Tuesday, October 22, 2019

American History


There are no facts, only interpretations.” (Friedrich Nietzsche, 1844--1900)
History is not objective.  There is no such thing as “what really happened.”  History is made of facts selected, facts ignored and omitted, facts interpreted and ultimately facts arranged into a narrative. Histories are written, rewritten, and perpetually revised often reflecting the tenor of the times in which they are written. Though built upon facts, History is a subjective story that mirrors the historian’s bias and agenda.
My high school American History textbooks were written in the 1950’s or early 60’s, pre-Viet Nam, in the congratulatory post-WW-II years. My textbooks were full of facts to be memorized. The narrative was patriotic.  The focus was largely on events involving presidents, politicians, generals, explorers, industrialists, inventors, and an occasional scoundrel.  With a few token exceptions, American History was largely about the achievements of our nation’s notable white males.
A few months ago, I read These Truths: a History of the United States by Jill Lepore (2018).  It is a history of America from colonial through modern times.  With the facts she selected, omitted, interpreted, and wove into a narrative, this female historian has authored a new, credible, yet very different American History.  Her narrative is filled with facts about the often over-looked; African-Americans, Native Americans and women. Her history is full of facts, but it is a very different history from what I was once taught.  It is a more nuanced and questioning narrative that includes both this country’s epic achievements and its epic short comings.
I can’t help but wonder how today’s news will one day be recorded in the history books.  In real time, based on the same daily ‘facts’, there is no agreed upon narrative. There is a FOX narrative and there is a CNN narrative.  There is a GOP narrative and a Democratic Party narrative.  There is a narrative from those who are rabidly pro-Trump and a narrative from those who are equally adamant that Trump must go.  Fifty years from now who will tell the story?  Who will be the interpreters of these times?  Who will decide what facts to include and what to omit in the high school textbooks?  What will be the agenda?
Fifty years from now, these turbulent and troubled times will be written about and remembered.  But not objectively, not “what really happened.” There is no such thing.

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