Pseudohistory


Chariots of The Gods
1421: The Year China Discovered America
Holy Blood, Holy Grail
The Sirius Mystery: New Scientific Evidence of Alien Contact 5,000 Years Ago
The Gold of the Gods
The Space-Gods Revealed: A Close Look at the Theories of Erich von Däniken
The Da Vinci Code (Robert Langdon, #2)
The Orion Mystery: Unlocking the Secrets of the Pyramids
Gods and Spacemen in Greece and Rome
Not of This World
Timeless Earth
Gods from Outer Space
Technology of the Gods: The Incredible Sciences of the Ancients
1434: The Year a Magnificent Chinese Fleet Sailed to Italy and Ignited the Renaissance
The Sign and the Seal: The Quest for the Lost Ark of the Covenant
Wrong Planet - Searching for your Tribe by Karl WigginsForbidden Archeology by Michael A. CremoThe Wine Dark Sea, Homer's Epic of the North Atlantic by Henriette MertzThe Mystic Symbol by Henriette MertzTechnology of the Gods by David Hatcher Childress
Snarfeology
181 books — 5 voters

Jeff Vandermeer
The impatient, feckless reader, posessed of no glimmer of intellectual or historical curiosity, should do an old historian a favor and skip the next few pages, proceeding directly to the Silence itself (Part III). I would assume that, in these horrid modern times, that will include most of you. Of course, those readers least likely to read these footnotes, and thus least likely to appreciate the next few pages, will skip this note and bore themselves upon the ennui of history .
Jeff VanderMeer, City of Saints and Madmen

Mary R. Lefkowitz
There is a current tendency, at least among academics, to regard history as a form of fiction that can and should be written differently by each nation or ethnic group. The assumption seems to be that somehow all versions will simultaneously be true, even if they conflict in particular details. According to this line of argument, Afrocentric ancient history can be treated not as pseudohistory but as an alternative way of looking at the past. It can be considered as valid as the traditional versi ...more
Mary R. Lefkowitz, Not Out of Africa: How Afrocentrism Became an Excuse to Teach Myth as History

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