Yep. Less My Teacher Told Me is solid.
If by "solid" you mean "full of shit", yeah, it's solid. It's garbage, unverified alternative history, just towards a more liberal bent than a lot of conservative American teachings.
Yep. Less My Teacher Told Me is solid.
Children aren't stupid and giving a more objective light to history and thinking about its losers would benefit US children. For example current US societal treatment of minorities, Blacks in particular, is completely shaped by slavery and history.I don't have a problem with giving history a more objective perspective and talking more about the actual problems that were created. But do kids see grey instead of just black and white? Even if the top 20% of them are smart enough to understand, what about the bottom 80%? If all they take away is that "America is evil" is that good for society as a whole? I honestly don't know. I was taught a more nuanced version of American history but that was in University.
Yep now we are at the top and have established a global capitalist economy that will permanently subjugate the world's nations, don't want anyone getting any ideas.Are you honestly trying to justify imperialism?
Imperialism is a thing that happened and we can't change that. But criticizing it through proper history lessons is a way to learn from the mistakes of our ancestors. We don't teach history for the sake of it, we teach it in hopes of not repeating it.
Given the current state of things in this nation, this one really shook me. I never learned about that stuff in school, only through GAF threads and books that I read about the fact. Its an utterly chilling and disturbing part of this countrys history and If you told 95% of people about it, they would think youre lying or being unamerican or something. Because the idea of American being so fervently pro-eugenics and having such a strong blatant pro-Nazi element (well maybe not so shocking anymore) is so opposite what were taught, and our parents and their parents have had ingrained in them for years.What if America never participated in eugenics? What if America was always staunchly anti-fascist and anti-Nazi?
He's not saying parents are teaching history, but that them talking about it and downplaying what happened influences kids as well.
I somehow forgot to write a sentence about the kids of migrants where parents romantize with the country of there ancestors.
Hence, that's why I find it important that history should be treated scholarly.
Kids are impressionable and things they learn then stick with them.
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It's also important to understand that teaching history changes all the time, because values, trends, fears and likes changes. WW2, like slavery, colonialism and so on, will not be covered like this in a hundred years. Every new major period changes how history is written, taught and delivered, and the bias of people have a lot to say.
Particularly now, we're in a age of being sensitive to uncomfortable truths.
Particularly in the sciences. Problems teaching biology that asks uncomfortable questions of a sexist nature is particularly a no-go. But attitudes will change. There will be a counter reaction in the future where the pendulum will go the other way, and that will change how literature is covered and conveyed.
My friend who is a historian told me that, one of the largest and most complicated aspects of understanding history, is to separate yourself and your own values from the story. You spend most of your time, not trying to understand people of history and judge them through our current values.
If you read about a historical figure like Benjamin Franklin (or whoever) and your conclusion is that they are a major racist and a bigot- You've stopped trying to understand history and reduced it to making your own op-ed. You've failed to understand, and examine how Franklin would have been perceived in his time. That's what makes history really, really difficult. Because you need an almost inhumane level of emotional dissonance to truly get into the bone of something without diluting it with what you want to get out of it.
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what grade you teach?
Along similar lines I really enjoyed the novel 'Lies My Teacher Told Me'
My friend who is a historian told me that, one of the largest and most complicated aspects of understanding history, is to separate yourself and your own values from the story. You spend most of your time, not trying to understand people of history and judge them through our current values.
If you read about a historical figure like Benjamin Franklin (or whoever) and your conclusion is that they are a major racist and a bigot- You've stopped trying to understand history and reduced it to making your own op-ed. You've failed to understand, and examine how Franklin would have been perceived in his time. That's what makes history really, really difficult. Because you need an almost inhumane level of emotional dissonance to truly get into the bone of something without diluting it with what you want to get out of it.
The old saying "history is written by the victor has always been true". If you go to China, Japan, Turkey, whatever- You see the same thing. A refusal to admit to their dark past. When you think you live in the greatest society on earth it tends to play tricks on you. Ego gets caught in the door, and negativity on the nation through the eyes of a patriot is an attack on the person itself.
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It's also important to understand that teaching history changes all the time, because values, trends, fears and likes changes. WW2, like slavery, colonialism and so on, will not be covered like this in a hundred years. Every new major period changes how history is written, taught and delivered, and the bias of people have a lot to say.
Particularly now, we're in a age of being sensitive to uncomfortable truths.
Particularly in the sciences. Problems teaching biology that asks uncomfortable questions of a sexist nature is particularly a no-go. But attitudes will change. There will be a counter reaction in the future where the pendulum will go the other way, and that will change how literature is covered and conveyed.
My friend who is a historian told me that, one of the largest and most complicated aspects of understanding history, is to separate yourself and your own values from the story. You spend most of your time, not trying to understand people of history and judge them through our current values.
If you read about a historical figure like Benjamin Franklin (or whoever) and your conclusion is that they are a major racist and a bigot- You've stopped trying to understand history and reduced it to making your own op-ed. You've failed to understand, and examine how Franklin would have been perceived in his time. That's what makes history really, really difficult. Because you need an almost inhumane level of emotional dissonance to truly get into the bone of something without diluting it with what you want to get out of it.
History- His Story. It's written recorded history, not the actual story of what happened. Everyone who looses, everyone who got caught off, often didn't get to read their version of events. So the story you have is relayed to you from those who were powerful enough to shout it loudest, and through most venues. And then it takes a life of its.
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One of the issues with the counter arguments here is that in the case of the civil war, the losers got to write their own version of history in a lot of places, which is a fucking disaster. We'd be a lot better off if the government had forced the south to stop being complete shitbags in their history books.
Well, theres a pretty big difference between the losers who were fighting to maintain slavery, and, for example, the nature of manifest destiny and Native American genocide and the losers in that conflictOne of the issues with the counter arguments here is that in the case of the civil war, the losers got to write their own version of history in a lot of places, which is a fucking disaster. We'd be a lot better off if the government had forced the south to stop being complete shitbags in their history books.
Good on you for fighting the good fight. That parent was fucking crazy for saying that btw holy shitI teach 7th grade. The past year and a half have been brutal in terms of the attitude kids and parents have. I got the district to allow me to teach The Breadwinner. I teach some fundamental history of Islam with it and use articles about the racism and prejudice Muslims face in America. I also use The Watsons go to Birmingham1963 and do a research project on the Civil Rights movement.
Last year I had a parent complain that Im radical and racist against white people. She suggested I read more uplifting books like Anne Frank. I literally spit when she said it.
the nature of manifest destiny and Native American genocide and the losers in that conflict
Great points all around. I find it increasingly difficult to discuss history with others in context and not through the modern lens.
It is not like historians are being actively suppressed and censored.
Well, theres a pretty big difference between the losers who were fighting to maintain slavery, and, for example, the nature of manifest destiny and Native American genocide and the losers in that conflict
Eh, iirc that was basically "white people are totally evil, guys, especially Americans (pay no attention to all the heinous atrocities committed by non-Europeans though)." I remember thinking it didn't really live up to the promise indicated by the title.
It's hard to come up with truly innovating stuff nowadays. What matters is that you add your own twist to it. I'm sure it'll turn out worthwhile.
Are you fucking serious, right now? Did you really just compare genocide, rape, slavery, and invasion to a natural bodily function?
Any Mexicans here - do we have a similar thing? Denying history and stuff? Because when I read about this, or Japan, it just feels unbelievable to me. I'm pretty sure Mexicans are aware that Mexico was built on top of the corpse of prehispanic cultures, we know why even indigenous people are Catholics, every year we repeat that we'll never forget 1968, etc.
But maybe I'm missing something obvious?
Why create more tension and division in an already divided and tense society? What is gained from it? We need to get kids to think about the future and focus their efforts towards that. Getting more people hung up on the past helps no one.
Of course, but neither history textbooks nor the ingrained narrative of the past are written by historians, which is what I thought we were talking about in how such beliefs and perceptions persist and are taughtHow many historians exactly do you think are blind to this? The issue isn't history and historians. It's the popular imagining of the past.
The "Lost Cause" isn't an argument for history being poorly done. It's an argument against people dismissing actual history in favor of believing whatever they want to believe because of the relative lack of legitimacy that historians are given over their field.
Isn't a lot of the tension from one side being ignorant to America's history and thinking everything is fine and you should stand up for the anthem and respect the country. And the other side who feels the reality of America not being fair to people. I would think that most of this division comes from the American school system has swept its history under the rug.
Of course, but neither history textbooks nor the ingrained narrative of the past are written by historians, which is what I thought we were talking about in how such beliefs and perceptions persist and are taught
Kids are totally able to get nuance.
There's no need to pretend america, the consitution or the founding fathers were perfect. You can convey that without demonising the country.
People (and kids) being aware of the history of slavery and native amercians in the US will not make America a more divided nation. If anything, more understanding helps unity.
Blaming the American school system for it's populace's poor understanding of the past seems like taking the easy way out. America's historians more than those of any other developed country have a legitimacy crisis. Until we rectify that, and other cultural issues, we won't make any progress on this front.
Don't the school systems get their information from the historians.
The point I was trying to make is that there is a very large portion (if not the majority) of America thinks that nothing is wrong with the country and tries to downplay its sins. That seems to cause conflict with the other populace who doesn't.
As a historian myself, there is an issue here with insisting that history not be viewed through a "modern lens."Great points all around. I find it increasingly difficult to discuss history with others in context and not through the modern lens.
In a perfect world, sure, history would 100% be objectively viewed because we all 100% understand everything about everything and everyone would be able to politely discuss and agree on the fine points of what our history is and what it means to us. In a perfect world, we wouldn't have books like Lies My Teacher Told Me to document deficiencies in our text books or books like History on Trial to document the struggles historians go through with the government to even work out the standards for text books, because history would be an easier clean cut subject that is just as simple to explain as math.
But this isn't a perfect world, and history can't be removed from the modern lens, or any additional lenses period. You can go into a primary source and start interpreting it with the intention of being 100% objective and trying to view it only "in context", and you're still ultimately going to be injecting your own biases in the end because your own background, your education, your politics, your methodology, and so on are all going to uniquely inform how you process that information and how you choose to repeat it to others. Your modern understanding, be it good or bad, is going to be a part of how you view and discuss history, regardless of whether you want it to or not. Even the very decision to try and "objectively" discuss/interpret history just "in context" is itself a bias that is going to skew the way you see things, because you are having to arbitrarily establish the lines of what that context actually is. And establishing where that line of "context" lies is very important in the end to how you and others view historical events.
It's easy to claim that anti-colonialism/anti-imperialism is a "modern" lens and that society was "fine" with it, but that ignores that we had people fighting and writing against colonialism and imperialism the whole time.
It's easy to claim that slavery was the "norm" for the world leading into the American Civil War, but that ignores how slavery was always a complicated issue for society, both in modern and pre-modern times.
It's easy to claim that our revered historical figures were monolithic entities that were fine in the context of their time and that we are only just now revisiting them with a more critical lens, but then that ignores the voices of dissent at the time who may have been speaking out against those figures or resisting them in other ways.
Now, yes, it is possible to limit that modern interpretation of history as much as you can. That said, history doesn't need to be about and absolutely shouldn't be about a pure 100% objective regurgitation of the facts. That modern lens is what lets us grow and understand when we should reconsider how we engage with certain parts of our past. It's also important for letting us understand how our views of the past before may have been biased by certain circumstances.
tl;dr Keeping the historical context in mind is important, but we are injecting biases no matter what and it important to always reevaluate how we interpret and present history because of that.
Eh, iirc that was basically "white people are totally evil, guys, especially Americans (pay no attention to all the heinous atrocities committed by non-Europeans though)." I remember thinking it didn't really live up to the promise indicated by the title.
Admittedly, it's more my poor wording here.This is rather odd, I don't come across too many historians suggesting this, especially the bolded.
I agree.(as a total aside math is not nearly as simply and clear cut as people tend to assume)
Again, agreed. I'm not trying to say that we should never attempt to be objective, just that we should understand that there will always be limits to how objective we can be.While this is all true it sounds a bit negative to me. I feel like when I see things like this it's based on a misinterpretation of Skinner. There is no objective history as you say, but attempting to look at it in a more objective way. Can, and often is, useful.
And this is also an important consideration with how we do deal those points, but my point still stands in that the context of that subject is a little more complicated.Kinda true, but as a historian we should be both critical of the stability of both words, especially colonialism but of course they weren't using the word Imperial in a way recognizable to anyone who isn't a historian of the period before the 19th century, and careful of what we mean when we say things like "fighting and writing against" these topics. There have been problems with it, but, especially in the context of what your replying to, this runs the danger of anachronistically assuming that their complaints were similar enough to ours for these people to be our historical stand ins.
I completely agree here. Injecting our own morals is definitely a danger we approach when we reevaluate historical events and figures, and it's something we have to always keep ourselves aware of when we do go about that.And here's the rub that I constantly come across. The fact that biases are inevitable doesn't justify anacrhoniostic moralizing. Historians should be trying to understand the past on its own terms as best we can. We can do other things in addition to this, but moralizing the best for its own sake seems like a useless endeavor.
To use a similar example from my own field. Cromwell is what he is. He did horrible things that we should never be repeating. That kind of moralizing is good, at some level that might be the very point of our craft. What is less useful is framing our understandings of him around some understanding of good or evil that we essentialize to the person. This is bad enough to do with people that are currently alive, it's even less meaningful with the dead.
At some level Cromwell legitimately struggled with his actions and thought deeply with what the right thing was. I have no qualms with saying he was wrong, I do have qualms with people focusing their understanding of him on some idea that he was bad. To nuance this further I also have no qualms with those that ask that we take down monuments to him and be careful in our instruction of the figure to primary and secondary students, because these things have a social value in the here and now that is actually removed from the historians work.
Eh, iirc that was basically "white people are totally evil, guys, especially Americans (pay no attention to all the heinous atrocities committed by non-Europeans though)." I remember thinking it didn't really live up to the promise indicated by the title.
What kind of history books did you guys have in school? All my history classes clearly talked about every bad terrible event and why. Chapters on chapters of war, genocide, massacres, history is bloody and we read about it.
I took AP history in high school.. I'm sure there were many things that were glossed over, but I do specifically remember a teacher who talked about the estimated population of Native Americans before colonization, and how ~90% of them died, something that really stuck with me.
That's not a great hypothetical considering that our technology hasn't gotten to the point where something like that is sustainable. What you wrote before was actually a much better example:
Even now, we know that that supporting those conditions are horrible, and yet we do so anyway. Businesses could pay people halfway decent wages, but they don't because they want to make as much money as possible, and we don't care because we want the things we buy to be as affordable as possible.
We know it's wrong, and we don't care. Future generations would be absolutely right to say that we were bad people, because we are.
Um, you realize that the lies our teachers taught us were largely about the greatness, bravery and purity of white men?
So that's why a book titled "lies my teacher taught me" would focus on the actions of white men, right?
Really, exactly what lies were we as American students taught about the atrocities committed by non-europeans that were twisted into acts of virtue?
Fucking none, right? So obviously a book called "lies my teacher taught me" wouldn't be about non-europeans at all, since we barely learn the history of anyone but europeans
like, cmon. It's not that hard to think it through
The only thing that feels like alternate history so far is this thread discussion itself. From my earliest memories of school, we learned about the barbarity of the conquistadors, the inhumanity of the 3/5 rule and later the Dred Scott decision, the trail of tears, the social cost of the first industrial revolution and how the military was used to suppress laborers during the second. I remember teachers setting aside entire classes to debate the ethics of the use of nuclear weapons in World War II.
Later in college, I started picking up on a lot of the things my school had left out. Like how the Mesoamericans did things to their own people that were far more horrific than anything any European ever did to them. My public school taught us about the Scopes trial but they never told us that Gregor Mendel was a Catholic priest. And we were told people in Columbus' time thought the earth was flat and the Pope burned anyone who said otherwise at the stake, despite the fact that the clergy of the Middle Ages not only knew the earth was round but could give you a close estimation of its circumference as well. By the time my professor told me that was nativist anti-Catholic propaganda, I was no longer surprised.
Public education is local and indoctrination cuts both ways.
Kids are impressionable and things they learn then stick with them.
Like the poster above me said, you are supposed to look at history thru the eyes of the people who lived it, and leave your own biases and opinions at the door. Telling the kids the Founding Fathers are evil because they owned slaves for example. Kids are not sophisticated enough to understand that didn't make them bad people.
Painting America as an evil empire are the divisions I am worried about. Like I said, kids aren't mature enough to understand grey areas and I would rather have their opinions be skewed positively than negatively. The ones that are curious and interested in a more accurate representation will learn about it in University or on their own. It is not like historians are being actively suppressed and censored.
I'd say it's easier now than every before with the varied large scale theoretical frameworks set up and the interdisciplinary nature of the field at the present.
Get off your high horse. That book was a biased piece of crap.
We clearly didn't have the same teachers. Maybe elementary school teachers didn't go too deep on that stuff, but in higher grades, absolutely. Basically the below (and the posts he was quoting):
Sure, there's material much to work with, but you will inevitably end up borrowing a large amount of other people's ideas to form your own. The poster seemed disappointed that the argument of his thesis has been made already, but my point is that doesn't stop him from building on it with new ideas.
This. The centrists/moderates of our time who purport to be social do-gooders have a blind spot for their own consumer-centric comforts (i.e., the latest annual iPhone or other non-essential bullshit they don't really need on the cheap) at the expense of fair wages, acceptable working conditions, and mitigating detrimental environmental externalities. They'd rather just NIMBY it out of their purview and pretend it doesn't exist. They also like to use the, "but it elevated so many out of poverty!" line, while their ilk benefited by far the most, consolidating global wealth and power, by skimming off the top by selling out workers across the globe.
Fuck these people and their convenient arm chair excuses.
But for you to sit here and act like a book called "lies my teacher taught me" should focus on other cultures that weren't taught at all.... wtf?
I took AP history in high school.. I'm sure there were many things that were glossed over, but I do specifically remember a teacher who talked about the estimated population of Native Americans before colonization, and how ~90% of them died, something that really stuck with me.
Later in college, I started picking up on a lot of the things my school had left out. Like how the Mesoamericans did things to their own people that were far more horrific than anything any European ever did to them. My public school taught us about the Scopes trial but they never told us that Gregor Mendel was a Catholic priest. And we were told people in Columbus' time thought the earth was flat and the Pope burned anyone who said otherwise at the stake, despite the fact that the clergy of the Middle Ages not only knew the earth was round but could give you a close estimation of its circumference as well. By the time my professor told me that was nativist anti-Catholic propaganda, I was no longer surprised.
Public education is local and indoctrination cuts both ways.