, and the
emergence of "experts" who eventually dictated the direction
of programs and services on university campuses. As this wider societal
context affected more than just higher education, Gidney's
exploration of these developments ensures that her book has a much wider
significance for scholars in a variety of different fields.
Overall, Tending the Student Body makes a significant contribution
to the scholarly literature. While its focus is on a relatively small
set of provisions within Canadian universities from the late nineteenth
century to the 1960s, Gidney effectively locates them within a much
larger context and offers a nuanced examination of wider developments in
Canadian society. Although greater analysis of the importance of local,
regional, and institutional culture might have added additional layers
of complexity, this monograph is nevertheless a key resource for
scholars in a variety of areas.
Roberta Lexier
Department of General Education, Mount Royal University