of Vermont Mississippi: Conflict and Change, not reviewed) draws the conclusion that little has changed since then. Loewen asserts that the muting of past clashes and tragedies makes history boring to students, especially groups excluded from the positive histories.Ī decade and a half ago, in America Revised, Frances FitzGerald demonstrated that widely used school textbooks presented simplistic, fatuous, and often inaccurate versions of American history. Rather than highlighting both the positives and negatives of historical figures, Loewen claims textbooks cause students to perceive these figures through a single lens. He proposes that when American history textbooks elevate American historical figures to the status of heroes, they unintentionally give students the impression that these figures are super-humans who live in the irretrievable past. He further criticizes the texts for a tendency to avoid controversy and for their \"bland\" and simplistic style. In Lies My Teacher Told Me, Loewen criticizes modern American high school history textbooks for containing incorrect information about people and events such as Christopher Columbus, the lies and inaccuracies in the history books regarding the dealings between the Europeans and the Native Americans, and their often deceptive and inaccurate teachings told about America's commerce in slavery.
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