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Home > Resources > For Educators and Students > Teaching the Violent Past: ONLINE BOOK COMPANION > The Book: Teaching the Violent Past |
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Introduction: Reconciliation and History Education Elizabeth A. Cole, Asia Society, formerly Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs
PART I. As Generations Pass: The Challenges of Long-Term Reconciliation in History Textbooks
1. The Trajectory of Reconciliation through History Education in Postunification Germany Julian Dierkes, University of British Columbia 2. Advancing or Obstructing Reconciliation? Changes in History Education and Disputes over History Textbooks in Japan Takashi Yoshida, Western Michigan University 3. Representations of Aboriginal People in English Canadian History Textbooks: Toward Reconciliation Penney Clark, University of British Columbia
PART II. Reconciliation in Process
4. History Teaching and Reconciliation in Northern Ireland Alison Kitson, Training and Development Agency for Schools, U.K. 5. The Spanish Civil War and the Franco Dictatorship: The Challenges of Representing a Conflictive Past in Secondary Schools Rafael Valls, University of Valencia 6. Historical Memory and the Limits of Peace Education: Examining Guatemala's Memory of Silence and the Politics of Curriculum Design Elizabeth Oglesby, University of Arizona
PART III. Reconciliation Jeopardized, Undone, or Not Yet Attained: Aspirational and Counter-Reconciliatory Cases
7. History and Myth in the Soviet Empire and the Russian Republic Thomas Sherlock, United States Military Academy 8. On the Use and Abuse of Korea's Past: An Inquiry into History Teaching and Reconciliation Roland Bleiker, University of Queensland & Hoang Young-Ju, Pusan University of Foreign Studies 9. The Role of History Textbooks in Shaping Collective Identities in India and Pakistan Jon Dorschner, United States Department of State and Thomas Sherlock, United States Military Academy
Afterword Audrey R. Chapman, University of Connecticut Health Center
Click here for an expanded table of contents for the book with individual chapter outlines and descriptions, or go back to the Welcome page.
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"For anyone interested in transitional justice, national reconstruction
after mass violence, or multicultural politics, Teaching the Violent Past is
a source of insight and wisdom, grounded in compelling case studies of the struggles
over teaching history in Germany, Japan, Canada, Spain, Northern Ireland, and
Guatemala. It includes probing chapters examining ongoing debates over how Russia,
North and South Korea, India and Pakistan should teach their young about the
past so that neither national pride nor psychic wounds ends up fueling new violent
conflicts. This book offers vital examples of efforts to engage students in
critical confrontations with the complexity of the past."
—MARTHA MINOW
Harvard Law School
"Can high school history texts 'facilitate nonviolent coexistence among people
divided by the memory of pain and death'? These case studies from ten countries
are rich in hopeful, cautious, mixed answers. High school history teachers should
take courage from this book, for theirs is a mission not often publicly celebrated:
their part in the healing of the wounds in our body politic. No country should
boast that it has no such wounds."
—DONALD W. SHRIVER, Jr.
President Emeritus, Union Theological Seminary
"Cole provides an indispensable set of readings for anyone interested
in learning how teaching history in the schools relates to healing after violence.
Through their gathered chapters, the authors show how any nation's future relates
to what the next generation learns about its past. Cole's collection offers
a powerful synthesis of multi-national points of view, which, taken together,
show how schools can reshape collective national identities and influence reconciliation."
—SARAH WARSHAUER FREEDMAN
University of California at Berkeley
History and the Politics of Reconciliation Program
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Reconciliation
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Germany,
Japan,
Canada,
Ireland,
Northern Ireland,
Spain,
Guatemala,
Russia,
Korea (North),
Korea (South),
India,
Pakistan
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