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Sendo
1st March 2010, 08:14
Nice to see people coming together to examine the "nation in a vacuum" treatment of history. Glad to see secondary level teachers especially examine textbooks. Too often it is a domain left to university professor analysts.

While in America there is a constant push to add Christian mythos to history and remove the socialist behavior of people like Helen Keller, MLK, and Malcolm X, while omitting Cesar Chavez, Columbus' massive Hispanola slave colony, and WIlson's introduction of segregation to the federal government--while that is going on, it is nice to see others perform the opposite.

Thoughts? How about in your own countries. What do have your textbooks left out?

From the Hankyoreh (South Korean Left newspaper):



South Korea, China and Japan have been presenting very different explanations of major East Asian historical events in their respective history textbooks. All three countries have either entirely omitted to mention or presented very biased accounts of incidents they deem either unrelated or disadvantageous to themselves. Some observers are highlighting the need to shift the focus of history education from ones own history to a history of relationships in order to broaden the shared historical understanding among people from the three countries.

The Hankyoreh and the Asia Peace and History Education Network (APHEN) have been collaborating on the compilation of East Asian history teaching materials to commemorate the 91st anniversary of the March 1 independence movement. The Hankyoreh and APHEN analyzed the presentation in Korean, Chinese and Japanese middle school textbooks of ten historical incidents and concepts that had a major impacts on the three nations, including the Four Commanderies of Han, the Joseon-Japanese War in 1592 and Japans colonial rule. The textbooks analyzed included South Koreas Guksa (Korean History), published by the Ministry of Education and Human Resources Development, and the first and second grade editions of Sahoe (Society), published by Kumsung Publishing, Japans New Society-History, published by Tokyo Shoseki, and the seventh and eighth grade editions of Chinese History and the ninth grade edition World History from Chinas compulsory education standard experimental textbooks, published by the Peoples Education Press.

In general, Chinese textbooks are strongly lacking in accounts related to Korea. In World History, the only mention of Korea is in a sidebar entitled Ancient Joseon. In Chinese History, not only did the role of Goguryeo in the fall of the Sui Dynasty disappear after 2000, but there is no mention of the the Joseon-Japanese War in 1592. Kim Ji-hoon, research professor of Sungkyunkwan University and head of APHENs China committee, said this was the result of the fact that the History Curriculum Standards, Chinas 2001 textbook-writing guidelines, deleted Korea-related content areas. Kim said, Judging from the fact that references to Koreas economic development have increased in social studies courses, this could be interpreted as reflecting the perspective on Korea held by modern Chinese.

The Tokyo Shoseki textbook, which has been adopted by around 50 percent of Japanese middle schools, presents relatively accessible treatments of the three nations history with a focus on their relationships. This stands in marked contrast with prominent examples of distorting textbooks such as those by Fusosha Publishing. While some differences from the Korean version are seen with regard to the theory of the Japanese outpost of Imna in South Korea during the fourth century, the book did attempt brief but objective accounts of areas such as the inequality of the Treaty of Ganghwa between Japan and Joseon in 1876, the causes of the March 1 independence movement and Japans armed suppression in response in 1919, the fabrication of the Manchuran Incident by the Japanese military in 1931, and the victimization of Koreans and Chinese through labor conscription. However, only a brief account is given for the Nanjing Massacre in 1937, without mentioning the extent of the atrocities, and no reference made to the conscription of women to serve as sexual slaves for the Japanese military.


Korean textbooks are no different in focusing on their own history in their accounts. The Korean textbooks analyzed do not mention of the Sino-Japanese War in 1894, which was decisively influential in reorganizing the international order in late 19th century East Asia, or the Nanjing Massacre. The world history textbook studied by second year middle school students in middle school places a predominant emphasis on accounts of Western history, while the development process of the East Asian nations was presented in a manner that is difficult to understand chronologically. And whereas Japanese textbooks deal in detail with the issue of Japans postwar reparations, currently a major point of contention between South Korea and Japan, South Korean textbooks made almost no reference to them.

APHEN steering committee head Kim Min-cheol said, Ultimately, history education is the most important thing for the sake of a peaceful future in East Asia, adding that the three countries need to abandon their biased accounts centered on their own histories and share more with their neighbors.

http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_international/407383.html

RedStarOverChina
1st March 2010, 17:11
With the exception of a few minor details, this article rings true. Chinese history books tend to be dismissive of the Korean kingdoms (Silla and Joseon).

The most important reason behind this is we all did unspeakable things to each other. I'm not sure if it would be better or worse for all the dirty laundries to be out there, as it may produce even more friction then there are already.

Maybe when Asian nationalism dies down a bit.

ls
1st March 2010, 18:39
Excellent idea for a thread Sendo.


With the exception of a few minor details, this article rings true. Chinese history books tend to be dismissive of the Korean kingdoms (Silla and Joseon).

The most important reason behind this is we all did unspeakable things to each other. I'm not sure if it would be better or worse for all the dirty laundries to be out there, as it may produce even more friction then there are already.

Definitely better if done from a materialist perspective.


Maybe when Asian nationalism dies down a bit.

When will that happen? Let's be honest here, it's way way better than it used to be.


Thoughts? How about in your own countries. What do have your textbooks left out?

Dunno where to start with this really, I remember WWII classes being incredibly biased towards "Churchill the great saviour", about an hour of one of them consisted entirely of the teacher talking about what a brilliant man he was, how he tempered with Stalin but used him against the Nazis, how he utilised the people of this country to come out en force and "protect the nation" by using everything, but mainly BBC propaganda to in a sense brainwash people (and that this was justified because workers are too stupid or something). We even went to the cabinet war rooms, then were told what a great man Churchill was there too!

Red Commissar
1st March 2010, 20:20
At least they are trying to discuss these issues, even considering the tensions between those nations and their people. Dialogue between educators is always good.

But when politicians and ideologues begin running the show, we have the current situation.

I posted a thread earlier about nuts in Texas simply ignoring facts and whitewashing history for their benefit.

RedStarOverChina
1st March 2010, 20:42
Dunno where to start with this really, I remember WWII classes being incredibly biased towards "Churchill the great saviour", about an hour of one of them consisted entirely of the teacher talking about what a brilliant man he was, how he tempered with Stalin but used him against the Nazis, how he utilised the people of this country to come out en force and "protect the nation" by using everything, but mainly BBC propaganda to in a sense brainwash people (and that this was justified because workers are too stupid or something). We even went to the cabinet war rooms, then were told what a great man Churchill was there too!Yeah, there lies the most incredibly glaring omission. To most Westerners, it sounded as if America single-handedly defeated Nazi Germany and Japan, with the help of little budies like Britain and Canada.

The war in the Eastern front was 4 times as large as it was in the Western front. If anything, it was the Soviet Union that single-handedly defeated Nazi Germany with the help of Western aid. On the Pacific front, 3/4 of the Japanese army was tied up in China alone.

Sendo
2nd March 2010, 17:02
Dunno where to start with this really, I remember WWII classes being incredibly biased towards "Churchill the great saviour", about an hour of one of them consisted entirely of the teacher talking about what a brilliant man he was, how he tempered with Stalin but used him against the Nazis, how he utilised the people of this country to come out en force and "protect the nation" by using everything, but mainly BBC propaganda to in a sense brainwash people (and that this was justified because workers are too stupid or something). We even went to the cabinet war rooms, then were told what a great man Churchill was there too!

That's so odd, because there should be people alive to refute his stature. The war-crazed maniac was on the verge of sending re-armed fascist to fight the iron curtain nations and the Brits got him the fuck out of office shortly after the war.

But then i America they completely ignore the last 4 years of MLK's life and make it seem it was "I have a dream" then immediate assassination.

I was reading a great book by (a left liberal/social democrat?) called "Lies My Teacher Told Me" focusing on history textbooks in the states. It talked about how the lies about history increase vastly once everyone who can remember the past event in question dies. And the living memory becomes a dead one.

If the UK and the USA can lie so much about stuff that old people can remember vividly, imagine how bad it will get when they die. Like my textbooks still upheld the myth of poor, unappreciated Columbus dying penniless in Europe (omitting the slave colonies he started in 1493 with funds from the Spanish crown).

9/11 really stand out for me. Will textbooks written today and tomorrow omit the fact that Al Qaeda and the Taliban can be traced the CIA-funded and trained anti-communist mujahedeen alliance of 1980s Afghanistan? Probably not. And if capitalism continued into 2100 I'm sure textbooks would treat 2001 like the birth of terrorism.