"Miseducating Americans: Distortions of Historical Understanding examines accounts of American history appearing in textbooks and popular accounts and compares them with the reports in scholarly monographs, considering how myths came to be considered as recorded history and taken as truth. The difference between this coverage and other examinations of American historical record is its focus on textbook history and how it's presented. Chapters debunk common explanations of American historical fact and, even more importantly, consider how these reconstructions of fact arose, and the social and political pressures surrounding them. The result is a solid college-level examination of how inaccuracies were created and passed on: key for any discussion about how American historical fact has evolved." - California Bookwatch

In Miseducating Americans, Richard F. Hamilton examines accounts of American history appearing in textbooks and popular accounts and compares these with the reports contained in scholarly monographs. The task: to determine how certain myths and misconstructions became accepted as recorded history. Hamilton provides much needed correction of those misleading accounts.

Was America historically the "land of the free?" Not if you take into account slavery, discrimination, and post-Civil War segregation policies. Was America in the late nineteenth century truly expansionist, as American textbooks imply, or did it actually capitalize on unexpected political and economic opportunities, like Russia's desire to rid itself of Alaska? Was the acquisition of the Philippines a zealous profit-seeking effort aiming for "the China market," or the fortuitous consequences of a move against Spain during the Spanish-American War?

Miseducating Americans debunks many commonly accepted explanations of historical facts. It contends that many accounts are oversimplifications, and some are one-sided depictions of virtue. Hamilton traces the sources of these misconstructions, which mostly come from history textbooks written by authors aiming for "popular audiences." He then offers explanations as to how and why the inaccuracies have been repeated and passed on.

Les mer

In Miseducating Americans, Richard F

Acknowledgments

Introduction: The Major Themes

1 Land of the Free, 1776–1865
2 Land of the Free, 1866 and After
3 Benjamin Harrison's Presidency
4 Hanna, McKinley, Roosevelt, and Carnegie
5 America's Empire, 1898 and After
6 On War and the Military
7 On Those Past Events, the Twentieth Century, and Likely Futures

Index

Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781412855013
Publisert
2015-02-28
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis Inc; Routledge
Vekt
521 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
298

Om bidragsyterne

Richard F. Hamilton is emeritus professor of sociology and political science at The Ohio State University, USA. He has written twelve books and seventy articles, mostly dealing with elite and mass politics and their interconnections.