Toronto Star

Author rewrote history books

‘Lies My Teacher Told Me’ challenged white, Eurocentri­c view of past

- HILLEL ITALIE JAMES W. LOEWEN

NEW YORK—James W. Loewen, whose million-selling “Lies My Teacher Told Me” books challenged traditiona­l ideas and knowledge on everything from Thanksgivi­ng to the Iraq War, has died. He was 79.

Loewen’s publisher, New Press, announced that the author died Thursday at Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, Md. A professor emeritus at the University of Vermont who lived in Washington, D.C., he had been diagnosed two years ago with Stage IV bladder cancer, enough time for him to post “Notes toward an obituary” on his website.

“Telling the truth about the past helps cause justice in the present,” was his guiding principle, he wrote. “Achieving justice in the present helps us tell the truth about the past.”

Loewen’s “Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong” was published in 1995 and became a favourite of students and former students as it challenged what Loewen considered a white, Eurocentri­c view of the past. He based his findings on his research while on fellowship at the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n, where he spent two years looking through textbooks.

In a 2018 interview with NPR, he said that inspiratio­n for “Lies My Teacher Told Me” came while he was teaching at the historical­ly Black Tougaloo College in Mississipp­i and asked his students for their thoughts on Reconstruc­tion.

“And what happened to me was an ‘A-ha’ experience, although you might better consider it an ‘Oh-no’ experience: 16 out of my 17 students said, ‘Well, Reconstruc­tion was the period right after the Civil War when Blacks took over the government of the Southern states. But they were too soon out of slavery and so they screwed up and white folks had to take control again.’

“My little heart sank.” Loewen’s book won the American Book Award and was sometimes likened to Howard Zinn’s “A People’s History” as an alternate text for progressiv­es. A Publishers Weekly review called “Lies My Teacher Told Me” a “politicall­y correct critique of 12 American history textbooks” that was “sure to please liberals and infuriate conservati­ves.”

He continued the series with “Lies My Teacher Told Me About Christophe­r Columbus,” “Lies Across America: What Our Historic Sites Get Wrong” and “Lies My Teacher Told Me: Young Readers’ Edition,” and revised the original work in 2018, during the Donald Trump administra­tion.

His other books included “Teaching What Really Happened,” “The Mississipp­i Chinese: Between Black and White” and the memoir “Up a Creek, With a Paddle.”

The New Press will publish a graphic edition in 2023 of “Lies My Teacher Told Me,” which Loewen had been working on with artist Nate Powell.

Loewen was born in Decatur, Ill., his father a doctor and his mother a teacher and librarian. While studying sociology at Carleton College in Northfield, Min., during the height of the civil rights movement, he spent the early part of 1963 auditing courses at Mississipp­i State University, while also visiting Tougaloo College and the Tuskegee Institute.

Before establishi­ng himself as an author, Loewen co-wrote a textbook that helped lead to a legal battle that anticipate­d current debates over how race should be taught.

In 1974, he and Dr. Charles Sallis published “Mississipp­i: Conflict and Change,” an intended corrective to what they saw as the racially biased informatio­n that his Tougaloo students had been assigned for a required 9th grade course on the state’s history.

The book won the Lillian Smith Award for nonfiction, presented by the Southern Regional Council, but officials in Mississipp­i voted to reject it for classroom use, alleging that “Mississipp­i: Conflict and Change” devoted too much time to Black history.

Loewen and others sued. In 1980, U.S. District Court Judge Orma Smith ruled in the plaintiffs’ favour and ordered the book placed on the “approved list.”

 ??  ?? “Telling the truth about the past helps cause justice in the present,” James W. Loewen wrote. He died Thursday at 79.
“Telling the truth about the past helps cause justice in the present,” James W. Loewen wrote. He died Thursday at 79.

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