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Archive for the ‘History’ Category

When Mike passed me this week’s New Yorker cover, I thought to myself, “Monopoly! I bet the Occupy Wall Street folks have already updated it.” And lo and behold, they have:

Flavorwire » The Occupy Wall Street USA Monopoly Board.

The Occupy Wall Street USA Monopoly Game

Editorial cartoons can have a huge impact on popular opinion. By clarifying issues in a visual format, drawing on popular symbols and myths, these artists manage to say something everyone can sense but can’t quite verbalize. “Yes,” we think, “that’s exactly it!”

New Yorker cover October 24, 2011

Click here for an overview of the history of political editorial cartoons:

Columbia University Press » Blog Archive » The New Yorker Cover Controversy and the History of Editorial Cartoons.

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Do you have any favorite political cartoons? Include them here!

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http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2011/10/09/movies/mondo-posters

I met someone recently who had the most unnerving effect on me. Around this man, all my normal good sense failed me and I found myself in a few bizarre situations I could not logically account for. What I realized is that sometimes we encounter people who, for whatever reason, wield a strange control over us. This was the case with him. As soon as I saw what was happening, I cut him out of my life, despite being inexplicably fond of him.  I just had this sense that around this man I could get carried into anything and barely even want to stop it. It got me thinking about legendary Depression-era couple Bonnie and Clyde.

Here is their story as told through the eyes of another famous couple, Serge Gainsbourg and Brigitte Bardot, in one of my all time favorite songs:

Serge Gainsbourg Bonnie and Clyde English subtitles – YouTube.

For a much better picture quality (which does the original beautiful film justice), but without the subtitles, click here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QKfBJMIANsM

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What kind of love affair makes you want to live like that?

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What passes for identity in America is a series of myths about one’s heroic ancestors.

–James Baldwin, as quoted by James W. Loewen in Lies My Teacher Told Me

Columbus Day comment from FunMunch.com

http://comments.funmunch.com/columbus-day-comment-2234.html

I’ve been compiling a list of the most important books I’ve read in my life. Right now I have seven, and they are not what I was expecting them to be. Only one is a humanities text, and an iconoclastic one at that. I’m talking about  Lies My Teacher Told Me by James W. Loewen. This book blew the top of my head off. Finally I understood why history class was so tedious, despite loving social studies as a younger child. (Partly due to this book, I later went on to work at a local historical society, to this day my favorite job!)

Loewen ripped the standard American high school history textbooks to shreds, exposing them as the vacuous drivel they were.  Even now, thinking about his telling of the Columbus story shocks me, not only because of the Mel Gibson level of atrociousness and violence, but because I had never heard about it before. It was truly a hero’s fall from grace.

The most striking point Loewen made, judging by what I most remember fifteen years after reading it, was the way American history texts were written not as fact or analysis of events, but rather as creation myths.  This wild country, cobbled together from so many cultures, needed a common creation myth. It needed this because all cultures need them. And since we are in theory a secular state, it couldn’t be a religious creation myth. Instead we wound up deifying historical figures, making heroes out of the cruel but influential, mythologizing the birth of the American state.

My point is this: if we don’t acknowledge the critical importance of myth to our collective psyche, we will be at the mercy of its disguised presence.

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Click here for some excerpts: http://www.criticalthink.info/Phil1301/lieshist.htm

James W. Loewen’s website: http://sundown.afro.illinois.edu/liesmyteachertoldme.php

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What are some of your thoughts on Columbus Day, and does the theory of history as myth shed light on your emotional response to it?

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