Current Trends in History and Social Studies Textbook Research
Current Trends in History and Social Studies Textbook Research
Current Trends in History and Social Studies Textbook Research
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Abstract
This essay gives an overview of major trends in history and social studies textbook
research focusing on issues such as textbook revision, identity construction,
methodology, textbooks and other educational media, textbooks and society, and
the theory and history of educational media. Since textbook research does not
exist as a specific academic field it seems to be more correct to speak of textbook-
related research that encompasses a wealth of diverse forms. Its high research
output and methodological plurality stands in contrast to its low institutional basis
in universities and other academic institutions. The main deficit of the current
literature of textbook-related research is the lack of empirical findings on the
usage, reception, and effects of textbooks in the classroom and a widespread
atheoretical approach to textbook analysis. However, the field is expanding
which is reflected by a variety of research approaches conducted from different
disciplinary perspectives.
Introduction
Textbook research is something of a chimera. While over the last forty years the
textbook has become the subject of scientific analyses, with diverse methodological
approaches and disciplinary contexts, it is still far from becoming a clearly defined object
for research. The likelihood of textbook research becoming established as a university
discipline seems as small today as it was when the field first emerged in Europe in the
1970s. It would therefore be more correct to speak of textbook-related research rather
than textbook research, the former existing in a wealth of diverse forms, yet in the
absence of a common denominator for individual research projects. Furthermore, “textbook
researchers” frequently abstain from referring to themselves as such, preferring to define
their work in terms of their disciplinary orientation. Consequently, an outline of current
research results that have been mainly published within Europe as well as of future trends
within the field cannot take the research object – the textbook – as its point of departure;
rather, it must begin with the various thematic, methodological and disciplinary contexts
from which such trends emerge (Nicholls 2006; Repoussi and Tutiaux-Guillon 2010).
Yet in an overview of the numerous defining works of the past four decades a key deficit
becomes apparent, one that has repeatedly been the subject of critique: a lack of empirical
knowledge on the impact of textbooks as well as on the transformation of knowledge
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Eckhardt Fuchs
between textbooks and students, and the frequent lack of contextualisation (Lässig 2009).
My presentation provides a brief overview of the most recent studies from the field of
history and social studies textbook-related research in the light of these shortcomings.
The overview does not aim to provide a complete list of studies from the last decade
produced in Europe, but rather to give examples of relevant literature. It also does not
include research on specialist didactic research on individual subject areas, which may
refer to the textbook as a medium yet do not analyse it as their primary object.
It appears fairly obvious that textbook research and textbook revision are closely
related. Up until today, textbook revision has been dominated by its aim to liberate
textbooks from nationalistic, chauvinistic and biased interpretations in order to contribute
towards peace and international understanding (Pingel 2010a). Especially in its early days,
textbook research was deeply influenced by this normative and, in many cases, highly
political nature of textbook revision. At the same time looking over past historiography
it is clear that textbook research has always been subject to significant political and
thus normative constraints. Textbook research has been marked by the tension between
normative assumptions (e.g. that the improvement of textbooks has a direct impact
on learning outcomes), political expectations (e.g. that a good textbook makes a good
citizen), and academic objectivity (Pingel 2010b). This tension has been shaped by
comparative textbook analysis from the very beginning, whether by the League of
Nations during the interwar period, or by UNESCO, the Council of Europe and bilateral
textbook conferences in the post-war era (Fuchs 2005a; Fuchs 2005b). Even though the
majority of textbook-related research today has distanced itself from this normative and
political point of departure, the latter continues to play a key role, particularly in cases
of war-affected or post-conflict societies. Here, textbook research – primarily analyses
of stereotyping and enemy images in textbooks and other teaching materials – provides
political recommendations for the revision of such materials. At the moment, this is most
relevant for three regions: the Balkans, East Asia, and the Near and Middle East. There
is very recent research on all three regions, ultimately serving to support political and
social processes of reconciliation and the reification of textbook contents (Dimou 2009;
Helmedach 2007; Dorschner and Sherlock 2007). In the case of the Near and Middle East,
research aims both to support the dialogue between the Arab states and, in the context of
Israel and Palestine, to contribute to a mutual understanding of different interpretations of
history, objectifying their portrayal (Firer et al. 2004). East Asia is another region that has
been marked by textbook conflicts for a long time. Since 2001 historians and educators
have been discussing controversial issues and developed various bi- and multilateral
textbooks and teaching material. East Asian textbook revision activities have caused
fierce political debates but have also been a tool to enhance the academic communication
between China, Japan, and South Korea. The ways in which textbook activities and
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Current Trends in History and Social Studies Textbook Research
academic historical research have contributed to coming to terms with the region’s past
has been widely analysed over the last decade (Nozaki and Selden 2009; Richter 2008;
Saaler 2005).
The highly explosive political nature of textbooks and research pertaining to them
is, however, not only relevant for cases of textbook revision in contexts of social conflict.
A multitude of textbook conflicts – especially in relation to history textbooks – have
resulted in so-called “history wars”, waged on a national level within a specific society
(Liakos 2008). These conflicts are essentially disputes over the formation of a national
tradition, the securing of legitimisation processes, and the construction of national
identity. It is no longer the historical profession that exclusively determines the way in
which a nation ought to remember its past but a wide public that uses digital media to
resonate about controversial historical events well beyond the context of the specialised
academic discourse. Over the last decade, there has been a worldwide increase in public
disputes of this kind surrounding the interpretation of historical events and the question
as to which interpretations should be included in history textbooks (Repoussi 2008;
Popp 2008). The Armenian genocide in Turkey, the textbook debate in Greece (Repoussi
2006), the colonial past in France (Bickerton 2006), the role of indigenous population in
Australia (McIntyre and Clark 2003), or the Enola Gay debate in the USA (Linenthal and
Engelhardt 1996; Bender 2009) are but a few examples.
As a general rule, it can be said that the experience of the globalising world and
increasing demands to account for the histories of hitherto “unheard voices” from socially,
religiously and ethnically disadvantaged groups, have contributed to a questioning of the
dominating national narrative. The challenges of the multi-ethnic classroom, as well as
attempts to construct supra-national identities, reveal the limitations of a master narrative
purely based on national history. On the other hand, it appears impossible to ignore the
neo-conservative trend that seeks to uphold traditional national history and prescribe
certain identity constructions with a view to sustaining particular national values. This is
tied to attempts by national governments as well as the EU to enforce specific readings
of history by law (Cajani 2008). Overall, textbook conflicts are not confined to conflict-
affected countries or societies in transition where textbook revision plays an important
part in enhancing reconciliation. In addition, globalization has led to a new understanding
about the nation, the role of historical scholarship and the public awareness of the political
dimension of memory production and, therefore, has a major impact on textbook issues.
Textbook research has started to contextualize the analysis of textbooks and educational
media within these developments.
Firstly, work in this area picks up the thread from traditional textbook research.
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Eckhardt Fuchs
Secondly, the last few years have seen an unwavering focus on the question as to
how textbooks contribute to national identity construction. National identity forms a
strong point of reference here, textbooks being generally understood as key media via
which nation-state history policy is reconstructed and conveyed. While scholars called
for an analytical distinction between (normative) textbook work and (objective) textbook
research as early as in the late 1970s, normative approaches nevertheless continue to
dominate, creating a direct link between bi-polar identity construction and conflict
solution (good versus evil) and thus often neglecting self-contradictory ‘underlying
assumptions’ within the narrative (Stojanović 2004; Furrer 2004).
Identity research on the basis of textbooks reaches beyond the national dimension
and is increasingly drawing upon Europe itself as a point of reference. This heightened
interest in Europe stems from the concept of a standardised and authoritative European
history textbook such as that published in 1992 (Delouche 1992; Stobart 1999). This
project, for the most part politically motivated, has met with a great deal of scepticism
from academia. The diverse and fragmented concepts of Europe appear to have been
melted down into one singular compulsory historical narrative, and this textbook neglects
the dramatic differences in learning cultures and didactics to be found between the various
European countries. It thus appears that dealing with the topic of Europe is based on a
need to register similarities and differences in perceptions of Europe, within Europe.
The aim, therefore, cannot be to construct a supra-national historical master narrative or
to establish a unified geographical area, but rather to sensitise pupils to the diversity of
European memory and the interpretative patterns of neighbouring countries (Fuchs and
Lässig 2009; Langer, C. 2009; Maier, R. 2009). Textbook research has taken up this issue
and investigates not only the diverse representations of Europe and Europeanness to be
found in contemporary textbooks, but concurrently pursues a historical interest in changes
to textbooks from a comparative perspective and thus the converging and competing
perceptions they provide of self and other with respect to Europe. However, research
still remains primarily limited to studies investigating how Europe, particularly the EU,
is mentioned in textbooks and curricula (Jackson and Iris 2002; Kotte 2007; Natterer
2001; Schissler 2003; Riemenschneider 2001). Only very first steps are being taken to
contextualise this question within the issue of European identity construction and the
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Current Trends in History and Social Studies Textbook Research
Fourthly, and finally, there is the dimension of world or global history, which
has also become relevant to textbook research in light of recent debates within history
didactics considering its inclusion in school instruction. Although contemporary research
indicates that the concepts of national identity continue to dominate over their local,
regional and global counterparts in the messages imparted by textbooks to the next
generation, it also shows that these national master narratives are increasingly located
within global contexts (Fuchs 2005a; Schissler et al. 2005; Popp 2008; Middell et al.
2003).
Over the last few years, textbook-related research has broadened its methodological
repertoire. Firstly, textbook analysis as discourse analysis is based on the assumption
that textbook texts are hybrid texts containing a variety of subdiscourses that relate to
one another in some way via tension, contradiction and/or competition, even though they
are located within the same meta-discourse. This incoherence within a single narrative is
examined using discourse analysis, which thus moves beyond a merely thematic approach
(Crawford 2001; Klerides 2010; Höhne 2008).
Secondly, the analysis of images has gained a great deal of ground following the
iconographic turn. Although education has long since “discovered” the potential of
images, the media revolution has led to a flood of pictures that have found their way into
multi-modal textbook in various European countries and thus given rise to new didactic
challenges. Although studies on cognitive theory of multimedial learning have increased,
there is not much known yet about the impact of the multi-modal textbooks on teaching
and learning processes compared to traditional textbooks. In general, recent research
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Eckhardt Fuchs
Thirdly, methods from the social sciences are becoming increasingly significant.
Empirical research on the impact and reception of textbooks in the classroom is still in
its initial stages and tends to form part of more general studies on history and geography
didactics (Von Borries, B. 2005; Von Borries 2006; Gautschi et al. 2007; Rauch and
Wurster 1997). Yet, there is a growing interest in how textbooks are implemented in
the classroom and the extent to which they can influence the emergence of a historical
consciousness in the pupils. These studies reveal several key points: a) textbooks
remain the dominant media for knowledge conveyance in the history classroom; b) their
implementation is primarily teacher-centric; c) they bear relatively little significance for
pupils outside of the classroom; and d) they fail to meet the qualitative expectations of
pupils and teachers alike in terms of multiple perspectives and controversy. Very little is
known, however, about the real impact of textbooks, especially in the contexts of other
media and societal agents (Foster and Crawford 2006).
In contrast to the above, international macro-sociological comparative studies on trends in
textbook and curriculum research, which seek to explain global developments pertaining to
textbooks and curricula, are well established. Particularly theories and research committed
to a neo-institutional approach have, in empirically convincing studies, diagnosed the
development of a dynamic “world culture” that serves as a model for conforming trends
worldwide within education policy, institutions and materials. From this perspective,
school curricula no longer serve primarily as media via which to legitimise national
regimes or local policies, but rather as means of adopting globally standardised education
norms (Ramirez et al. 2000; Ramirez & Meyer 2002; Kamens et al. 1996; Benavot et al.
1991). Recent neo-institutionalist studies of textbook contents also reveal a stronger focus
on human rights and environmental issues in textbooks on a global scale since the 1970s,
in general studies textbooks more so than in history books. This focus, it is claimed, goes
hand in hand with a more pupil-centred didactics (Bromley et al. 2011). At the same time
it appears that the stronger a country’s international establishment, the more emphasis
it will place on human rights education. A similar trend can be ascertained for the topic
areas of global citizenship, cosmopolitanism and multiculturalism (Ramirez et al. 2010;
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Current Trends in History and Social Studies Textbook Research
The media revolution, beginning in the 1990s, not only brought new challenges for
schools, it also influenced the ways in which education is acquired and conveyed. This
goes hand in hand with public, didactic, educational and academic debates on the purpose
and impact of these new media on educational processes (Köck 2006). Educational
media research has concentrated, for example, on the potential and limitations of new
media in knowledge gain, conveyance and communication via innovative technologies.
A key factor here is the question of design and the implementation of integrative learning
environments. Textbooks only play a minor role within this field. The mutual relationship
between new media and the textbook, user behaviour, and their impacts on learning
processes has not been dealt with yet in textbook research, although the International
Association of Research on Textbooks and Educational Media (IARTEM) has addressed
this issue (Bruillard et al. 2006).
In contrast, the relationship between curricula and the textbook has been of interest to
researchers for a long time. Modern curriculum research, however, which links curricula
with political, scholarly and education-related discourses, is still in its early stages in
Europe, and has hardly been established at universities. There has been a particularly
striking lack of research on the social construction of school (book) knowledge (Künzli
and Hopmann 1998) and internationally comparative studies (Garcia and Leduc 2003;
Héry 1999). Curricula are held to be appropriations by educational institutions such as
the state, society and academia, and, more recently, as reflections and products of societal
transformation processes. Based on questions of curricula legitimisation, this research
analyses the processes of debate via which learning contents are determined and defined
as relevant knowledge for schools. These studies thus move beyond critical analyses
of curricula to include the discursive structures in which their practical development is
executed. For example, one research area is orientated towards civic education, examining
how human rights or citizenship concepts influence curricular developments and thus
ultimately the contents of textbooks, especially with regard to patterns of inclusion or
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Eckhardt Fuchs
exclusion (Keating et al. 2009). An especially interesting discovery here has been that
while curricula themselves have been subject to a process of Europeanisation, the actual
textbook implementation in the classroom has been diversely national in character.
Until now, there has been a distinct lack of systematic studies locating textbooks
within their wider social contexts. Only recently scholars have started to explore this
new terrain by comprehensively examining textbooks in relation to society, education
policy, academia, educational practice and the economy, from the perspectives of
scholarship, didactics, educationalists, textbook authors, education policy representatives,
and publishing houses (Fuchs et al. 2010; Cajani 2008). Textbook-related research
has also responded to current societal developments. Education systems in Europe
find themselves faced with the challenge of addressing the increasingly cultural,
ethnic and religious diversity of school classrooms in the light of more heterogeneous
(im)migration societies (Schiffauer et al. 2002). This especially affects curricula and
teaching and learning materials, which have a particularly crystallising effect on issues
of inclusion and exclusion. Textbook-related research has begun to explore the extent
to which constructions of cultural difference can be found in textbooks and on which
social contexts these might be based (Höhne et al. 2005; Körber 2001; Chikovani 2008).
This is connected to the fact that multicultural issues are addressed by textbooks today,
unlike the 1980s, when textbooks practically ignored this matter altogether. Recently,
scholars have started to ask how textbooks construct “otherness”, and how they address
the dichotomy of self and other as well as diversity and interculturality, and whether all
these constructions contribute to cultural integration. Here new issues emerge in textbook-
related research—for example, the issue of difference in textbooks, as well as its complex
subject matter, classroom implementation, subject orientation, and educational objectives
(Matthes and Heinze 2004; Helgason and Lässig 2010).
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Current Trends in History and Social Studies Textbook Research
While the unique character of textbooks and the specific methods for their analysis
have been of interest to generations of textbook researchers, no consensus has yet been
reached as to their defining aspects. If we consider that textbooks and research questions
pertaining to them are unpredictable and constantly changing objects, then this comes as
no surprise. At the same time textbook-related research lacks self-reflection and semantic,
theoretical and methodological issues connected to textbooks--and other educational
media--are only addressed in isolation. Three examples from the past decade appear
particularly significant.
The German scholar Thomas Höhne seeks in his book to develop a theory of
the textbook (Höhne 2002). In doing so, he follows approaches from the sociology of
knowledge, discourse analysis and media analysis, in which (textbook) knowledge forms
the leading category and the social processes of negotiation surrounding such knowledge
are described by the term “discourse arena” (Diskursarena). He thus moves beyond the
standard and normative definition of the textbook by examining the processes via which
textbook knowledge is constructed, structured and transformed. He describes the textbook
in multi-dimensional terms as an “informatorium”, a “pedagogicum”, a “politicum” and
also as a “constructorium”. In this sense, the textbook is regarded as a medium of social
observation within a multimedial world. Textbook knowledge, defined as knowledge
both in and about textbooks, can be distinguished from other media via its didactic
structure, yet cannot be reduced to this feature. It must be decoded (analysed) in terms of
its semantic structure, function and form in order to be defined in terms of socio-cultural
knowledge.
The Belgium scholars Angelo Van Gorp and Marc Depaepe (2009) do not seek to
develop a theory of the textbook, although they do attempt to open up new perspectives
of textbook-related research via processes of definition. They define the textbook in
terms of its content, style and physical aspects. Its content-related dimensions include the
“elementary” and “pedagogical” nature of the instruction material. “Style” refers to the
question as to whether its contents are presented in a manner suitable for the age of the
learners and whether they motivate the latter to learn. The extent to which a textbook can
be considered child-centred is determined by its physical components such as its design,
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Eckhardt Fuchs
cover, layout, and so on, which are peculiar to all textbooks regardless of cultural context.
However, with their question as to what constitutes a “true textbook”, Van Gorp and
Depaepe themselves fall into the normative trap and their approach remains a pragmatic
one: they seek to raise the interest of third-party funding and politicians in textbook
research and textbook libraries (Van Gorp and Depaepe 2009; Pandel 2006; Crawford
2003 and 2006; Nauman et al. 2006).
Conclusion
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Current Trends in History and Social Studies Textbook Research
Secondly, textbook research has been emancipating itself from traditional content
analysis, pursuing two new paths with a view to methodological diversity. The first
involves locating textbook contents within specific contexts – of society and politics,
specialist research and of other educational media – thus gaining access to a wealth of
specialised discourses, even while the educational dimension of the textbook nevertheless
remains a central aspect (Matthes and Heinze 2003). Textbook research draws on
approaches from discourse theory, media studies, the social sciences and cultural studies,
using the tools of conflict-, memory-, or transnational research. Self-reflection on the
theory of the textbook and the status of textbook research, however, remain a rarity.
Textbook-related research, on the other hand, is pursuing a promising path, especially
as it seeks to fill a gap in the area of empirical research on impact and reception. There
are also methodological studies that use methods from textbook research and subject
them to critical self-reflection (Mikk 2000; Crawford 2000; Lebrun 2006) such as those
visualising the historical dimension of textbooks as educational media that have altered
over the centuries.
While the textbook itself may be “in trouble”, textbook-related research is not (Tobin
et al. 2008). Textbooks should be contextualised in diverse ways, taking into account
the relationship between textbooks and other, particularly more recent, media, in the
nexus of social, historical and communicative relationships in which school knowledge
is represented and imparted. They should also be placed in the context of processes via
which textbook contents are negotiated and of the actors involved in them; the interaction
between state influence and textbook production, approval and use; pedagogical
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Eckhardt Fuchs
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