War,Peace,Nonviolence and Environmental Literacy

In 2005 the United States had nearly 17,000 murders and 94,000 reported rapes—that is nearly 50 murders and 260 rapes every day (U.S. Department of Justice, 2005). There is growing attention for using literature to help young adults investigate violence and war and to inspire students to promote peace (Brozo, Walter, & Flacker, 2002; Franzak & Noll, 2006; Miller, 2005; Wright & Kowalczyk, 2000). Informed decisions on going to war cannot be made without critical understandings of past wars and the devastating psychologies of war (Noddings, 2006). The intoxicating yet destructive power of war is a theme in The Lord of the Nutcracker Men (Lawrence, 2001), which takes place on the brutal battlefields of World War I as a boy’s father writes home to his son about life in the trenches. Myers’ (1988) Fallen Angels takes us into the jungle of the Vietnam War, and Sunrise over Fallujah (Myers, 2008) to the desert of the Iraq War. In the graphic novel Pride of Baghdad (Vaughan & Henrichon, 2006), the devastation of the war in Iraq and the country’s cultural conflicts are told by a group of lions that escaped from the Baghdad Zoo. In The Hunger Games (Collins, 2008), the United States is now called Panem, and the government holds an annual lottery to chose two 12—18-year-olds from each of Panem’s 12 districts to participate in a reality television show where the contestants must fight until just one remains. Thomas Sabo And Real Time (Kass, 2004) tells the simultaneous stories of multiple characters as they converge on a terrorist attack on a bus in Israel.

Social responsibility requires consciousness to Thomas Sabo Charm Carriers environmental problems and the ability to critique the American way of life. Beyond simply studying recycling and pollution, this would include exploring issues of energy, natural resources, and rampant consumerism. In Firestorm: The Caretaker Trilogy Book 1 (Klass, 2006), Jack thinks he’s just a normal high school kid until he finds out he has been sent from 1,000 years in the future to save the earth from our own environmental destruction. Another book by Klass (1994) is California Blue, which is about a high school student living in the U.S. northwest who discovers a new butterfly species on land owned by the local lumber mill where his father works. The Gospel According to Larry (Tashjian, 2001) is about 17-year-old Josh who creates an alter ego (Larry) on a website who espouses the dangers of consumerism. And in Exodus (Bertagna, 2008), it is 2099 and global warming is melting Earth’s polar ice caps.

Citizens cannot make informed and critical decisions on civic matters—from affirmative action and gay marriage to criminal justice and war—without an understanding of past people and events. Knowledge of the past should help shape our opinions in the present and our vision for the future. The novel My Mother the Cheerleader (Sharenow, 2007) is about 13-year-old Louise, whose mother is one of the “cheerleaders” who stands outside the school of Ruby Bridges (one of the first African American students to attend an integrated U.S. school) each day, screaming racist epithets. In Before We Were Free (Alvarez, 2002), a family is involved in a plan to topple the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic in the 1960s. Tree Girl (Mikaelson, 2004) takes place in Guatemala in the 1980s during the country’s devastating civil wars. The brutality of slavery—and the passionate force of poetry—is explored in The Poet Slave of Cuba (Engle, 2006), a biography (written in verse) about Juan Francisco Manzano.

Nearly two thirds of Americans say that they do not pay attention to international current events on a regular basis (Pew, 2007b). Given the void of global content in so many of our schools, it should not come as a shock that U.S. citizens know little about the world beyond the country’s borders. Good books, either as part of a literature curriculum or integrated into the social sciences, help to humanize other countries and cultures for young Americans and connect across oceans.

The findings, published in the Food Additives and Contaminants Journal, confirmed what consumers of organic food have taken for granted but did not settle the argument over whether organic food is safer than conventional food treated with chemical pesticides. The debate gained prominence in February 2000 when John Tassel, a correspondent on the ABC News program “20/20”, reported that testing had proved that the levels of pesticide residues in conventional produce were similar to those in organic produce, making organic claims a fraud. Though Mr. Tassel withdrew his statement – such testing had never been conducted – his report alarmed supporters of organic agriculture and those like Consumers Union who do not oppose the use of synthetic pesticides but want stricter standards.

Processing your request, Please wait....

Leave a Reply