Watched Charlie Wilson's War last night.
Got furious, again, over the state of history education in this country.
Maybe somewhere in the U.S., there are schools that do a decent job teaching history. God knows I didn't go to one of them, and neither did anybody I've ever talked to about this. We never seemed to make it past the Civil War; even in junior high, when U.S. history was split over two years, the first one ending with the Civil War and Reconstruction, we still didn't get through the twentieth century. Why? Because we started the second year by recapping . . . the Civil War and Reconstruction. And then got bogged down reading All Quiet on the Western Front. I know nothing about the Korean War. (Except that I think technically I'm supposed to call it the Korean Conflict.) What I know about Vietnam, I got from movies. Ditto WWII, mostly. And when it comes to things like Afghanistan (the subject of Charlie Wilson's War) or our involvement in Iran, there are whole oceans of historical incident I'm ignorant of.
Historical incident that is very goddamned relevant right now. How many people in the U.S. -- especially those under the age of 30 -- understand the ways in which our problems in Afghanistan are of our own creation? We wanted to stop the Soviets, so we poured weapons and support into the hands of the Afghans, and then wandered off as soon as the commies went away. What's worse than rampant interventionism? Half-assed interventionism. But thank God we've learned our les -- oh, wait.
You can't learn from history if you never learned it in the first place, people.
I want the history textbook I never got. I want a single-volume overview of United States history, 1900-1999, that will tell me the basics about the KoreanWar Conflict and Vietnam, about Afghanistan and Iran and Iran-Contra and the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban Missile Crisis, about all those things that were kind of important to U.S. policy and foreign relations that might be tripping us up today, and most especially about the ones I've never even heard of and so can't list here. Bonus points if it has colorful pictures and informative sidebars and maybe a brief quiz at the end of each chapter, because when it comes to this stuff, I'm about at a junior-high level of comprehension.
I don't even know if that book exists. If it does, I don't have time to read it anyway, because the downside of writing the Onyx Court series is that most of my nonfiction reading is about Britain. But I can always buy it and hold onto it until the next time I hear about some war I never even knew we fought, and then maybe I'll drop everything for a few days and learn about my own country.
Got furious, again, over the state of history education in this country.
Maybe somewhere in the U.S., there are schools that do a decent job teaching history. God knows I didn't go to one of them, and neither did anybody I've ever talked to about this. We never seemed to make it past the Civil War; even in junior high, when U.S. history was split over two years, the first one ending with the Civil War and Reconstruction, we still didn't get through the twentieth century. Why? Because we started the second year by recapping . . . the Civil War and Reconstruction. And then got bogged down reading All Quiet on the Western Front. I know nothing about the Korean War. (Except that I think technically I'm supposed to call it the Korean Conflict.) What I know about Vietnam, I got from movies. Ditto WWII, mostly. And when it comes to things like Afghanistan (the subject of Charlie Wilson's War) or our involvement in Iran, there are whole oceans of historical incident I'm ignorant of.
Historical incident that is very goddamned relevant right now. How many people in the U.S. -- especially those under the age of 30 -- understand the ways in which our problems in Afghanistan are of our own creation? We wanted to stop the Soviets, so we poured weapons and support into the hands of the Afghans, and then wandered off as soon as the commies went away. What's worse than rampant interventionism? Half-assed interventionism. But thank God we've learned our les -- oh, wait.
You can't learn from history if you never learned it in the first place, people.
I want the history textbook I never got. I want a single-volume overview of United States history, 1900-1999, that will tell me the basics about the Korean
I don't even know if that book exists. If it does, I don't have time to read it anyway, because the downside of writing the Onyx Court series is that most of my nonfiction reading is about Britain. But I can always buy it and hold onto it until the next time I hear about some war I never even knew we fought, and then maybe I'll drop everything for a few days and learn about my own country.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 08:19 pm (UTC)I read Charlie Wilson's War about a year before the movie came out... just incredible.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 08:33 pm (UTC)I'm told the book of CWW is even more amazing than the movie, being as how it can include a lot more information. But even the movie was profoundly eye-opening.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 08:28 pm (UTC)I think that's a load of bullshit. I've talked to my parents, teachers and older friends about the history between 1960-1990 (I was born in '81, and don't remember much about the early 80s) and had ONE teacher in High School give us a partial history of this time. Through music. Cop out.
I was also the person who raised my hand in Sociology 101 and asked why so many people feared the Communists in the 60s and 70s. He had a good answer: The Commies were like the Borg, and people feared a loss of individuality. It took me until College to learn that!
no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 08:31 pm (UTC)Screw impartiality: even a biased view would give me a better starting point than pure ignorance does. Because then I would know the stuff happened, and could choose to go learn more about it.
Did your music route involve "We Didn't Start the Fire"? Because that's what my history teacher did in the last six weeks of our freshman year.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 05:11 am (UTC)Now, I know by March of my high school history class we were into WWI. I don't remember much after that, not a fault of the class, but rather of personal tragedy I was going through. But I think I remember seeing Reagan on a test at some point. However, our teacher still had us sit down and listen to "We Didn't Start the Fire" as a way of introducing us to the last few weeks of the class.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 08:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 08:31 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 08:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 08:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 08:40 pm (UTC)Which brings me to a question to subscribers outside the US. How were YOU taught history? Did they gloss over certain events, stop at a certain period, or continue to the present day?
no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 08:55 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 08:59 pm (UTC)I also kind of want a history of the United States that takes a local perspective from the start. In other words, one that views the arrival of Europeans from the perspective of the Native Americans, in much the same way that we might present, say, the Irish immigration of the nineteenth century as seen by the people already here. 1491 is the closest I've found to that.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 09:15 pm (UTC)I've been kicking around the idea of open source textbooks to get around the Texas problem, and I've heard rumors that California may go to something like that (but not as open as I'd prefer) for the other reason I want to do them; currently a 4th grade math textbook costs $75-100 which is ridiculous.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 10:23 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2009-08-18 03:23 pm (UTC) - Expandno subject
Date: 2009-08-12 09:15 pm (UTC)Even the best of my teachers, the one who had me reading things like Citizen Hearst, and held in-class debates on the causes and cures of the Depression, didn't do what I would in retrospect I would call a bang-up job of relating those events to anything more contemporary.
Though I do sometimes wonder if I am the only person my age who wonders what the hell the investors were thinking every time I hear about on-margin purchases of complex bearer instruments and short positions. I don't care what you're buying. On margin? Really? Didn't we learn about how well that worked in 1929?
no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 10:23 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 09:52 pm (UTC)As a Canuck, I suffered through the same thing. Literarlly. I had an American teaching Canadian history and all I ever remember about it is the Revolutionary War, or the Civil War, being really important . . . to Canada? (OK, they were, very important, but my nation has a rather unique though linked history to the US, and it would have been cool to learn about that).
I don't think you'll find a good one volume history that is readable on each one of these weight strategic topics in US history. However, the best one volume guide to world conflict since 1945 is Patrick Brogan's The Fighting Never Stopped. It covers each major region around the globe, breaking it down into countries. It is a little out of date (1988), and not as in depth as a treatise on any one of the subjects, but it's a quick and dirty guide that is better than most of the other quick and dirty guides to such topics. I can probably give you a list of books for each topic, if you're really keen (Cuban Missile Crisis, Korean War, US foreign policy in the Cold War, etc), though I am not a US specialist by any means (especially what you folks did in South America. Outside of the drug war, I don't know beans).
JSR
JSR
no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 10:13 pm (UTC)also: http://www.deadtroll.com/index2.html?/1812/index.html~content
less than informative, but entertaining.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 10:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 10:35 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 10:39 pm (UTC)And I suspect that the rest of the world's history, even when it intersects with our own, is always going to live in elective limbo for anyone who's not some form of history or poli-sci major.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-12 11:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 01:12 am (UTC)My default history classes seemed to be Mesopotamia to WWI, or maybe II, over and over again. A bonus class would start with Mohendo-Jaro and Harappa instead. This was up through 8th grade; I jumped the gun and took AP European, then AP US, in high school. I'd say we covered the 60s pretty well, except I'm not certain if that was AP US or Academic Decathlon. Think it was AP US, though. Had a "current events" class in 7th or 8th grade, too. I got to surprise my teacher with the little Libertarian political quiz; he came out libertarian.
I'm tempted to say your "all in one" book is Howard Zinn's People's History of the United States. Though Joy Hakim has a supposedly good series of US history books for kids, with snippets of primary sources and good perspective.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 05:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 02:04 am (UTC)I had my first good history teacher just this winter, for modern European history (which included a great deal of U.S. history as well). We went up to the present, into the debate about Turkey joining the EU. We learned SO MUCH in his class.
Sadly, because it was only 10 weeks long, I did not have time to learn ENOUGH from this wonderful professor, and I am just as ignorant as the next person about all of the aforementioned wars/crises/insanity. Though I do know about Vietnam, mostly from my hippy father, and my awesome high school English teacher who did a whole unit on it.
At any rate: history is awesome and should be taught awesomely, and hardly ever is.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 06:00 am (UTC)<hates you> :-)
no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 02:10 am (UTC)The more I follow this thread, the more I fear Mike Judge's 'Idiocracy' will come to pass.
Really sad...
no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 06:01 am (UTC)I fear it's succeeding.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 07:51 am (UTC)So that I should be aware that Imperialism never sleeps!
Thanks to the insomniac Imperialism the history of the 20th century was covered widely (even if edited shamelessly to fit the Soviet view to history) first in the basic school course and then, in more detail and citing relevant parts from works of the classics of Marxism-Leninism, again during the high school.
Sometimes I wonder - was there less bullying in our high school than it seems to happen in USA because we had more homework and so less time left to bully the undesirables?
no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 08:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 12:50 pm (UTC)But my grandmother tells me all the time about how they started changing the textbooks and pulling things out. And there are things she remembers as a young black woman that never made it in! Like the cities that African Americans used to make until that got broken up.
But the best bet I can give you is to purchase books written IN the time period. The best way to cover your own mistakes is to never publish them. Propaganda by omission. I learned early on not to count on school to teach me anything. My main classroom was library and life.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 08:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 01:07 pm (UTC)I still don't remember anything about the Korean War, except for something about Macarthur disobeying the president.
Alas, I have no idea what textbook we used. That's because our teacher mostly taught us with her own (highly entertaining) lectures, and I don't know if we even opened the textbook. Still the best history education I've ever gotten.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 08:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 08:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-13 08:06 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2009-09-08 10:29 am (UTC)In particular, it's kind of cool because it doesn't focus on historical "episodes." Sure, there are plenty of anecdotes, but Hobsbawm is much better at saying "this is how it started, this is how it ended, this is why" - so more about how the USSR's socialist system brought down the country and less about the specific actions of Gorbachev that did. So it's much less of a list of trivia than many other history books.
no subject
Date: 2009-09-10 09:54 pm (UTC)