This article examines the Swedish debate on Bildung from the early nineteenth century to the present, treating Bildung as a fundamentally contested concept whose meanings have been repeatedly redefined. Drawing on books, scholarly journals, government reports, educational policy documents, and press materials, the study combines intellectual-historical contextualisation with a conceptual-historical approach. The analysis focuses on three periods in which debates on Bildung have been particularly…
Read moreThis article examines the Swedish debate on Bildung from the early nineteenth century to the present, treating Bildung as a fundamentally contested concept whose meanings have been repeatedly redefined. Drawing on books, scholarly journals, government reports, educational policy documents, and press materials, the study combines intellectual-historical contextualisation with a conceptual-historical approach. The analysis focuses on three periods in which debates on Bildung have been particularly intense in Sweden: the era of idealism and neo-humanism in the early nineteenth century; the period of social movements and national romanticism around the turn of the twentieth century; and the contemporary context shaped by neoliberalism and right-wing populism since the 1990s. Across these phases, Bildung has been mobilised by different social groups and political actors as an academic ideal, a civic and popular project, and a conservative or nationalistic programme. The article argues that, despite persistent disagreements over its meaning, Bildung has recurrently functioned in Sweden as a critical counter-concept to instrumental and utilitarian understandings of education, thereby reflecting broader European intellectual conflicts over culture, education, and politics.