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Teaching by Lying: Professor Unveils 'Last Pirate' Hoax

By JENNIFER HOWARD This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Fairfax, Va.


Did you know that a pirate roamed the Eastern Seaboard as late as the
1870s, and lived into the 20th century? Edward Owens haunted the lower reaches of the Chesapeake Bay after the economic crash of 1873 wiped out his living as an oyster fisherman. Owens robbed but didn't kill his victims, and when the economy picked up, he gave up piracy for good. He died in 1938.

Owens's exploits might have been lost to the mists of time if not for an
undergraduate student named Jane Browning, who stumbled on the story ina cafe in Gloucester County, Virginia, and tracked down the man behind the legend. You can read more about Owens in his Wikipedia entry The Last American Pirate. On YouTube, you can watch Ms. Browning visit the site of Owens's house about his historical status.

Edward Owens and Jane Browning are fictions, unleashed on an
unsuspecting world by students taking an upper-level history course at
George Mason University. Will they get in trouble with their professor
now that the hoax has been unveiled? No. It was his idea.

T. Mills Kelly, an associate professor of history at George Mason and an associate director of the university's Center for History and New Media, thought up the course, "Lying About the Past," as a novel way to teach history, not to subvert it.

He wanted to get undergraduates to tackle detailed historical research,
using digital-history tools as well as old-school archival work. He
wanted them to become more sophisticated consumers of information-to
learn when a source could be trusted and when to be skeptical of it. And
he wanted them to enjoy it all.

"History classes aren't often as much fun as they could be," Mr. Kelly
said. "An awful lot of history classes are the passive-learning model,
where the professor dispenses and the students consume. It's an
efficient model. There's no evidence that it actually results in
learning."

As he put it in the syllabus for the class, "Maybe it's our conditioning
in graduate school, or maybe we're afraid that if we get too playful
with our field, we won't be taken seriously as scholars. Whatever the
reason, I think history has just gotten a bit too boring for its own
good. This course is my attempt to lighten up a little and see where it
gets us.

Historical Fiction


The Edward Owens hoax went live on the Internet on December 3. The
Chronicle sat in on the great unveiling. Students hovered over their
laptops in a classroom at George Mason, making final edits and tweaks
before unblocking the Jane Browning blog, its entries dated back into
September. The Wikipedia entry they'd created a few days earlier was
already up, having survived the online encyclopedia's vetting process.

The enthusiasm was infectious. "It's been the best stuff so far this
semester," sophomore Kristen Motley said as a classmate uploaded
"Jane's" YouTube videos.

"This has definitely been my favorite history class I've taken," said
Kelly Kreis, a senior majoring in history and English. "I love to do
things hands-on. I don't like to sit down and read out of a textbook
constantly. The point of history is to explore it."

One or two of the perpetrators sounded a little nervous. "It has been a
lot of fun, but it has been a little ethically queasy at points," said
Rachel Dickson, a junior who is working toward a career in journalism.
She wondered whether a future employer might hold her involvement in a
historical hoax against her.

"A historical site might denounce us," said Tom Gow, a junior. He seemed
unfazed at the prospect.

Ms. Kreis said, "Most of us have professional aspirations and don't want
to tick off people." She didn't really seem worried, though, and neither
did most of the class. They were having too much fun.

Early on in the semester, the students said, they talked for a long time
about ethics and laid down some ground rules. No money would change
hands. No medical information would be put forth. No national-security
issues would be involved. No violations of the university's
responsible-computing policy would be made.

"Nothing that would get me fired," Mr. Kelly said, half joking.

Historical hoaxes are easier to spread than ever, thanks to the
Internet. They're also easier to debunk."People couldn't fact-check the
Fiji Mermaid" easily, Mr. Kelly pointed out. (The mermaid, a sideshow
hoax, was popularized by P.T. Barnum.) He and the students wondered how
quickly the Owens hoax would spread-and how quickly they'd be found out.

With a link here and a post there, the students began to spread the
Edward Owens story as soon as the Jane Browning blog went live. They
Facebooked, Twittered, and Shoutwired it. Within a day, USA Today's Pop
Candy blog
<http://blogs.usatoday.com/popcandy/2008/12/ahoy-delve-into.html>
picked it up, posting a link to Jane Browning's "simple-but-fascinating
Web site." The Pop Candy blogger wrote, "Here's hoping she'll get a
stake in the inevitable film rights to his life story."

Jane Browning's blog attracted about 1,200 unique visitors by the third
week of December-modest, perhaps, but not bad for an undergraduate's
blog about her research project. The YouTube videos got more than a
hundred views each.

We will never know just how hard the world would have fallen for the
story of Edward Owens, the last American pirate. When Mr. Kelly got wind
that a colleague's spouse and a historian he knew at another university
had bought into the hoax, he and the students decided it was time to
pull the plug. Thursday afternoon, a prewritten "mea culpa" appeared on
Jane Browning's blog. Now Edward Owens really is history.


Questions of Ethics


Is is unethical to ask students in a history class to fabricate? A few
of Mr. Kelly's colleagues got a little squeamish when he described his
plans for "Lying About the Past." Nobody told him he couldn't teach it.

"You have been warned," he told readers of his blog, edwired,
<http://edwired.org/?page_id=2>  in a post in late August in which he
laid out the idea. "I've already been told that I'm violating some sort
of historian's Hippocratic oath by encouraging my students to willfully
mislead a possibly credulous public. Aside from the fact that I don't
remember taking such an oath, my own view is that we need to be playful
sometimes in the study of history and that this course is a good way to
do just that, even as we do some serious learning along the way."

You certainly could call it a teachable moment-or a whole semester's
worth of them. For the first part of the semester, Mr. Kelly and his
students explored dozens of historical and journalistic hoaxes: the
Hitler Diaries, alien autopsies, the Fiji Mermaid, and the story (cooked
up by H.L. Mencken in the Evening News in 1917) that Americans were
reluctant to use the bathtub when it was introduced. Mr. Kelly's
students concluded that a hoax story doesn't have to be possible, it
just has to be plausible, and there has to be a market or potential
audience of people willing to buy it. There's one born every minute, as
the saying goes.

"I am very confident that those 15 students will graduate from college
being much more critical consumers of online information, because they
will never want to get caught themselves," Mr. Kelly said.

The would-be hoaxers kicked around ideas about what fabrication they
might be able to pull off. They could invent some crazy sport and rules
to go with it. They could dream up a lost Midwestern town, or spread the
story of how a simple act-a sneeze at the wrong moment-changed the
course of history.

Some topics, like the Civil War, were too well-studied, the risk of
getting found out too high. What about a 19th-century Chesapeake Bay
pirate? The idea was plausible, local and, post-"Pirates of the
Caribbean," could catch some headwinds in the zeitgeist. (It didn't hurt
that Somali pirates put piracy back in the headlines this fall.)

The class divided into working groups, one to create Edward Owens's plot
line, one to handle Jane Browning's, another to pull together details to
add texture to the story. The students pored over census records to come
up with a name that was both plausible and common. They logged time at
the National Archives and the Library of Congress. They located a house
in rural Virginia that could be passed off as Owens's, and filmed "Jane"
exploring around it. They created the blog and the videos and uploaded
enough documentation-a scanned 19th-century document purporting to be
Edward Owens's last will and testament, for instance-to make it seem as
if there was some real evidence behind the story.

That's at least as much work as most college students put into a
research paper, and maybe more. "You actually learn stuff in this
class," one said the day the hoax went live.

"It accomplished all the things we say we want to accomplish in a
history course," Mr. Kelly said. "They learned about primary sources,
they learned about historiography, they learned how to construct an
argument in a compelling way, and they learned some digital skills. They spent some time discussing ethics in the historical profession, and they had a great time."

Assuming he doesn't get fired (yes, he has tenure), Mr. Kelly intends to
teach the course again. You have been warned.

________________________________

Copyright <http://chronicle.com/help/copyright.htm>  (c) 2008 by The
Chronicle of Higher Education <http://chronicle.com/>


 
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