History is about chaps, geography is about maps. This may sound like a tweet-savvy academic in a chirpy mood, but is actually an old saying. Whoever said it hadn’t dealt with a feminist. In today’s interdependent world, however, more than chaps and maps, my worry is about gaps — gaps in knowledge. Just how breathtaking this has become was evident last week.
A survey by Journeys of Distinction, one of Britain’s luxury tour specialists, revealed that more than half of British adults (58.6 per cent) believed that Mount Everest was in England. This created an instant stir here. The Herald, a Glasgow newspaper, also mentions that just over 20 per cent of those questioned also “admit they do not know how many countries are actually in the UK”.