NinjaFletch
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- Sep 30, 2009
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Yeah this was basically what I was thinking, you’ve just fleshed it out a lot better than me. The idea that as historians we’re somehow uniquely immune to the passions of the moment, that we have frozen the interpretation of certain symbols, events, individuals etc., in time so that any challenge to them represents an attempt to “undo” history is, well, bollox.
Oh don't worry, I knew you agreed and just wanted to use it as a launchpad to elaborate further.
I've been reading Simon Schama on the French Revolution recently. He states that many historians often have themes or implicit biases (in their books), and frequently avoid 'negative' incidents that might upset the validity of those themes or biases. Could it be the case that some historians aren't so much guilty of dismissing/downplaying Churchill's various errors and personal faults but rather that they're afraid the alternative would spoil their 'bigger picture'?
Of course, and it happens on a conscious and unconscious level, too. History is a subjective discipline, and historians fit their evidence to their arguments, no matter how much they try to avoid doing so. For a figure like Churchill, about whom so much is known, even the process of distilling his life down into a manageable narrative requires judgement calls about what to include and what not to include. Those judgement calls are as much reflections of our society as the way what is included is written about.
On the wider issue of statues more generally, we can see how much what we think we know about the past and the values of it is a construct of our present shaped by our own research agendas and lines of enquiry with the rather spurious argument that slave owning was ok judged 'by the values of their time'.
What is implicit in that argument is that we must ignore the voices of those we know were not happy with being enslaved, and privilege the voices of slave owners over the top of them. To make that argument one must , consciously or consciously, make the argument that the voice of slavers is move important than the voice of the slaves themselves. The fault for that lies at no ones feet in particular, but it's a reflection of the fact that the academe has privileged those white, rich voices of slave owners over the voices of the slaves themselves and has been far too slow to address that imbalance. It is only in the past few decades as debates in our society play out, that research into those voices and aspects of race has begun.
The 'values' that we supposedly 'know' were held and against which we 'must' judge is entirely a modern construct based upon who and what we decide the taste makers and opinion setters were, and it's one which decided that the opinions of slavers and slave traffickers was more important than slaves. It's one steeped in structural racism and white supremacy and one that we will change over the next few decades not because we're 'whitewashing the past' but because our own society's judgements on whose voices we should hear from, and how we should treat those voices will shift.
I know it's bloody high concept, but, really, history is all constructed and always re-written.