Fan Forum
Remember Me?
Register

  New Forum Poll (Vote Here)   |     Summer TV Shows Poll (Vote Here)   |     Request a Forum   |     View New Forums

Reply   Post New Thread
 
Thread Tools
Old 12-06-2004, 05:59 PM
  #1
Total Fan

 
Katis's Avatar
 
Joined: Jul 2000
Posts: 7,246
China's Textbooks Twist and Omit History

Quote:
DHANGHAI, Dec. 5 - The history teacher maintained a blistering pace, clicking from one frame quickly to the next, during a lecture on China's relations with the world from 1929 to 1939 in one of this country's most selective high schools.

There was Hitler, shown on parade, his hand lifted in the Nazi salute. The teacher mimicked the gesture, to brief laughter, announcing the year the dictator came to power, with no pause for a discussion of fascism. Pushing ahead quickly, he said the United States was exploiting Canadian and Latin American resources, while Britain fed off India. Wherever it could, France, which was dismissed in barely a sentence, mostly followed Britain's example.

Getting to the meat of the lesson, the teacher said Japan decided to pursue its own longtime desire for a continental empire, and attacked China. The presentation lingered on a famous 1937 picture of a Chinese baby sitting in the middle of a Shanghai road amid the Japanese aerial bombing of China. Then, moments later, the teacher announced plainly, "America's attitude toward the Japanese invasion of China stopped at empty moral criticism."

This country has made a national pastime of wagging its finger at its neighbor, Japan, which it regularly scolds for not teaching the "correct history" about Japan's invasion of China in the 1930's, straining relations between Asia's biggest powers.

However, a visit to a Chinese high school classroom and an examination of several of the most widely used history textbooks here reveal a mishmash of historical details that many Chinese educational experts themselves say are highly selective and often provide a deeply distorted view of the recent past.

Most Chinese students finish high school convinced that their country has fought wars only in self-defense, never aggressively or in conquest, despite the People's Liberation Army's invasion of Tibet in 1950 and the ill-fated war with Vietnam in 1979, to take two examples.

Similarly, many believe that Japan was defeated largely as a result of Chinese resistance, not by the United States.

"The fundamental reason for the victory is that the Chinese Communist Party became the core power that united the nation," says one widely used textbook, referring to World War II.

No one learns that perhaps 30 million people died from famine because of catastrophic decisions made in the 1950's, during the Great Leap Forward, by the founder of Communist China, Mao Zedong.

Similar elisions occur in everything from the start of the Korean War, with an invasion of South Korea by China's ally, North Korea, to the history of Taiwan, which Beijing claims as an irrevocable part of China.

"The Anti-Japanese War finally succeeded, and Taiwan came back to the motherland," another leading textbook states, referring to Japan's defeat in World War II and the loss of its colonial hold on Taiwan.

"The closer history gets to the present, the more political it becomes," said Chen Minghua, a 12th grade history teacher at the No. 2 Secondary School in Shanghai. "So for things after the founding of the People's Republic, we only require students to know the basic facts, like what happened in what year, and we don't study why."

Although some defend the curriculum, many academics say the way history is taught in China forces even the best teachers to bob and weave around anything deemed delicate by the country's leaders and leaves students confused about their own country's place in the world.

Asked what they made of the discussion of the 1930's, one student at the Shanghai high school eagerly volunteered that China had prevented Japan from taking over much of the world. Another said war was inevitable. And a third, who approached the teacher after class to pursue the discussion, said the war had not been a bad thing, since it had prevented Japan from becoming a world power.

Defenders of China's curriculum say that whatever its shortcomings, history education has vastly improved in recent years. There is more choice among textbooks, even if all textbooks are carefully screened by the government, and once taboo subjects, like the Chinese Nationalists' contribution during the war against Japan and even the Cultural Revolution are being mentioned, if only cursorily, in more and more textbooks.

Asked why Chinese textbooks do not mention such matters as Tibet's claim to independence at the time Communist troops invaded, Ren Penjie, editor of a history education magazine in Xian, said: "These are still matters of controversy. What we present to children are less controversial facts, which are easier to explain."

Others said such events were too recent to be seen with objectivity, or that the facts were still coming in, both of which are common explanations offered by Japanese historians who defend the lack of candor about Japanese atrocities in World War II.

For his part, Mr. Ren, who took part in the 1989 protests in Tiananmen Square, which ended in a military crackdown that left hundreds of civilians dead, counted that event as being far too recent to touch upon.

One 1998 textbook that alludes to the demonstrations calls them a "storm" created by the failure of leaders to stop the spread of "bourgeois liberalism," adding vaguely that "the Central Committee took action in time and restored calm." The most recent edition of the same textbook is vaguer still, speaking only of thoughts fanned by a small number of people whose aim was to overthrow the Communist Party, with no mention of the lethal aftermath.

Some Chinese history specialists were less inclined to make excuses for the evasions, however.

"Quite frankly, in China there are some areas, very sensitive subjects, where it is impossible to tell people the truth," said Ge Jianxiong, director of the Institute of Chinese Historical Geography at Fudan University in Shanghai and a veteran of official history textbook advisory committees. "Going very deeply into the history of Mao Zedong, Deng Xiaoping and some features of the Liberation" - as the Communist victory is called - "is forbidden. In China, history is still used as a political tool, and at the high school level, we still must follow the doctrine."

Taking the long view, though, Mr. Ge, 59, who taught high school during the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, when teachers were beaten and education became hyper-politicized, said things were gradually getting better.

Su Zheliang, a historian at Shanghai Normal University, who is himself the author of a new textbook, agreed.

"Sometimes I want to write the truth, but I must take a practical approach," he said. "I want my students to learn, and I've put out the best book that I can. In 10 years, perhaps, China will be a much more open country."
New York Times, Article Link

This was an article assigned by one of my professors which I thought was interesting. Not because I am suprised at what China is doing but because it makes one think to what extent this happens in other countries around the world. Obviously the textbooks are going to be biased towards the history of whichever nation but how much are they actually twisting or omitting essential facts?
__________________
Do not meddle in the affairs of cats, for they are subtle and will piss on your computer.
--Bruce Graham
Katis is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-07-2004, 06:32 AM
  #2
Extreme Fan
 
pacifierrocks's Avatar
 
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 2,286
I'm not really surprised at all. I'm pretty confident that all countries to do. I don't really know to what extent since i slept through all my history classes in high school, but i'm sure that all countries do this.
pacifierrocks is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-07-2004, 06:38 AM
  #3
Master Fan

 
Lovesbitch's Avatar
 
Joined: Nov 2000
Posts: 12,719
I really think that all countries do this, just not as extreme.

I know that in the school I went to a number of facts I learned later on i my education was completely breezed over.
__________________
avatar by highdreams (on lj)
Lovesbitch is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-07-2004, 10:32 AM
  #4
Elite Fan

 
The Happy Psycho's Avatar
 
Joined: Mar 2002
Posts: 28,072
From what I've learned since high school, I don't think schools here really distorted history. They just briefly mentioned or completely omitted some of the things the nation has done.
__________________
The only defense against a tyrannical government is an armed citizen.

~Thomas Jefferson
The Happy Psycho is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-07-2004, 11:17 AM
  #5
Extreme Fan
 
Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 2,310
Doesn't surprise me.

Countries with large histories are guilty of it.

It's extremely sad in the Chinese circumstances that the government is preventing them from being taught the truth or at least the different perspectives.

I had a really great history teacher who would present periods in history from different parts of the world - to see the different perspectives.

I was also actually schooled overseas for a year - it was so hard to come back and study the same period because I had recieved it from such a biased perspective to the degree that was described in the text - it was simply propaganda.
__________________
"Due to budget cutbacks, the light at the end of the tunnel has
temporarily been shut down. Sorry for any inconveniences this may cause
you."
Elizajoey is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-08-2004, 01:31 AM
  #6
Loyal Fan
 
Messed Up Girl's Avatar
 
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,512
As far as I know, that's what a lot of countries are teaching in their schools. While they may not neccessarily ommit or change the facts, there's a lot of propaganda in what they teach that distorts views and opinions.
__________________
And it’s all the subtle change in landscape and business
Reminds you of your limited time
This time you’ll listen to the movement in your body
How it keeps on despite you and it frightens you
Cause you’re barely alive
- rilo kiley
Messed Up Girl is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply   Post New Thread

Bookmarks


Thread Tools



All times are GMT -7. The time now is 10:52 PM.

Fan Forum  |  Contact Us  |  Fan Forum on Twitter  |  Fan Forum on Facebook  |  Archive  |  Top

Powered by vBulletin, Copyright © 2000-2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.5.2
Copyright © 1998-2012, Fan Forum.