All history is 'revisionist'
A Florida law banning relativism in classes
ignores reality and 75 years of academic tradition.
By Jonathan Zimmerman | Los Angeles Times | June 7, 2006
JUST WHEN YOU thought it was safe to study American history again
the revisionists
are back!
You know, those relativists who distort or simply fabricate the past to make it
fit their present-day biases. For instance, shortly after the U.S. invaded Iraq
in 2003, President Bush attacked "revisionist historians" who questioned
his justifications for using force against Saddam Hussein. He did it again on
Veterans Day in 2005. "It is deeply irresponsible," he declared, "to
rewrite the history of how the war began."
And just last week, in an unprecedented move, the president's brother approved
a law barring revisionist history in Florida public schools. "The history
of the United States shall be taught as genuine history and shall not follow the
revisionist or postmodernist viewpoints of relative truth," declares
Florida's Education Omnibus Bill, signed by Gov. Jeb Bush. "American history
shall be viewed as factual, not as constructed."
Ironically, the Florida law is itself revisionist history. Once upon a time, it
theorizes, history especially about the founding of the country
was based on facts. But sometime during the 1960s, all that changed. American
historians supposedly started embracing newfangled theories of moral relativism
and French postmodernism, abandoning their traditional quest for facts, truth
and certainty. The result was a flurry of new interpretations, casting doubt on
the entire past as we had previously understood it. Because one theory was as
good as another, then nothing could be true or false. God, nation, family and
school: It was all up for grabs.
There's just one problem with this history-of-our-history: It's wrong.
Hardly a brainchild of the flower-power '60s, the concept of historical interpretation
has been at the heart of our profession from the 1920s onward. Before that time,
to be sure, some historians believed that they could render a purely factual and
objective account of the past.[*] But most of them had given up on what historian
Charles Beard called the "noble dream" by the interwar period, when
scholars came to realize that the very selection of facts was an act of interpretation.
That's why Cornell's Carl Becker chose the title "Everyman
His Own Historian" for his 1931 address to the American Historical
Assn., probably the most famous short piece of writing in our profession.
In it, Becker explained why "Everyman" that is, the average layperson
inevitably interpreted the facts of his or her own life, remembering
certain elements and forgetting (or distorting) others.[**]
For instance, try to recount everything you did yesterday. Not just a few things,
like going to work or eating dinner or reading the newspaper, but everything.
You can't. Even if you kept a diary and recorded what you did each minute, you
would inevitably omit some detail: a sound in your ear, a twitch in your nose,
a passing glance of your eyes. A 24-hour video camera might pick up these physical
actions, but it could never record your thoughts.
So when somebody asks what you did yesterday, you select a certain few facts about
your day and spin a story around them.
As do professional historians. They may draw on a wider array of facts and theories
but, just like "Everyman," they choose certain data points and omit
others, as well they must.
Becker was an optimist. Although historians could never determine the capital-T
"Truth," he wrote, they could get progressively closer to it by asking
new questions, collecting new facts and constructing new interpretations.
Nevertheless, he concluded his 1931 address on a pessimistic note: Unless the
profession engaged lay readers unless, that is, we taught the public about
what we actually do Americans would reject history itself, taking comfort
in banal pieties and sugarcoated myths.
And surely one of the biggest myths of all is that history is simply about "facts."
This year marks the 75th anniversary of Becker's famous speech, yet Americans
appear no nearer to understanding that all pasts are "constructed,"
that all facts require interpretation and that all history is "revisionist"
history.
Demagogic politicians are certainly at fault for this situation, but historians
bear a good deal of blame too. Unlike Becker's generation of scholars, who worked
hard to cultivate a lay readership, most of us write only for each other. Is it
any wonder that the public has no idea about how we go about choosing topics,
identifying sources and arriving at conclusions?
"It should be a relief to us to renounce omniscience," Becker wrote
75 years ago, "to recognize that every generation, our own included, will,
must inevitably, understand the past and anticipate the future in the light of
its own restricted experience."
Yet this recognition also comes with a responsibility, which most historians have,
unfortunately, renounced as well.
If more of us wrote for the people instead of simply about them, perhaps they
would turn a deaf ear to specious charges of "revisionism," "constructivism"
and the like. People construct their own stories every day, just like we historians
do. And may the best story win.
JONATHAN ZIMMERMAN teaches history and education at New York University.
He is the author of "Innocents Abroad: American Teachers in the American
Century" (Harvard University Pres, 2006).
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times
* Hugh Rank writes (June 7, 2006): Although I especially notice
the name -- Leopold von Ranke -- when I read history or travel abroad (Rankestrasse
intersects Berlin's famous "K-dam"), I claim no relation to that famous
19th German historian who is known as the "father of objective history"
by telling things "as it had really been" (wie es eigentlich gewesen).
In current usage,"Telling it like it is." However, in the early 20th
century, the "New Historians" pointed out that Ranke didn't recognize
his own bias: that Ranke was basically a conservative monarchist, a political
historian, focused on recording the politics of those with power, whom he saw
as the agents working out God's Will on earth.
Zimmerman is accurate when he notes the continuing popular acceptance of Ranke's
ideas about one "true" history. Dogmatists and demagogues today tend
to attack anyone who doesn't agree with their version of Truth ("that's
the Way Things Are," "Absolute Truths") -- so they often use
the term "relativists" as an attack word, with a sneer
and a snarl. Furthermore, academics who disagree with said demagogues are often
labelled "so-called intellectuals, effete ivory-tower dwellers, godless
secular humanists."
By the way, when President Bush critized "revisionist
history" on Veterans Day ("It is deeply irresponsible to rewrite the
history of how the war began."), this veteran thought that it was a very
odd remark because I don't remember any changes or revisions. Critics
of the Bush administration war policies were consistent: before, during,
and after the start of the Iraq war, Check it out, on google.
** "remembering certain elements and forgetting (or distorting) others."
My Intensify/Downplay Schema
is based on the observable premise that "All communication
is limited, slanted, or biased to include and exclude items." and that
"Downplaying by omission is common since the
basic selection/ omission process necessarily omits more than can be
presented."