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A Dangerous Idea

The Scopes Trial, the Original Fight over Science in Schools

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A Dangerous Idea

De : Debbie Levy
Lu par : Noe Nishizawa
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Bloomsbury presents A Dangerous Idea by Debbie Levy, read by Noe Nishizawa

A Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection

One hundred years ago, a small-town science teacher ignited a nationwide debate over what students should learn in school--and who should decide.

In 1925, when Tennessee lawmakers banned the teaching of evolution in public schools, teacher John Scopes challenged the law--and set off a gripping circus of a legal battle. Two masterminds faced off in a blistering courtroom debate over creationism and natural selection, each armed with the books they believed belonged in classrooms. Celebrity politician William Jennings Bryan relied on the Bible to make his case, while legal luminary Clarence Darrow defended Charles Darwin's groundbreaking books On the Origin of Species and The Descent of Man. Their clash would go down in history as the Scopes Monkey Trial.

A century later, here is the riveting truth of what happened and why it matters. For a nation still arguing about the books and ideas that young people should encounter, award-winning author Debbie Levy delivers an important, insightful and expertly-researched account of our history that illuminates the challenges we face today.©2025 Debbie Levy (P)2025 Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Amérique du Nord Histoire Éducation et apprentissage
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Commentaires

The past feels astonishingly present in Debbie Levy's comprehensive and conversational A Dangerous Idea.
At first glance, the time period seems far removed from our own. But the issues of the trial remain with us today. . . . [A] fine, thoroughly researched book.
A welcome, timely resource.
Through accessible language, strong and unhurried pacing, and the deft incorporation of human interest into the story, Levy crafts a compelling narrative. . . . This engaging history relates the story of the first significant battle in America’s ongoing “culture wars” and is highly recommended for junior high and high school collections.
Ample details and a well-researched backstory paint a picture of a pivotal court case that's both surprising and familiar.
[A] riveting work . . . Thorough text depicts [the Scopes Monkey Trial] and its impact, resulting in a look at two combatting schools of thought . . . and the figures who became the face of them.
Levy ably sets the historical stage . . . lead[ing] into a full (and at times farcically funny) recounting of the events.
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