we coverd most of those things as well
Apsalar Shadowdancer Send a noteboard - 06/02/2010 08:08:22 PM
The Trail of Tears, of course, was just one episode in a sustained Westward Expansion policy that inevitably saw Indians slaughtered, pushed off their lands, infected with diseases, hooked on alcohol and marginalised. When I was in school, we discussed that, as well as the internment of Japanese Americans in World War II, the civil rights movement and a whole host of other events in US History where a lot of people should not be proud of what they did to their fellow Americans.
I'm just saying that in my school the Genocide of the Jews in WWII got like 2-3 weeks of coverage, while the American Genocide of Native Americans is really glossed over. They talk about stealing their land and moving them into Reservations, but they never really go into how many of them were killed. It was a genocide worse than the holocaust.
I think this gets to me mostly because I have some Native American friends, and have done some charity work in Reservations such as the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. That is a terrible place, a third world country right inside America.
Edit: spelling and grammar
This message last edited by Apsalar Shadowdancer on 06/02/2010 at 08:09:27 PM
Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas.
05/02/2010 05:15:17 PM
- 1365 Views
Tough Subject, censorship
05/02/2010 07:24:39 PM
- 903 Views
I think I would be worried if a school had more than one copy of Mein Kampf
06/02/2010 06:30:08 PM
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I was mostly just using it as an example, since it was what the article talked about
06/02/2010 10:20:08 PM
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I actually ran into this in high school.
05/02/2010 08:33:10 PM
- 1020 Views
I found that we covered a lot about American Indian issues in US History.
06/02/2010 06:23:16 PM
- 798 Views
we coverd most of those things as well
06/02/2010 08:08:22 PM
- 950 Views
Anyone interested in German history in particular and European history in general should read it.
05/02/2010 08:47:14 PM
- 976 Views
I think jane austen and the brontes would be good to leave in
06/02/2010 03:44:10 AM
- 703 Views
I read a great number of books I don't necesarily agree with, so I'm on your side.
06/02/2010 06:19:21 PM
- 807 Views
Hmm.
05/02/2010 09:11:13 PM
- 852 Views
It's interesting that many of the most influential books are hardly ever read.
06/02/2010 06:15:19 PM
- 794 Views
Love the survey.
05/02/2010 09:42:29 PM
- 965 Views
Interesting. Do you really think that Nineteen Eighty-Four is plausible?
06/02/2010 10:13:56 AM
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Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas.
05/02/2010 11:09:41 PM
- 937 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas.
05/02/2010 11:47:08 PM
- 929 Views
I agree with most of that. But to quote our eminent Camilla...
06/02/2010 10:30:15 AM
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Re: I agree with most of that. But to quote our eminent Camilla...
06/02/2010 12:25:37 PM
- 834 Views
I agree on the Shakespeare (and mentioned that below).
06/02/2010 05:54:50 PM
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Re: I agree on the Shakespeare (and mentioned that below).
06/02/2010 06:05:48 PM
- 915 Views
I don't think high school students need to discuss possibilities for staging.
07/02/2010 01:36:03 AM
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nice post
06/02/2010 01:27:23 AM
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Re: nice post
06/02/2010 01:29:34 AM
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A lot of people think von Clausewitz is important.
06/02/2010 05:51:44 PM
- 718 Views
More than Sun Tzu? *NM*
06/02/2010 08:31:44 PM
- 300 Views
Sun Zi was relatively unknown in the West until recently.
07/02/2010 01:30:06 AM
- 774 Views
Sure, but he could still have influenced world history by influencing Asia... *NM*
07/02/2010 01:35:17 AM
- 327 Views
Doubtful.
07/02/2010 01:41:01 AM
- 784 Views
In many ways, books are like automobiles or power tools...
06/02/2010 11:08:01 AM
- 936 Views
The interesting thing, to my mind, is that the BBC article talks about "Lebensraum".
06/02/2010 04:46:34 PM
- 792 Views
And nary a thing about Alois Hitler, no?
06/02/2010 05:52:50 PM
- 985 Views
I have yet to see a literature teacher in schools teach history through literature.
07/02/2010 01:33:57 AM
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But yet I know several history teachers who have done this
07/02/2010 10:38:49 AM
- 891 Views
Viewing history through a literary prism is usually an injustice to the study of history.
07/02/2010 03:16:30 PM
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No, the opposite: viewing literature through historical lens is what I'm interested in
07/02/2010 03:31:04 PM
- 844 Views
Hmm.
06/02/2010 11:33:02 PM
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I will answer yiour survey but may I ask a question first? What did you think of Steinbeck?
07/02/2010 06:20:52 AM
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The Grapes of Wrath was required in Sophomore English in HS. And I loved it.
07/02/2010 03:25:55 PM
- 846 Views