History as MysteryCity Lights Publishers, 22. avg. 2016 - 304 strani In a lively challenge to mainstream history, Michael Parenti does battle with a number of mass-marketed historical myths. He shows how history's victors distort and suppress the documentary record in order to perpetuate their power and privilege. And he demonstrates how historians are influenced by the professional and class environment in which they work. Pursuing themes ranging from antiquity to modern times, from the Inquisition and Joan of Arc to the anti-labor bias of present-day history books, History as Mystery demonstrates how past and present can inform each other and how history can be a truly exciting and engaging subject. "Michael Parenti, always provocative and eloquent, gives us a lively as well as valuable critique of orthodoxy posing as 'history.'"—Howard Zinn, author of A People's History of the United States "Deserves to become an instant classic."—Bertell Ollman, author of Dialectical Investigations "Those who keep secret the past, and lie about it, condemn us to repeat it. Michael Parenti unveils the history of falsified history, from the early Christian church to the present: a fascinating, darkly revelatory tale."—Daniel Ellsberg, author of The Pentagon Papers "Solid if surely controversial stuff."—Kirkus |
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... leaders, government officials, and news and entertainment media, a mass miseducation that xi begins in childhood and continues throughout life. What we usually are taught “is not 'reality' but a particular version of it,”2 a version ...
... leaders, military commanders, journalists, television producers, government and corporate scribes, clergy, amateur ... leader who wrote a monumental history of the very Peloponnesian War in which he had participated. The nineteenth ...
... leaders regularly produce selfserving memoirs whose contributions to historical truth are often parsimonious. Perhaps the premier example of the politician/historian is Churchill himself. Gordon Lewis sees Churchill as someone who could ...
... leaders felt compelled to introduce this “doctrine.” Was it an altruistic gesture to protect Latin countries from European despotism, as some claimed at that time and many textbooks have maintained ever since? Was it to assure the peace ...
... leaders opposed revolutionary and even reformist governments, and supported rightwing autocracies around the world? Questions of this sort are seldom asked in our media, schools, or textbooks. Textbooks: America the Beautiful In failing ...