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#113265 - Thu Nov 15 2001 02:47 PM There's going to be a test on this later
Linda1 Offline
Star Poster

Registered: Thu Sep 30 1999
Posts: 11250
Loc: Munchkinland
I have a feeling you people were not taught proper history. In order to remedy this, I will post the following. Please study it hard and be prepared for a quiz on it later.


quote:
Thursday November 15 8:04 AM ET
Student Book Offers a Twisted History 'Coarse'
By Sarah Tippit

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Experience history from the Stoned Age to the Blintz Krieg! From Middle Evil Times to the Age of Now, from the Land of Milk and Chocolate to the Iran Hostess Crisis and the fall of the Berlin Mall!

Welcome to the wonderful world of ``Non Campus Mentis,'' (Workman) a book of mangled moments of Western Civilization culled from actual term papers and exams of today's ``brightest'' students by incredulous college professor Anders Henriksson who, while grading exams, chose to laugh, rather than cry, at his students' most egregious mistakes.

History, after all, is nothing more than ``the behind of the present,'' according to one student, who aptly added: ``This gives incites from the anals of the past.''

The once-mighty British Empire is in a ``state of recline. Its colonies have slowly dribbled away leaving only the odd speck on the map.'' Chairman ``Moo'' has passed away, as has former President ``Franklin Eleanor Roosavelt,'' and civil rights leader ``Martin Luther Junior'' was slain in the 1960s, shortly after making his famous ``If I Had A Hammer'' speech.

Hitler, a depressed ``Nazi leader of a Communist Germany'' who spurred a huge ``anti-semantic'' movement through a terrifying ``Gespacho,'' launched ``Operation Barbarella'' while the English ``vanely hoped for peas.'' The war began turning around, though, when the ``Allies landed near Italy's toe and gradually advanced up her leg.

Hitler ultimately ``shot himself in the bonker.''

'CRETINALIA HISTORICA'

At its best, the 150-page book ``illustrates the ingenious and often comic ways we all attempt to make sense of information we can't understand because we have no context or frame of reference for it,'' according to Henriksson, chairman of the history department at Shepherd College in West Virginia. He began compiling samples 20 years ago at the University of Toronto where he also taught.

Shortly after he began his collection, he published an article in the ``Wilson Quarterly'' titled ``College Kids Say the Darndest Things,'' which prompted amused colleagues at more than two dozen universities in the United States and Canada including West Point, University of Alberta and McMaster, to regularly send him their own inane prose collections. Last year, when he realized his office overflowed with funny samples of ``cretinalia historica'' the idea for a book was born.

While Henriksson declined to identify all the schools involved he said they ranged from moderately to highly competitive, about half were in Canada, no Ivy League schools were represented, and that one of the entries came from Oxford in England.

At its worst, the book may reflect a generation raised in ignorance by bad schools and disengaged parents.

``This is not the norm,'' Henriksson told Reuters in an interview. What you have here is almost 30 years of my collecting from students' (works) at various institutions. This really represents sort of the creme de la creme of the creatively inane.''

Did he make it up?

``No!'' he said. ``Who could make this stuff up except Mel Brooks. I'm not Mel Brooks.'' Which prompts the question: Should people sound the alarms and search for an ``escape goat?''

Maybe. Hundreds of student contributors received passing grades with such statements as: ``When the Davy Jones Index crashed in 1929 many people were left to political incineration. Some, like John Paul Sart, retreated into extraterrestrialism. The New Deal was an idea inspired by Franklin Eleanor Roosavelt.''

(The Boston Tea Party, by the way, was held at Pearl Harbor.)

Gravity of the misstatements aside, the bloopers make a great reference whether one seeks information on the Canadian Missile Crisis, clashes between Israelis and Parisians, or the Gulf War (news - web sites) in which, according to one scholar: ``Satan Husane invaided Kiwi and Sandy Arabia.''

(No doubt an act of ``premedication.'')

'NEW INCITES'

Henriksson said the errors fall into three major categories. Some are simply caused by bad spelling or a lack of proofreading, and come out funny. Some were prompted by a ''profound lack of preparation, while others, just seem to be ''really out at sea,'' he said.

``You get the ones who don't really even seem to understand there's a line between past and present and they tell you that the first airplane was flown by the Marx Brothers. I had this one kid who wrote that Spartacus led a slave rebellion in ancient Rome and then appered in a movie about it later.''

The book offers fresh new ``incites'' on history from ''prehistoricle'' times through ``King Toot'' and the birth of ''monolithic'' religion.(''Judyism had one big God named Yahoo'').

The book goes on to ``chronicle'' the birth of Christianity (''Just another mystery cult until Jesus was born'') and, his pronouncement, later, that ``The mice shall inherit the earth.''

The book sheds new light on the lives of Martin Luther (he nailed 95 theocrats to a church door), ``Florence of Arabia,'' and General George ``Custard'' who managed to stand up anyway.

(''Martian Luther King's'' four steps to direct action, by the way, included ``self purification,'' when you ``allow yourself to be eaten to a pulp.'')

In its final pages, the book includes students' geographical misconceptions as represented on several world maps bearing such labels as ``The Land of Milk and Chocolate'' and ``Home of Golden Fleas'' (in the Ancient World) to ``Bulemia,'' ''Whales,'' ``Roam,'' the ``Eel of France,'' and the ``Automaton Empire'' (as they were known in the ``Middle Evil'' Times).

And it notes that, yes, there has indeed been a change in America's ``social seen,'' over the centuries. The last stage, according to the book, is ``The Age of Now. This concept grinds our critical, seething minds to a halt.''

Until then, however, we Americans, ``in all humidity'' are nothing less than ``the people of currant times.''


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#113266 - Thu Nov 15 2001 05:08 PM Re: There's going to be a test on this later
TabbyTom Offline
Moderator

Registered: Wed Oct 17 2001
Posts: 8479
Loc: Hastings Sussex
England UK
Once again nature imitates art and improves on it. Some of these howlers seem to be even better than the contents of the celebrated British spoof 1066 and All That.
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#113267 - Thu Nov 15 2001 05:54 PM Re: There's going to be a test on this later
creamowheat Offline
Forum Adept

Registered: Tue Oct 23 2001
Posts: 190
Loc: Missouri USA
Linda,
Thank you for the laughs. That was thoroughly enjoyable.

quote:
(No doubt an act of ``premedication.'')

I have got to agree with that statement. I think I would like to have a copy of the book (being that I work at an institution of higher learning). My friends will get a kick out of this. Take no medication before its time...

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#113268 - Thu Nov 15 2001 07:38 PM Re: There's going to be a test on this later
gtho4 Offline
Administrator

Registered: Sun Dec 26 1999
Posts: 54484
Loc: Sydney
oz downunder
geez us aussies can play cricket
quote:
In 1958 the great Australian leg-break and googly bowler, Arthur Mailey, published his memoirs, entitled '10 for 66 And All That'. This was a reference not only to the immortal alternative view of English history by Walter Carruthers Sellar & Robert Julian Yeatman, but to his own finest day on a cricket field when, as a member of Warwick Armstrong`s 1921 side, he took all 10 Gloucestershire wickets at Cheltenham - for 66 runs. www.cricket.org/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/ARTICLES/TIMELESS/RICE_ON_MAILEY_28AUG1996

pity we can't use a keyboard

[ 11-15-2001: Message edited by: gtho4 ]


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#113269 - Fri Nov 16 2001 11:17 AM Re: There's going to be a test on this later
justawful Offline
Mainstay

Registered: Sat Mar 03 2001
Posts: 571
Loc: Sykesville
Maryland USA
Lol! Back in school I always enjoyed a good Doze of history.
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