The Swedish physical education method has had a singular destiny in France. Originally created by the Swedish Per Henrik Ling (1776-1839), it first spread in France thanks to German doctors. From 1902, the Swedish method became the official method of the Ecole normale de gymnastique et d'escrime de Joinville. It caused serious dissension first within the army, between Georges Hébert, a naval officer attempting to spread his own method called `Méthode naturelle', and Emile Coste, a major at Joinville school who was a resolute supporter of Ling's method; then within Joinville school, where, from 1905, Georges Demeny, renowned physiologist, tried to impose his French method `Eclectique'. The three protagonists would use arguments focused on the rationality of the Swedish method to legitimize or criticize it. But this explicit stake based on the validity of the link between a scientific culture - anatomy and physiology - and a physical education method does not mask the implicit stake of real power.
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