Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong
Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong | James W. Loewen
LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
ravenlee
Pickpick

This was a very enlightening read. There are parts of the text that were confusing because they didn‘t get an update from the 1993 original version, and I wish that more than just the introduction had been updated again in 2018 (although an update in the next couple years would be fantastic). My biggest complaint is that I feel like there should be recommended reading somewhere.

megnews I never quite finished this but I finished his other one, Lies Across America, which was very good too. Howard Zinn‘s People‘s History of the United States is good though I only got up to the Vietnam War in that. There‘s a series of that for young people too. I also love 3y
ravenlee Thanks @megnews . I think I have the Young People‘s History of the United States as an ebook, but I have to check. I‘m planning to read more of Loewen‘s books as soon as I can find them. My library doesn‘t have them but hoopla might. I‘m not familiar with Freedom, though, so I‘ll check that out, too. 3y
28 likes2 comments
quote
ravenlee
post image

Since the structural problem in the government has not gone away, it is likely that students will again, in their adult lived, face an out-of-control federal executive pursuing criminal clandestine foreign and domestic policies.... To the extent that their understanding of the government comes from their American history courses, students will be shocked by these events and unprepared to think about them.

Um, right on the money, Loewen.

35 likes2 stack adds
quote
ravenlee
post image

Discussing the US role in the Chilean coup against Allende: “...Kissinger openly says that the United States should not and will not respect the electoral process or sovereignty of another country if the results do not please us.”

Or, in light of recent events, even of our own country. 😳

blurb
Chrissyreadit
post image

Thank you Simon & Schuster. 4,000 people died in one day due to Covid. And a political coup was attempted that will be a super spreader event. I watched Hawley speak during the certification process and was disgusted by his role as a supposed leader in egging on the traitors who filled the Capitol.

Ericalambbrown I‘m so embarrassed this guy is my Senator. He‘s just awful. 3y
DAB 😲 That say a lot.
3y
ValerieAndBooks Agreed!! 3y
See All 14 Comments
Traci1 Totally agree. And this is in no way a free speech issue as some have said. You can't stop someone from speaking in a crowd, but you also aren't required to hand them a megaphone. 3y
Chrissyreadit @Traci1 exactly that. 3y
mrp27 If a baker is allowed to assert their freedom to choose who he bakes cakes for and why, a publisher can certainly assert their freedom to choose who they publish. (edited) 3y
GingerAntics I was so happy to see this. 3y
Cuilin This pleases me so much ❤️ 3y
KVanRead Great news! 3y
bookishdawg 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 3y
Books4Nicole Agreed! 3y
meganlynae He was on Twitter immediately after this statement was released, claiming a First Amendment violation. Every author I follow on Twitter was losing their minds at the idea that a refusal to publish was somehow a legal problem. So dumb. 3y
sprainedbrain This was a welcome piece of news! 3y
Caroline2 Good!! 👏 (but now waiting for all extremist republicans to start moaning about republicans being silenced! 🙄) 3y
109 likes1 stack add14 comments
review
Amie
post image
Pickpick

Pick with disclaimers. This is an important read with much content to think about and discuss, but even though I read the most recent edition - 2018 - much of the data is just too out of date (original written in 1995). I found one sentence that clearly had not been updated for 2018 (saying war of 1812 was almost 200 years ago), which made me uncertain about less specific references (this century, last century). But there is new, updated content.

CocoReads I think I have the original 1995 version somewhere at home. 3y
37 likes1 comment
review
effani
post image
Pickpick

I found this book riveting. Where it touches on matters that I know something about, I don't always agree with Loewen's conclusions, but one of his main points is that history isn't set in stone and reasonable people can disagree.

For all that it's 25 years old, this book is timely, especially the chapters on racism and antiracism. Highly recommended for Americans who haven't thought much about history since high school.

More blather below...

effani I'm convinced that history textbooks haven't significantly changed since the 90s, but I'm curious about how history teaching has changed. He talks about students who used the first edition of this book to heckle their teachers. Those students are now old enough to be teachers themselves, and the new generation of hecklers has the internet in their pockets. On the other hand, the rise of standardized testing makes it harder to teach creatively. 4y
effani Obviously the quality of teaching is way outside the scope of this book, but I'm really curious.

Anyway, this was my #BookSpin pick for this month. Thanks, @TheAromaofBooks! This is exactly what I want from #BookSpin - a book that I've wanted to reread for ages, but that never seemed to float to the top of my list.
4y
TheAromaofBooks Great review!!! 4y
25 likes2 stack adds3 comments
quote
effani

“Americans need to learn from the Wilson era, that there is a connection between racist presidential leadership and like-minded public response.“

This book was last revised in 2007 and, well, clearly we didn't learn this lesson from the Wilson era.

blurb
effani
post image

My #BookSpin book for this month is Lies My Teacher Told Me. This is a reread - I read it when I was in or just out of high school, and at the time my main takeaway was a sense of smugness that *I* knew some of these things that aren't typically taught. I'm excited to revisit it now that I'm older, less self-centered, and further removed from the educational system.

effani On the other hand, I may have played myself with regard to format. I'm not sure I can get a print copy from the library in time, and I definitely can't get a Kindle copy, so I'm stuck choosing between audiobook and Hoopla. I'm not sure I can really absorb it in audio, but Hoopla involves reading on my phone or tablet, both of which I hate - and I'm already reading one book on my tablet now. 4y
llcoolnate I've been putting this one off too long! 4y
25 likes3 stack adds2 comments
blurb
edimopoulos
post image

Finished but going back to re-read the Columbus chapter. What a monster. Great read -- gripping, horrifying accounts of history that strip away the white supremacist narrative superimposed on all our history textbooks.

violabrain Great book! I read it for the first time a few weeks back and it was unbelievably eye-opening! 4y
2 likes1 comment
review
Floresj
post image
Pickpick

I learned many falsehoods in this book based on the theme of total American exceptionalism that is taught in US History textbooks. Without the honesty of analyzing American policies, we get a history that‘s whitewashed, inaccurate, and boring. My one complaint is the author had an off-putting tone which, even though I agreed with his points, was hard to take after awhile.

Suet624 This man used to live in my very small neighborhood in Vermont. I felt the same way way back when. 4y
11 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
StaceGhost
post image
Pickpick

Note to self from gregcorbinspeaks on Instagram #blacklivesmatter

Scochrane26 I loved Lies my Teacher Told Me. I think it was the reason I started to read more NF about US history & other cultures. 4y
29 likes1 comment
blurb
megnews
post image

I was almost done reading this a few years ago when it became a casualty of overdue library books. I haven‘t finished it yet but what I read was excellent. I think it should be required reading with every high school American History course. It makes a case for not using textbooks to teach history at all but rather primary documents to get the truth and not the official press release of history.

#SummerSchool #Educational #Riotgrams #Bookstagram

tournevis The last chapter is, in fact, funny and perfect. I've used it in courses myself. Take it up again, if you can. I still laugh when I see a Champlain statue and think about how damned hot he would be dressed like that! 5y
marleed Omg, I recall reading my son‘s 5th grade social studies with him. His version of Christopher Columbus differed vastly than my Catholic school teaching nearly 30 years earlier. I‘m not sure if it was time or the public/private aspect but it was long ago history in either case and so so different. I still think about it. 5y
34 likes3 stack adds2 comments
blurb
MsLeah8417
post image

12 likes1 stack add