Corporal Punishment

I love the film Kes (1969). It was still modern when I went to sec­ondary school, nearly ten years later  — some local author­ities were still trying to get it banned when I was teaching in the 90s, and it’s still modern now. This scene, where the poor mes­senger boy from the second form gets beaten seems really resonant.

They had CP at my school back then and I don’t believe it made any dif­fer­ence to anyone’s beha­viour. I don’t believe it did anyone any good. I remain unde­cided as to whether it did us any harm, but that’s a moot point, really. As the headteacher in the clip says, he’ll be beating them week after week with no evident impact. As the story goes, Ken Loach, who always uses impro­visa­tional tech­niques with his normally untrained actors, didn’t tell the boys that they’d be properly caned, hence their very real­istic reactions.

 

PS: I book­marked this link to the fant­ast­ic­ally funny football scene in Kes with the much-​​missed Brian Glover a few weeks ago.

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3 comments to Corporal Punishment

  • Aye — I remember it as some­thing that had only recently been dis­missed when I got to sec­ondary school. The idea and the folk memory in the play­ground made myths of it… it may not ave been policy, but the spectre of a beating still hung above ius in the 80s.

    Ugh. I think that the reality of CP was that it was often used to vent some teachers’ frus­tra­tions rather than as part of a measured, effective pro­gramme of discipline.

  • A friend of mine (Bernard Atha) appeared in Kes playing a teacher. It’s a great film.

  • Antony — In my case, most teachers deferred beatings to the senior man­age­ment. Some, however, used it as a way to increase their personal authority. One guy had a custom-​​made rubber slipper-​​shape for extra stingi­ness. Again, I’m not con­vinced that we were harmed. Kids are pretty springy and rebel­lious, and it’s possible we were more rebel­lious because these bastards were in charge.

    Stuart — can I touch you?

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