The Atlantic

How History Classes Helped Create a 'Post-Truth' America

The author of <em>Lies My Teacher Told Me</em> discusses how schools’ flawed approach to teaching the country’s past affects its civic health.
Source: Glasshouse Images / Getty

In 1995, the University of Vermont sociologist and historian James W. Loewen published a book that sought to debunk the myriad myths children were often taught about the United States’ past. Framed largely as a critique of the history education delivered in America’s classrooms but also serving as a history text itself, was the result of Loewen’s analysis of a dozen major high-school textbooks. It found that those materials frequently taught students about topics including the first Thanksgiving, the Civil and Vietnam Wars, and the Americas before Columbus arrived in incomplete, distorted, or otherwise flawed ways. Take, for example, the false yet relatively widespread conviction that the Reconstruction era was a chaotic period whose tumult was attributable to poor, uncivilized governance of recently freed slaves. Textbooks’ framing of the history in this this interpretation of Reconstruction to justify the prevention of black people from voting.

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