"The End of History was supposed to
have happened back in 1989, the year the Berlin
Wall fell and Francis Fukuyama announced the conclusive triumph of liberal
democracy. We know how that thesis worked out. But what happens when the other
kind of History — academic, not Hegelian — starts to collapse?
That’s a question that James H.
Sweet, a professor of history at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and the
president of the American Historical Association, tried to raise earlier this
month in a column titled “Is History History?”
for the organization’s newsmagazine. It didn’t go well.
Sweet’s core concern in the piece, which was subtitled
“Identity Politics and Teleologies of the Present,” was about the “trend toward
presentism” — the habit of weighing the past against the social concerns and
moral categories of the present.
The column offered some muted
criticism of The Times’s 1619 Project (along with jabs at Clarence Thomas and
Samuel Alito) and warned that “bad history yields bad politics.” It immediately
raised howls of protest on Twitter from left-wing academics. Within two days,
Sweet produced a groveling apology, in which he indicted himself for a
“ham-fisted attempt at provocation” that “alienated some of my Black colleagues
and friends” and for which he was “deeply sorry.”
We should now feel deeply sorry for Sweet, who probably
didn’t realize that, in the cancel culture we inhabit, apologies intended as
bids for forgiveness are almost invariably taken as admissions of guilt.
But the larger shame is that Sweet
had important things to say in his thoughtful column — things that the reaction
to the column (and the reaction to the reaction) now risks burying.
Between 2003 and 2013, a dwindling number of history Ph.D.s,
he noted, were going to students doing work on topics preceding 1800. At the
same time, historians were producing works that “collapse into the familiar
terms of contemporary debates,” particularly those connected to identity
politics.
“This new history,” he wrote, “often ignores the values and
mores of people in their own times, as well as change over time, neutralizing
the expertise that separates historians from those in other disciplines.”
Put another way, Sweet was warning
that historians risked doing an injustice both to their own profession as well
as to the past itself by falling victim to “the allure of political relevance.”
His main example came from a recent visit to the Elmina Castle in Ghana, which
had once been one of the principal sites of the Atlantic slave trade. These
days, he wrote, the castle has become a kind of shrine for African Americans
seeking a place to memorialize enslaved ancestors.
But, Sweet says as a historian of
Africa, “less than 1 percent of the Africans passing through Elmina arrived in
North America” — most enslaved Africans who survived the middle passage ended
up in Brazil or the Caribbean. And those who were enslaved were often first
brought to Elmina by other African brokers who promoted the slave trade just as
cruelly and greedily as the Europeans with whom they did business.
That does nothing to diminish the
evil of the trade, much less its relevance to America’s past and present.
But it helps put it into a global
context in which the roles of victim and victimizer seldom fall neatly along a
color line. If that challenges current orthodoxy, it’s only because that
orthodoxy is based on a simplistic understanding of history.
The proper role of the historian is to complexify, not
simplify; to show us historical figures in the context of their time, not
reduce them to figurines that can be weaponized in our contemporary debates.
Above all, historians should make us understand the ways in
which the past was distinct.
This shouldn’t prevent us from making moral
judgments about it. But we can make better judgments, informed by the knowledge
that our forebears rarely acted with the benefit (or burden) of our
assumptions, expectations, experiences and values.
There’s a lesson in humility in that, as well as a reminder
that we are only actors in time whose most cherished ideas may eventually seem
strange, and sometimes abhorrent, to our descendants.
All this should have been a useful antidote to what Sweet
correctly lamented as “the idea of history as an evidentiary grab bag” for
people “to articulate their political positions.”
Instead, his column — which bent
over backward to showcase his liberal bona fides — ignited the usual
progressive furies. Anyone looking for further confirmation that modern
academia has become a fundamentally ideological and coercive exercise
masquerading as a scholarly and collegial one need have looked no further. It
will be interesting to see if Sweet manages to hold on to his post as the
American Historical Association’s president.
Meanwhile, in 2019 only 986 people earned
history Ph.D.s — the first time the number had fallen below 1,000 in over a
decade, according to an A.H.A.
analysis of available data. That number is still nearly twice as
high as the number of advertised job openings. If people are wondering how
history ends, maybe this is how: when a scholarly discipline tries to turn
itself into something it isn’t, making itself increasingly irrelevant in its
desperate bid for relevancy."
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