Teaching Difficult History through Film explores the potential of film to engage young people in controversial or contested histories and how they are represented, ranging from gender and sexuality, to colonialism and slavery.
Jeremy Stoddard is Professor of Education and an Associated Faculty Member in the Film and Media Studies program at The College of William & Mary.
Alan S. Marcus is Associate Professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction at the Neag School of Education, University of Connecticut.
David Hicks is Professor of History and Social Science Education (Social Studies) in the School of Education at Virginia Tech.
Dedications
Section 1: Introduction to Teaching Difficult History and Film as Difficult History
Chapter 1: Using Film to Teach Difficult Histories
Jeremy Stoddard, Alan S. Marcus, and David Hicks
Chapter 2: Difficult History Means Difficult Questions: Using Film to Reveal the Perspective of 'The Other' in Difficult History Topics
Ben Walsh, David Hicks, and Stephanie van Hover
Section 2: Human Rights, Trauma, and Contemporary Difficult Histories
Chapter 3: Teaching the History and Contemporary Challenge of Human Rights through Film
Glenn Mitoma
Chapter 4: From Seeing to Learn to Learning to See: Films on the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict
Brian Britt
Chapter 5: The Torturers Among Us: History, the Film Industry, and its Claims to Truth
Robert P. Stephens
Section 3: Difficult History, Identity, and Implementation in Curriculum
Chapter 6: Institutional Roles in Using Film to Teach Difficult History: The Federal Agency for Civic Education and The Lives of Others
Mattias Frey
Chapter 7: "I saw a REAL Indian on TV last night!": Engaging Students in Historical Thinking for Social Justice
Christine Rogers Stanton, Amanda LeClair-Diaz, Brad Hall, and Lucia Ricciardelli
Chapter 8: What Does History Have to Do With This?: Youth Filmmaking for Social Change
Sandra Quiñones, Brian Bailey, Joseph Ehman, and Daniel Delehanty
Section 4: Teaching Common but Difficult Histories through Film
Chapter 9: Hollywood Histories: Examining Contemporary Depictions of Race and American Slavery in Popular Film
Keffrelyn D. Brown and Anthony L. Brown
Chapter 10: Classroom as Memory Workspace: The Educational and Empathetic Potentials of Twelve Years a Slave and Ask a Slave
Matthew R. Cook and Derek H. Alderman
Chapter 11: Teaching Difficult History with Film: Multiple Perspectives on the Holocaust
Alan S. Marcus and Gary Mills
Section 5: Difficult Histories from the Margins in Curriculum and Teacher Education
Chapter 12: Questioning "Normal": Actively Undoing Dis/ability Stereotypes Through Teaching a Critical Analysis of Films.
David J. Connor
Chapter 13: Invoking Precious Knowledge with Teacher Candidates to Reclaim the Past, Reassess the Present, and Revolutionize Future Practice
Mark Kohan and Emilie M. Camp
Chapter 14: Finally "Seeing" a Queer Past: The Importance of Film in Teaching LGBTQ American History
Sharon Ullman