The newest crop of
award-winning films from Hollywood, Lincoln, Zero Dark Thirty, and Argo, are all
based on true stories. The key word here
is “based.” It seems that film-makers have no trouble inventing scenes,
creating dialog, and inserting information that is completely made up if, in
their opinion, it makes a better story. The
rationale? Movie-goers “expect” an
exciting chase scene in Argo or a Navy Seal raid on Osama Bin Laden’s
home to be noisy even if it never happened. Historians
are worried because so many people are learning history from the movies. Will the story from the movie’s point of view
become the myth that supplants the careful scholarship and meticulous digging
that drives the best historians to get it right? The good news is that these transgressions
are being noticed. But we authors
who contribute to this blog, who craft nonfiction for children, may be held to
the highest standards around. We’re not
allowed to make anything up.
Period. Maybe we’re the last
group on the planet to be held to such high standards. Anna’s recent post on Just the
Facts shows how hard we work to make sure we’re accurate.
The erosion of the truth seems
to be touching journalism as well. One previously absolutely inviolate
journalistic standard was that every fact must be verified by at least three
independent sources. It’s hard for a
reader to check on the accuracy of many stories because journalists can keep
some of their sources secret. So one
outcome is that people wind up reading and tuning in to the media they agree
with. The biased medium becomes the arbiter of what it wants its audience to believe, cherry-picking from the many conflicting “facts” being touted
in public that support different sides of critical issues. It’s no wonder that the “echo chamber” of Fox
News [Un]fair and [Un]balanced skewed version of the news kept them in a bubble
oblivious to the possibility that Obama would be elected, even after the election results were called by other news services.
Many pundits dissected why Fox News got it wrong but the consensus seems
to be that they had problems believing the inconvenient truth of independent
polls so their own slanted views became their own truth. I googled
the words “journalism erosion of standards” and up came a slew of posts
with many different examples about the extent of misinformation foisted on
the public. There was so much
disagreement between these posts that I’m now confused about the truth on a
variety of issues. But all the articles
seem to agree that many news organizations play fast and loose with the truth
in the interest of ratings, readership, political and social bias, and the
bottom line. Propaganda is alive and well in the good old USA.
What happens when misinformation is embedded
in a compellingly told story that has a lot of truth to it? What should our
response be when it is uncovered? Here’s
a thorny problem from the film Lincoln: It seems there were two invented Connecticut
“nays” against the 13th amendment in the voting scene in the movie thus casting the Nutmeg State
incorrectly on the wrong side of history.
My initial reaction was: where
were the fact checkers? This is the kind
of error that is so easy to correct. Were the film-makers being lazy or
sloppy? The Connecticut congressman, Joe
Courtney, called out the error in an open letter to director
Steven Spielberg. In response, Tony
Kushner, the screenwriter admitted that it was no accident. He had made the changes deliberately. Kushner
argues that the facts were changed to serve the larger story: “These
alterations were made to clarify to the audience the historical reality that
the Thirteenth Amendment passed by a very narrow margin that wasn't determined
until the end of the vote. The closeness of that vote and the means by which it
came about was the story we wanted to tell. In making changes to the voting
sequence, we adhered to time-honored and completely legitimate standards for
the creation of historical drama, which is what Lincoln is.” In other words, he
used artistic license to shorten the voting scene in the film from the actual
historical voting time in the interest of a dramatic effect. You can read the arguments here.
So it wasn't laziness or sloppiness. I
think he has a point.
Dramas like Lincoln and Argo
create tremendous interest in history. When kids encounter a compelling story or an
amazing fact they want to know if it is true. The proper answer is
“Mostly.” But a curious kid now wants to
know what’s true and what isn't. Aha! A teachable moment! What an opportunity! Telling details (small things that catch
one’s attention) can add to the credibility of a work if true or, if incorrect, indicate
that the work was not vetted for accuracy and perhaps shouldn't be trusted. If only
the interested person knew for sure which were which!
Maybe this is an opportunity for
us. Perhaps it takes authors who write
history for children to create white papers on these films. They could explain what is true and where
truth has been manipulated. They could
ask questions like, can you think of another way to meet the requirements of an
historical drama without changing the facts? Are there any fabrications that
are unacceptable in a work that portrays real events? If so, what are they and why should they not
be included? What does a careless error
of fact tell you about the creators of the work? Whose responsibility is it for those
errors?
Searching for truth drives us in
creating our books. Perhaps we need to add
our voices into the larger conversation engendered by the popular media.
6 comments:
Great post! Looking for further update! Games can be entertaining too! Why not buy runescape accounts ?
Kudos to Courtney for getting that discrepancy on the front page of the Courant and in other news outlets (he lives in town). That is a very good question about which version people will remember, the printed page or the spoken word accompanied by images? It might be interesting if a year or two from now they test student movie viewers that were made aware of the error and see what they recall.
Interesting post, Vicki. While I enjoy historically based films, I typically don't expect total accuracy (unless it is a documentary). That said, the scene in which Lincoln slaps his son disturbs me. I have done a lot of research on Lincoln and his interactions with his children, and there is no evidence that he behaved or would have behaved in such a manner. On the contrary, many of his contemporaries believed he was too lenient.
Important post. Unfortunately, not enough people are skeptical about the movies and the press. The best nonfiction authors for kids know from experience that plenty of folks believe what they see in the movies or in certain biased or inaccurate news reports. How do we know this? Because these non-scholars regularly call us out to say we got the facts wrong when we have actually taken great care to fact-check our sources and write the truth.
Vicki, thanks for mentioning my Just the Facts post.
Here's to sticking to the truth! Great post.
***runs off to work on line edits and digs and digs***
Vicki,
The Orbis Pictus Award has very strict standards for what constitutes nonfiction. They accept absolutely no fictionalized "information," or at least they did not when I was on the committee. So, good nonfiction can be read when watching historical dramas to note the difference.
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