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The Scopes Monkey Trial (Headline Court Cases)
 
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The Scopes Monkey Trial (Headline Court Cases) [Library Binding]

Freya Ottem Hanson (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 8 Up-Solidly researched titles, written in a lively manner to draw and keep readers' attention. The authors examine the changing times and the clash of ideas behind both of these famous trials. DeVillers describes the financial and personal difficulties that plagued Brown throughout his life as well as his strong faith in the Bible that fueled his radical beliefs. Hanson presents an account of what was billed as the "trial of the century." In 1925, John T. Scopes challenged the Tennessee law against teaching the theory of evolution. Concluding chapters present court decisions since the 1960s dealing with the teaching of evolution in public schools. Each book contains black-and-white photographs and reproductions, discussion questions, and chapter notes. Both of these titles explore important chapters in the development of the United States and introduce young people to legal terminology and procedures.
Patricia Ann Owens, Wabash Valley College, Mt. Carmel, IL
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Reviewed with Judy Monroe's The Sacco and Vanzetti Controversial Murder Trial.

Gr. 6-10. Should evolution be taught in schools? Did Sacco and Vanzetti get a fair trial? Part of the Headline Court Cases series, these two books combine details of the courtroom drama with arguments about the crucial social and legal issues that are still relevant today. In the Scopes "monkey" trial much of the excitement came from the clash in the courtroom between two famous lawyers, atheist Clarence Darrow (who defended the teacher Scopes without charge) and William Jennings Bryan. Hanson also relates the evolution/creationism debate to the First Amendment issues raised by the trial, especially the separation of church and state and the right to free speech. Monroe's book is stronger in style, focusing both on the violation of Sacco and Vanzetti's rights and on what are fair and just proceedings in any trial, from arrest to indictment and arraignment. She ends with several discussion questions that will stimulate classroom debate, questions of court proceedings and of guilt and innocence. Both books include full source notes by chapter, a glossary, a chronology, a brief bibliography, and Internet addresses. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 11 and up
  • Library Binding: 104 pages
  • Publisher: Enslow Publishers (June 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 076601388X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0766013889
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,988,125 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The best juvenile history of the celebrated "Monkey" Trial, April 15, 2002
This review is from: The Scopes Monkey Trial (Headline Court Cases) (Library Binding)
The Scopes "Monkey" Trial did not appear in American History textbooks until after the play "Inherit the Wind" opened on Broadway. In fact, several textbooks used the fictional account of the trial as the basis for what appeared as history. One of the chief virtues of this book by Freya Ottem Hanson is that she puts the celebrated "duel in the shade" where Clarence Darrow questioned William Jennings Bryan about the Bible and evolution in perspective.

Hanson only spends a couple of pages on the cross-examination, but she does focus on the point where Bryan admitted that the days in Genesis were not necessarily 24-hour days. This, of course, is the focal point of the play's version of what happened. However, an examination of the trial transcript shows that Bryan, knowing where Darrow was going with his questions, was actually attempting to pre-empt the line of attack; he was not force to admit the point, but actually volunteered the point. After all, according to Genesis the sun, moon, and stars were not created until the fourth day. So, while Hanson does not let the cross-examination dominate the story of the trial, she does buy into the importance of that particular declaration. So while "The Scopes Monkey Trial" focuses more on what happened in the court that most juvenile accounts, it still falls short of adequately capturing the legal arguments of the trial.

Hanson provides a lot of information about the trial, including details about all of the various witnesses for the prosecution and the defense. I was also pleased to see that she pays more attention to Dudley Field Malone's speech in defense of academic freedom than you will find in Edward J. Larson's Pulitzer Prize-winning account of the trial "Summer of the Gods." However, for a book that is focusing on the trial as a court case, I was surprised that it does not given young readers a clear sense of the stages of the trial. The cross-examination of the third and final stage of the trial was intended to embarrass Bryan; the decision had already been made to ask the jury to find Scopes guilty. Darrow would even refrain from giving a closing argument just to prevent Bryan from giving the "Back to God" speech he had been working on for weeks.

Malone's speech represents the key position of the defense, which was to reconcile evolution and Genesis. This is important because it was this rhetoric of reconciliation that was intended to be their position and not the ridicule of Bryan that came to characterize their position. Furthermore, Hanson ignores the first stage of the trial, where defense attorney Arthur Garfield Hays argued the Butler Act was unconstitutional. Hays is mentioned in the book (but not in the index) so young reader do not learn about how he drafted up a law patterned on the Butler Act to teach that the Earth was the center of the universe, just like it says in the Bible.

Another strength of the book is how Hanson covers the legal cases involving evolution and creationism from the Epperson v. Arkansas case that finally saw the anti-evolution laws declared unconstitutional to more recent court actions. The book is illustrated with black & white photographs, including several which I have never seen before (and since I did my dissertation on the Scopes trial I had some reason to believe I had seen pretty much everything out there). In terms of primary and secondary sources, Hanson certainly availed herself of a better selection than any other author of a juvenile account of the trial....

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Scopes monkey trial review, March 22, 2005
This review is from: The Scopes Monkey Trial (Headline Court Cases) (Library Binding)
In the book The Scopes Monkey Trial, by Freya Ottem Hanson, the trial between John Thomas Scopes and the state of Tennessee is broken down piece by piece. Everyone who had something to do with this trial was included in this piece of writing. Hanson talks about all of the different points of view that were faced when it came to Darwin's theory of evolution and the kind of people that had them. Hanson even talks about how much excitement was brought to the small town of Dayton Tennessee because of the trial and its publicity.

I personally did not like this book. It is a long drawn out piece of writing about a boring trial back in the 1920's. Though the fact that a state would feel that they have a right to outlaw the teaching of a different theory of how humans came to existence, other than the Catholic Church's theory does interest me a little bit. I personally would not recommend this book to anyone who is not studying this subject because the way that the material is presented is just boring and obsolete.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Truth About the Trial, June 10, 2010
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This review is from: The Scopes Monkey Trial (Headline Court Cases) (Library Binding)
The Scopes Monkey Trial, Freya Hanson

Freya Hanson is a lawyer. These 101 pages provide a summary of this show trial. There are `Chapter Notes', a "Glossary" with definitions, "Further Reading" of six books, and an `Index'. 1921 saw the price of agricultural products fall by half; many businesses failed. A group in Dayton Tennessee decided to challenge the Butler Act that made teaching evolution a crime after the ACLU offered money and support to anyone who would challenge the law. It would bring publicity to this economically depressed town. John Scopes graduated with a law degree, but the best job available was a teaching job as the football coach. The trial was a town festival (pp.9-10). It attracted two famous lawyers: William Jennings Bryan (three time Presidential candidate, former Secretary of State), and Clarence Darrow (defender of working men and accused criminals). The basic issue was one of politics: do the people have the right to control local education, or does it belong to the Big Corporations (p.13)? This struggle continued to this day.

Chapter 2 discusses Charles Darwin and his 1859 book. Darwin did not study fossil evidence to create his belief of evolution from a common ancestry. Darwin's example of finches is flawed; birds can and do fly to other areas in search of food. Darwin knew nothing about genes and their effect on organisms. Hanson does not tell how Darwin's ideas justified the rule by corporations and the aristocracy ("survival of the fittest"). Fundamentalism was especially popular in rural areas and in the South (p.20). [These were suffering from economic oppression by the forces pushing Darwinism.] Popular support allowed passage of a law banning the teaching of evolution in the public schools. Even though a standard textbook discussed Darwinism. Chapter 3 notes the changes in America (p.23). Drugstores (not taverns) were the social gathering places (p.25). Town leaders picked John T. Scopes to create a test case (p.27). Pages 27-31 explain the background to this trial.

Chapter 4 provides the background of John T. Scopes. He believed in evolution. He profited from the trial to go to graduate school in Chicago and worked as a geologist. William J. Bryan was known as "The Great Commoner" for his support for farmers and working people (Chapter 5). Bryan was talented (p.44) and supported popular control (p.45). Clarence Darrow was one of the best defense attorneys in America (p.46). He defended oppressed workers and people charged with crimes. A Grand Jury indicted Scopes twice (Chapter 6). Chapter7 highlights the prosecutor's case. Chapter 8 has the defense: a teacher has the right to educate students about well-known theories. The defense experts were not allowed to testify. Bryan testified as a witness, but his testimony was expunged.

The jury quickly found Scopes guilty (Chapter 9). The Tennessee Supreme Court reversed the verdict. The media commented on the trial (p.89). John Scopes enrolled in the University of Chicago (supported by the Rockefellers), then worked for an oil company in Venezuela (Rockefeller interests). Should the parents and voters control what is taught in their local schools (home rule), or should corporate flunkies control local education? This fight continues today (Chapter 10). Note the US Supreme Court says only one sort of belief is allowed, but doesn't say this is also a belief system. [A history of science shows how its truths evolve.] Is the creationist movement a form of resistance to political oppression by big corporations (p.104)? Belief in Darwinism requires an act of faith (p.105). Does Darwinism have a practical use? Do teachers have the right to comment on evolution (p.108)? Can a teacher point out the damage done to America by Wall Street bankers and brokers? Or the damage from the Federal Reserve? Note the noxious Wall Street gang are now attacking the school teachers of America. Is that science?

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