“Lies My Teacher Told Me”

March 11, 2011 in American History, History, »

Lies My Teacher Told MeI just finished the book Lies My Teacher Told Me by James W. Loewen. This book is a bit of a “cult classic.” Although this was the first time I’d read it, I had heard it mentioned and cited numerous times over the years and have crossed it on feature tables and end caps in bookstores. I saw it for only $5 on the Kindle store and figured it was time to read it.

The base premise of the book is a scathing critique on modern high school American History textbooks. The author combs over the most popular and common text books (I believe 18 of them) used today and addresses all the things they say and don’t say that are incorrect, incomplete, or dramatically skewed. The overall premise is that this inaccurate and abridged version of history is contributing to a sea of ignorant citizens who know only a limited amount of history and are incapable of asking questions, making insightful sociological observations, or displaying critical thinking skills.

Although I was more than willing to accept the theoretical premise that the history we’re taught is biased and sometimes wrong, I also admit that I was a little nervous going in. There are two fatal directions a book like this can take: either being politically correct to the extreme of being inaccurate in the opposite way, or to be overly picky and so focused on minor details that the big picture becomes cloudy or forgotten. However, the book impressed me because it falls victim to neither of these, and the point it drives home is a serious one.

The book doesn’t simply create a shopping list of “facts that textbooks get wrong.” It walks us through a brief American history, stopping at points to focus on common misunderstandings and misrepresentations. Loewen points out what textbooks say by quoting them directly, discusses how and why they are wrong in those instances, and then makes best efforts to present the correct information. Lies never forgets to clarify why the truth is important and how students might benefit from knowing it is relevant to that particular topic, lest the reader lose sight of the “big picture.”

While Loewen does address many specific facts that are inaccurate or conflicting, what was more profound was the attitude more so than the information itself. The skew of much of the information is not a subtle slant; loaded adjectives, heavy with connotation, were more common than I expected. The things that are ignored, omitted and minimised are not minor issues — in some cases they are far more relevant to today’s students than some of the things covered in-depth which may hold only a minor importance but are “safer” topics.

Race and gender issues are rarely presented in high school history books, or addressed in the past tense as if they have been solved. Economic class and social stratification coverage was almost entirely missing from all the books, despite the fact that this is one of these most influential factors in political history and in modern society. Causes of these issues are simplified to the point of inaccuracy, if mentioned at all. History is a social science — to omit the critical role of these things in educational books is unforgivable. Not only was it not explained and the various causes or consequences not addressed, most of the books did not even reference their existence in their indexes and glossaries.

Historical events, particularly in foreign policy, that might make our country appear in a negative light are usually left out completely.  Most modern text books rarely address the times our country has aided or initiated coups or political assassinations, fixed foreign elections or covertly intervened in the affairs of other nations. The very rare times these types of things are mentioned, it is under the paintbrush of anti-communism or even altruism – even if, in reality, those factors had absolutely nothing to do with the reason for such interventions (to be fair: anti-communism was a motivator many times). Even if one believes all America’s interventions were ultimately the right things to do, it’s still shocking that we’re not even teaching students about them.  And to omit these events entirely because they may be interpreted negatively is certainly not good education. For a country as active in foreign affairs as ours, this is a dangerous approach.

Everyone knows that history is written by the victors, so we expect it to be biased. Most of our history-book heroes are white and middle-to-upper-class, all the stories are spun with a European bias, and the contributions from other cultures and class is minimised, if mentioned at all. Well, you might say, that’s who founded our country and influenced our government the most. But if we think about it for more than five seconds, this is absurd, especially in a country as diverse as this one. If it’s not adequately covering the history of blacks, American Indians, and other ethnic groups, and if its not addressing our working poor as well as the powerful upper class, it’s not really American history. And what does it say, subconsciously or blatantly, to those students who aren’t affluent WASPs when their history is unrepresented, inaccurate or absent entirely? How does that colour our perspective and mental framework for viewing social issues in the world today?

Lies makes the point that much of what our history books present are not so much real history but American cultural myth meant not to educate but instill patriotism. We exalt historical figures to hero status and exclude all mention of their flaws and mistakes. We whitewash, misrepresent and ignore critical events in our past regardless of their educational value and this often means neglecting very important information that would be both enlightening and relevant to modern students. These exaggerated, abstract figures and stories lose value to us. This makes history bland, uninteresting, and teaches students nothing of value in the real world.  The constantly positive spin on things is inappropriate and unnecessary.  Why can’t we be affirmative about our government and history by appreciating its strengths and its beauty while still acknowledging the mistakes we’ve made in the past and the changes we need to make in the future?

When American history is presented as a simple list of facts and dates and places to memorise, no discussion needed, it doesn’t teach the readers any critical thinking, to ask questions, to evaluate consequences and implications. Students do not gain an insightful understanding of the past and don’t develop the skills to accurately view today’s world as a result. No one enjoys this kind of sterile approach, not historians and certainly not students. Every high schooler knows they’re supposed to learn something from history to help them be better people, but most probably wonder how that occurs by knowing the dates of Revolutionary battles or who our 25th president was. These are not the things that encourage character growth or wisdom. Students know that, but they don’t know how it could be different.

All of these are the issues Lies seeks to address. Loewen is not saying we should revise history to be politically correct. He’s saying we should recognise the issues relevant to the American people today whether they are positive or negative, that we should get our facts right, and books should address critical issues of race, gender, and class. The goal is to end the whitewashed, one-dimensional, cultural fairytale and tell the real story of the issues, events and people that shaped our history. History is never black and white, so why do we make it that way? Not only does it become extremely boring, but it also becomes something we can no longer identify with, and hardly something we can learn from.

Despite what it sounds like by the critiques of missing information, Loewen’s critique of history books is not that they are too short.  In fact, Lies argues that the average history book is too long and filled with too many unimportant dates, people and details.  He argues that books need to be pared down the events, issues, people and topics that had a significant influence on history.  However, this must be paired with a thorough effort to teach students how to think critically, ask questions, and do their own research.  Students should learn to identify and discern between valid evidence and arguments and to formulate their own ideas.  If we can teach students to do this, it won’t really matter if their books are imperfect, because students will know how to judge them critically.  What’s more, this kind of approach makes history exciting and dynamic and has the seeds to make students actually passionate about events and issues that are important, influencing them to be thinking citizens who control their own education.  In other words, it is more important to teach our students how to learn then to try to teach them all the millions of things they should learn.

I want to end this by pointing out that although the book is written as a critique of those high school history books, it doesn’t just beat you up with all the things you were taught that were wrong. It is not an ad nauseum attack on your education, as I might have lead you to believe. Well, okay, it is that, too. It is also a very fascinating look at the real history of America. As Lies retells our past, many people and events come alive. You learn new things, build new appreciations and shape your own judgments. The book is interesting and reading it is a positive — not punishing — experience. You will feel a better person for reading it, not worse.

Buy the book on Amazon – Paperback / Kindle

Good Books: Science

March 8, 2011 in "PopSci", African-American Studies, Biography, Biological Science, Chemistry, Cognitive Science, Crime, History of Science, Medical Science, Science, Technology, »

There are a lot of great books that I’ve read in the past that I want to give a quick nod to. Eventually, I may go back and write a dedicated entry for any I re-read them. In the meantime, I feel I owe them a few words here:

The Poisoner’s Handbook by Deborah Blum

This one is about the advancement of forensic chemistry in the 1920s and the work of the two scientists who developed and honed the ability for detecting poisons in human bodies. It takes place in New York during Prohibition investigating deaths by poisons, toxic gases, radium, and illegal alcohols. It has lots of interesting science that is punctuated by murder-mystery cases with a “CSI” feel, which makes it very readable even for the layman.

This book on Amazon.com

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot

This book as gotten a lot of attention the last year, and with good reason. This book is an intersection of fascinating science with history and medical ethics. The book is about the famous HeLa cell line just as much as it is about the woman those cells came from, cells that killed her shortly after. It alternates between discussing the discoveries and advances of HeLa and how it spread to laboratories all over the world while making aggressive effort to put a face to those cells. Skloot worked heavily with the family to tell the story of woman who started it all, all the while addressing the important ethics question of patient rights, boundaries and consent.

This book on Amazon.com

Phantoms in the Brain : Probing the Mysteries of the Human Mind by VS Ramachandran

This book is, at its core, a book on the structure of the brain and its workings. However, it would be really selling it short to leave it at that. Ramachandran looks at particular neurological abnormalities and individuals who possess them and takes us on a journey, clearly illustrating what these conditions mean and what we can learn from them, what questions they may raise, and what implications that knowledge can have on cognitive science. Think of Oliver Sacks, but with more depth and scope. Some of the things you’ll find in this book feel revolutionary, and you can feel our knowledge of the brain advance with you as you turn the pages. Through it all, the patients are human, part of the story, not distant case-studies or a clinical collection of symptoms. Ramachandran has a gift, not just as a talented scientist who is able to able to connect pieces of knowledge into a larger truth, but also to explore those little pieces with great depth, but as a writer in telling us information that we not only find interesting but also information for which we can see its importance. This book is engaging and electrifying to read, the author just as excited as you are, and it feels through all of it as if a very fascinating person was speaking into your ear.

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Packing for Mars by Mary Roach

As you could probably figure out from the title, this is a book about space exploration… except, uh, from a unique angle. It focuses mostly on those basic kinds of things one might wonder about functioning long-term (as one would need to in a trip to Mars) in zero gravity: eating, bathing, pooping and space sex. It’s interesting and also very funny, a good quick read if you’re looking for a weekend book. Even the footnotes will make you laugh out loud.

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As a quick homage to another book by Roach, Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers is a really really enjoyable book looking all the useful things we do with dead people. This book was pretty popular when it first came out, I think, and for good reason. It’s one of my favourites. It is not only informative, but thoroughly hilarious.

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Mountains Beyond Mountains by Tracy Kidder

This book is about an internist, infectious disease specialist, and anthropologist named Paul Farmer, and his passionate work combating tuberculosis and providing medical care in places like Haiti, South America, and Rwanda (although his dedication to the cause takes him many other places, including the prisons of Russia). His tireless fight to provide adequate medical treatment to people who might not have otherwise received is an inspiring read, making this book a very good read for people interested in science but also people who want to hear about the good being done in the world.

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The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins

This book is an oldie but goodie, before Dawkins was the face of Neo-Darwinianism and simply a zoologist. To be sure, though, this is the book that started it all. It looks at how our genes have evolved with one need in mind: to propagate. Although Dawkins is considered a controversial figure, don’t shy away from the book because of it. The Selfish Gene is a solid source for information on biological evolution. It is great science reading even for the layman, breaking down complex topics and processes — like DNA, the origin of life, and evolution — into simple, understandable language with interesting examples.

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A Morning’s Work: Medical Photographs [...] by Stanley Burns

This is a medical photography book, full of both beautiful and haunting (sometimes at the same time) images from the Burns Archive. The book visually documents afflictions, injuries, and medical procedures from the turn of the century, with a description of what is shown for each in the back of the book. The pictures are very well done, artistically placed and often hand-coloured, and are quite stunning. The book handles the topic gracefully and never treats the patients disrespectfully.

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Rebel Code: Linux And The Open Source Revolution by Glyn Moody

This is book that falls under the technology subgenre, if you hadn’t figured out by the title. This is a very readable book on the history and development of the Free Software Foundation and Open Source movement, beginning at its early roots to the present. Unlike the title implies, the book is not limited to Linux and also discusses GNU, Perl, Apache, Netscape and other critical advances in the open source world. The book focuses on both the technology itself, but also the critical players (Stallman, Torvolds, Raymond, etc),and its implications on the software world, on business models, on technological advancement. Moody obviously did very meticulous research and also made a point to interview tons of big names and famous hackers in this very comprehensive, sometimes sympathetic and sometimes critical, book.

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All of these books have a well-deserved recommendation from me.

Good Books: History

February 5, 2011 in African-American Studies, American History, European History, History, Medical Science, Middle-Eastern History, Military / Warfare, Modern History, »

There are a lot of great books that I’ve read in the past that I want to give a quick nod to. Eventually, I may go back and write a dedicated entry for any I re-read them. In the meantime, I feel I owe them a few words here:

Triangle: The Fire That Changed America by David von Drehle

To say this book is simply about the infamous fire at the Triangle shirtwaist factory would be to sell it short. The book begins with the fire itself, covers the subsequent trials of the factory owners and, most critically, discusses how this one tragic event sparked the social changes and workplace safety reforms. The book paints a very detailed picture of 1911 New York City, physically, socially, politically and really makes you feel immersed in the story.

This book on Amazon.com

Frozen In Time by Owen Beattie

A great book about the famed Franklin Expedition, the British navel crew sent to scout the Northwest Passage for England in 1845, only to disappear (seemingly) without a trace. The mystery of why the best equipped ship of its time not only failed in their goals by didn’t make it home alive was answered years later, as the story of the expedition was pieced together from their graves, stories from the Inuit, and the things they left behind. The book covers it all, from start to finish.

This book on Amazon.com

Guns, Germs & Steel: The Fates of Human Societies by Jared Diamond

A very comprehensive look at human history and how societies developed. Diamond attempts to answer the question of why some societies came to dominate others and all the many factors at play that shaped the kind of civilisations and societies that make up our world today. Definitely the most thorough and interesting overview of the history of us one can find. It’s a large book but it’s hard to put down until you’ve finished it.

This book on Amazon.com

1491 by Charles Mann

There are very few books on the Americas before Columbus and there are even fewer good ones. This is a comprehensive and dynamic look at the societies and peoples that existed before the Europeans invaded and settled on North and South America. The book is absolutely wonderful and gives coverage and credit to great nations that are often overlooked in the history of victors. Everything you were taught in high school was wrong or radically incomplete and this book is the best effort I’ve seen to right those wrongs.

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The Worst Hard Time by Timothy Egan

This book is the sad story of the people affected by the dust bowl. It is unique in the fact that it talks about the people who chose to stay in the face of the black storms, destroyed landscapes and bitter poverty. Worst Hard Time looks both at the big picture and also the unique story of particular individuals who lived, worked, and died during this period.

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Medical Apartheid by Harriet Washington

The sub heading on this book is “The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to Present.” This book is a thorough coverage of a tragic topic, written by a Harvard medical ethicist. Everyone has heard of Tuskegee, but most of the other events discussed here will be new information to the average reader.

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Inside Deaf Culture by Padden & Humphries

This book is a short but very good overview of the history and development of Deaf culture America. It covers the history of ASL, the rise of Deaf clubs and theatres and the role of Deaf schools in forming the personal identity culturally Deaf people have today.

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Arab & Jew by David Shipler

This insightful book tries very hard to show a balanced look at the conflict between Palestine and Israel, through history to present. It addresses the history, the social and cultural circumstances and all the other relevant factors. It looks at how children are raised with indoctrination, how social and political factors can distort the situation and aggravate circumstances. This book triumphs above all others by showings the real faces on both sides of the line as genuine people and not just the “good” verses the “bad.” The text is not uncritical, but it tries very hard to be objective; Shipler judges mistakes, tragedies and evil events by the acts themselves and not simply right or wrong by the side that perpetuated them. Although profoundly frustrating and sad, the book does seem to give a glimmer of hope that there are people out there who are looking to make compromises and work together to end the nightmarish conflict.

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A Higher Form Of Killing by Harris & Paxman

This book is a chilling but fascinating look at the history of biological and chemical warfare from World War I to present. It looks at the history of their use and development and the science behind it. It also addresses recent developments and the scary directions warfare may be heading. It’s a short and very readable book.

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All of these books have a well-deserved recommendation from me.
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