Posted 2023-March-27, 07:43
About parents, 6th grade, and Michelangelo:
I will start with a true story. I started 7th grade when I was 11, and the teacher, no doubt with good intentions, talked a lot about The Red menace and how the country needed to be ready for war. My mother was usually of the opinion that the schools can do as they please but in this case, she got worked up. She did not intervene, but she made it clear to me that she objected to what this teacher was doing. How would she have reacted if my sixth-grade teacher had shown the class a picture, yes, a famous artistic picture, of a naked man? I am confident that my mother never heard of Michelangelo, I very much doubt she had ever been in an art museum or ever planned to do so. I believe that she would have thought that an adult showing a picture of a naked man to 10-year-olds was an adult showing a picture of a naked man to 10-year-olds, that would be what it was, no further explanation needed. this would not be because of religious beliefs, my mother sent me to Sunday School but that was the beginning and the end of any sort of religious instruction for me. With regard to the Red Menace and war, her view was that all wars are about oil. When I said that I didn't think there was any oil in Korea (this was during the Korean war) she said 'They are fighting there, there is il there". Her views about adults showing pictures of naked men to children would have been equally brief and definite.
My mother had run away from home when she was 14. Her views on just about anything were unsophisticated, but not altogether crazy. With regard to war, if she had maintained that the decision to go to war was often linked to economic issues, probably many scholars would have agreed with her. And if she said that children should be cautious when an adult wants to show them pictures of naked men or women, I expect that the police and many others would agree.
As a child, I was given a great deal of freedom to explore on my own. Exploring on my own is very different from having an adult guide my exploration in a way that the adult thinks that I should go. We can probably all agree that David was a great piece of art. So is the Mona Lisa, and parents could relax about the teacher's intent. I saw the 1952 movie Moulin Rouge in 1952 with Jose Ferrer playing Toullouse-Lautrec. It was a bit upsetting to 13-year-old me. But I was 13, not 10, and the choice to see it was mine, not some teacher's.
Short version: Parents are watching out for their kids. Maybe these parents are unsophisticated, but there are some good features to being unsophisticated. Thinking that these parents are simply stupid religious zealots is, perhaps, unsophisticated.
Ken