Search
On-Site Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Room
Browse By Unit
Browse By Session Type
Search Tips
Change Preferences / Time Zone
Sign In
Bluesky
Threads
X (Twitter)
YouTube
Why are histories of racial trauma so often omitted or distorted in U.S. history education? This study investigates the systemic motivations behind curricular erasure by drawing from interviews with historians, cultural studies scholars, and educators. Participants reflected on suppressed or distorted accounts of events such as the Sand Creek Massacre, the Tulsa Race Massacre, anti-Asian violence, and the lynching of Italian immigrants. Findings identify converging ideological pressures, such as nationalism, denialism, and efforts to preserve favorable portrayals of the U.S. government, as key drivers of curricular distortion. This research contributes to critical curriculum studies and the teaching of difficult, violent, and intergenerational traumatizing racial histories by examining how racial violence is remembered, reframed, or buried in public education.