Which is exactly what I'm saying. Black history isn't just the civil rights movement, but it's the area that is most current and socially important so it's bound to be the "public" focus, black history month seems to more of a celebration of civil rights, and what's wrong with that? You seem to be confusing that with the actual academic study of black history.lowing wrote:
no what you do is you study the history that came before the topic at hand, then you study the after affects of the topic.coke wrote:
Seriously what the fuck are you on about, "black history" is simply a "module" of American history like all the others that make it up. Each of which can be studied individually/specifically, and yet at the same time they will all still look at their wider context within history as a whole.lowing wrote:
I have no problem with the study of American history and the contributions made by all Americans to that history. But you simply can not discuss the civil rights movement and those involved without discussing the course of action that drove it to existence. and that is American history. Not some special consideration footnote. We are all Americans and our past is as one nation.
No one told me how we could discuss white history without discussing how white people fucked over everyone else. So how can we discuss a single thread in a tapestry of history without discussing the tapestry itself? You can't.
Generally when you study history as an academic subject (as I have) you can't just go "derp, I studying all the history", you look at certain facets and how they relate to the picture as a whole and there impact on the modern world, and in these terms "black history" (the civil rights movement) certainly deserves to be its own area...
ou do not study WW2 without discussing WW1, the Treaty of Versailles, the events that lead to invasion of China and ultimately Pearl Harbor etc.
or let me guess, your WW2 history course started on Dec 7 41 and went forward right?
Edit: And if a WW2 history course did start on Dec 7 '41, it would be a pretty shitty one, but I guess in America you all think that's when it started...
I suggest instead of worrying about people not looking at the whole "tapestry of history", you start taking a wider look yourself, rather than thinking American History is "History".
Last edited by coke (2011-08-27 13:31:50)