In 1974, to mark The Edinburgh Academy's 150th anniversary, alumnus Magnus Magnusson released The Clacken and the Slate, a book which painted a vivid picture of a leading educational establishment, not only in Scotland but in the UK. This bold new history, released in the school's 200th year, revisits and expands upon Magnusson's account to tell a more far-reaching, more complex story.
It is a tale of dramatic change, a tale of many endings: of corporal punishment, of boarding, of the English exam system. Beginnings, too, have been momentous: co-education, pastoral and curricular revolutions, life-changing 100% bursaries. Arguably, the developments of the last fifty years have outweighed in significance the many changes of the first 150. It's a story of light, but also of shade. Written at a time of intense public scrutiny about the school's past, this book takes a hard and open look at an institution that has too often buried its secrets. Its pages give voice to the many experiences of its past pupils, from those enhanced to those diminished by it.
But more than anything, what becomes clear is just how hard it is to put The Edinburgh Academy into a box. From its foundation in 1824 until today, this iconic school at the heart of Scotland's capital remains indefinable. After 200 years, that indefinability is now the school's superpower. Read this book to understand why.
About the Author :
Richard McLauchlan was educated at The Edinburgh Academy between 1992 and 2005. After the universities of St Andrews and Cambridge, and a stint playing his bagpipes in Cologne, he co-founded the educational charity, Light Up Learning. He has written on the poet R. S. Thomas in Saturday's Silence and on the extraordinary Haldanes of Cloan in Serious Minds. Richard also collaborated with John Campbell on the biography Haldane, a Sunday Times 'Book of the Year'.