Chipotlemonger said:
Bruce Almighty said:
I desperately want a Saving Private Ryan version of WW1. It was such a brutal war, but I feel like it's been forgotten or ignored. I don't even recall learning about it in high school or college history classes. It's like 1870-1930 didn't exist.
I agree with this. I bet there is a bit more understanding of WWI in Europe.
One of my biggest pet peeves with others is ignorance of history. I feel like for so many Americans, if you put this timeline on a piece of paper and asked them to write about it, they wouldn't know what to do hardly. Some would know nothing, others could bookend it with the Civil War and WWII.
1860 - 1945
This is off topic, but do y'all think Americans are generally poor with history because we have such a short country history to begin with? May be fuel for a History board post.
I don't know enough about the historical knowledge of the average person in other countries to be 100% confident in asserting that we know less about history on average. The only foreigners I ever see talking about history are professional historians.
If I had to posit a theory, it would go something like:
1. it's been a lot longer since we had a war fought on our soil, so it's less immediate
2. As countries go, our national myth certainly has a historical element, but I think it has a much bigger emphasis on what we are now and where we are going. We are a superpower right now, almost everyone else has to look back to find their zenith.
3. There is a lot of critical focus on parsing the actions of our national heroes. All of our national heroes come from a time with copious documentation, and many of them from the age of slavery. Most everyone in the 20th century on is viewed pretty ambivalently, probably because we've never really had put backs to the wall. Almost impossible to romanticize our past.
4. Ancient history is way cooler than modern history, and we have a lot less physical evidence of ancient history. People in hundreds of cities around the world walk past buildings every day that were built before Columbus set sail. We have a few mounds and outlines of native american settlements along the Mississippi, but anyone in Europe can visit the Pantheon, Parthenon, Stonehenge, or Hagia Sophia tomorrow.