- Framed properly, even boundary-breaking comic sketches can be handled by students. Beyond the obvious Catholic and Spanish stereotyping, we have crime and punishment being sent up.
- The actual Inquisition and its type of bizarre logic–not “fear and surprise,” but heroic punishment and the Malleus Maleficarum–speak to a tendency to find the worst in people. While nobody may expect them, the Inquisition finds guilt, finds what it is looking for. . .
- The other obvious idea in classrooms is that, nowadays more than ever, we only research what we are already looking for. This is a huge problem I encounter every unit as a composition professor. This sketch famously sends confirmation bias and illustrates the engaging Dunning-Kruger Effect.
Candela Citations
CC licensed content, Original
- The Spanish Inquisition. Authored by: Monty Python's Flying Circus. Provided by: BBC. Located at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cj8n4MfhjUc. Project: Practical Foundations and Principles for Teaching. License: All Rights Reserved