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The Art of Time Travel: Historians and Their Craft PDF

345 Pages·2016·2.75 MB·English
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Praise for The Art of Time Travel ‘Griffiths’ luminous new work underlines the inarguable point that if we are truly to understand our history, we must get to know those who wrote it. A must- read for anyone interested in Australia’s past.’ – TIM FLANNERY ‘Erudite but honest. Generous yet discerning. Warm, perceptive and nothing if not elegant. A soulful meditation on the people who have shaped our past into the stories we call history, by an historian who himself is at the top of his game. Tom Griffiths reveals that the beating heart of history rests in the humanity of those who write it.’ – CLARE WRIGHT ‘Tom Griffiths’ study of fourteen historians greatly enriches our understanding of Australia past and present. The book teems with fresh insights into our history. The author, himself an eminent environmental historian, keeps his subjects close to earth. Like much of his work, the book adds new meaning to the word “country”.’ – KEN INGLIS ‘A series of subtle and penetrating intellectual portraits of Griffiths’ teachers, forebears and peers. As we read, we are brought into communion not only with the minds of these thinkers, but with the mind of Griffiths himself, an historian at the height of his powers, with insights that range far beyond history to the meaning and significance of modernity itself. This book is not only a meditation on the past, but a rallying cry for the future, in which Australia’s history might be a source of both unflinching self-examination and poetic wonder.’ – BRIGID HAINS ‘For too many decades Australian history has been a cacophony of “too many notes”. Tom Griffiths has the rare, reconciling capacity – and a collegial historian’s generosity – to envisage it as a symphony, created by many voices, the discordant as well as the harmonious, that tells an evolving, bracing story of who we are.’ – MORAG FRASER ‘Tom Griffiths reveals the crucial importance of history to our humanity. A rare feat of imagination and generosity, The Art of Time Travel will remain relevant for decades to come.’ – MARK MCKENNA ‘By exploring the intellectual and emotional backstories of fourteen people who have crafted Australian history, Tom Griffiths shows how and why it is done. In the process, he has created a beautiful work of history.’ – JULIANNE SCHULTZ ‘Sharp insights, thoughtful judgment, a generous spirit – The Art of Time Travel has the hallmarks of all Tom Griffiths’ scholarship. His panorama of Australian historians shows why any similar survey conducted in the future will include his own artful work among the honoured.’ – STEPHEN J. PYNE, Arizona State University ‘An enthralling account of the intellectual rediscovery of Australia, vividly brought to life by a gifted interpreter. Griffiths’ lyrical prose is mesmerizing.’ – DAVID LOWENTHAL, University College London ‘Liberates the study of historians and historiography from the dry, soulless confines of the academy to demonstrate the creative and imaginative craft at its best. If there were one single volume to encapsulate this dramatic, complex, entangled and exciting field, The Art of Time Travel is that book. Certain to become an instant classic.’ – JANE CARRUTHERS, University of South Africa For Michael, Julie, Mardie and Dominic Contents Prologue ONE The Timeless Land: Eleanor Dark TWO The Journey to Monaro: Keith Hancock THREE Entering the Stone Circle: John Mulvaney FOUR The Magpie: Geoffrey Blainey FIVE The Cry for the Dead: Judith Wright SIX The Creative Imagination: Greg Dening SEVEN The Frontier Fallen: Henry Reynolds EIGHT Golden Disobedience: Eric Rolls NINE Voyaging South: Stephen Murray-Smith TEN History as Art: Donna Merwick ELEVEN Walking the City: Graeme Davison TWELVE History and Fiction: Inga Clendinnen THIRTEEN The Feel of the Past: Grace Karskens FOURTEEN Dr Deep Time: Mike Smith Epilogue Acknowledgements Endnotes Index Prologue A couple of years ago, when I was walking a pilgrimage route in rural France, I was invited to share the evening meal with three fellow walkers, all of them French. Conversation eventually got around to how we earned our livings. One was an air-conditioning salesman, one was a nurse and the third a psychological counsellor. When they discovered that I was a historian, there was a chorus of approval, even, dare I say it, a frisson of serious regard – something unexpected for scholars in Australia. And, as proud French citizens, they were ready with their natural next question: ‘Who are your favourite French historians?’ The question beautifully fulfilled one of the stereotypes we have of French culture – that the general public knows and reveres its nation’s intellectuals. It was predicated on the confidence that they would know the names I managed to present to them. Even the adjective ‘favourite’ acknowledged that there were many possibilities of which they were aware, and that my answer would reveal something about myself. The question also sweetly assumed that I, as a historian living in Australia, was part of a global scholarly community, and would surely be familiar with the historians of France. They awaited my answer – I am not exaggerating – with strong interest. I gave them two names. The first was Fernand Braudel. This was greeted with satisfaction and approval. Yes, they replied, The Mediterranean was a landmark work, a history with prodigious scale and depth, a book they all knew.1 My second offering was Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie. ‘Oh yes! The author of Montaillou!’ they rejoiced.2 I had hit the jackpot here, and there was much to discuss about the intimate eye on medieval society that Ladurie had given us all. My stocks went up even further when I was able to say that I had heard Ladurie speak just a week earlier, at a conference in Munich. Now I was boasting. Before the meal was over, they had pressed me for the titles of my histories and regretted that they were not ‘yet’ translated into French. I knew they never would be, but how exhilarating that they considered it likely. Over the next week or two, as I strode across the Aveyron, I happily pondered this heady conversation, which had unexpectedly united my scholarly and recreational lives. Would I ever be asked this question in Australia, I wondered. And how would I reply? What is the role of historians in our national conversation and what exactly is it that they do? This book is a quirky, serious and personal exploration of the art and craft of history in Australia since the Second World War. I have chosen to illuminate my discipline in the way my French table companions found most congenial: by nominating some of my favourite historians and trying to describe how they work. I am keen to show that writing history is a highly creative act and that its artistic aspirations are perfectly consistent with the quest to represent the past truthfully. Good history is a high-wire, gravity-defying act of balance and grace that fills me with awe. Rather than investigating this process abstractly, I am going to observe how particular historians construct a body of work out of a lifelong dialogue between past evidence and present experience. Historians tend to be dedicated, passionate citizens who seek to make a difference by telling true stories. They scour their own societies for vestiges of past worlds, for cracks and fissures in the pavement of the present, and for the shimmers and hauntings of history in everyday action. They begin their enquiries in a deeply felt present. But as time travellers they have to forsake their own world for a period – and then, somehow, find their way back. If, at the dinner table, I had named a third favourite French historian, it would have been Marc Bloch. A French Jew who fought in both world wars, Bloch was a senior member of the French Resistance in Lyon who was captured by the Gestapo, imprisoned, tortured and murdered in 1944. Together with Lucien Febvre, he founded in 1929 the Annales School of historians, which pioneered ‘the new social history’ with its integration of social science techniques and interest in long-term changes in social structures and collective mentalities. Bloch was a gifted student of rural society, and his French Rural History (1931) and Feudal Society (1939) remain greatly admired. But perhaps his most famous works were those written during the German occupation of France, when he was mostly stranded from his sources except for the grim stimuli of oppression and imprisonment. In 1940 he wrote Strange Defeat, an urgent but reflective analysis of his country’s ‘terrible collapse’ under the German invasion. He also began writing The Historian’s Craft – but it was unfinished on the evening he was taken in a truck to be executed with twenty-seven other Resistance prisoners. The manuscript survived, and it began with the question, ‘What is the use of history?’ The book was his response: a heartfelt but calm self-examination at a time when many felt betrayed by history. Bloch’s tenacious integration of civic engagement and critical scholarship amidst such trauma was an inspiration to many of the historians studied in this book.3 Historians are often challenged about the usefulness of their discipline – and they frequently challenge themselves. The Australian historian Graeme Davison, himself inspired by Marc Bloch’s practical sense of history as a craft, took up the challenge of ‘the utilitarian age’ of the late 1990s to write his insightful book The Use and Abuse of Australian History.4 Another Australian historian, Hugh Stretton, besieged by rising economic rationalism in the 1980s, treasured history as a discipline because it has ‘three qualities which have been scarce in modern social science’: it is ‘holist, uncertain and eclectic’. ‘Who study societies of every kind,’ he asked, ‘study them whole, know most about how they conserve or change their ideas and institutions, write in plain language, and generally know how uncertain and selective their knowledge is at best? Historians do.’5 History is a form of knowledge that tends to be subtle, humble, complex and contextual and therefore less amenable to generalisation, prediction or application. A decade ago, when I was writing a history of Antarctica and researching human experience in remote places, I read the medical and psychological studies of life in isolated communities and kept coming up against the limits of faceless, nameless, clinical accounts of deeply personal and cultural matters. In the name of objectivity, rationality and generalisation, real people were gutted and meaning ebbed away. History, by contrast, spills over with illuminating, verifiable examples that you can argue with. This person did that here, then, because. History’s commitment to contingency and particularity has often been seen to weaken its usefulness. But to understand the rigours of the long polar night – and to survive it – people need vivid tales of winters past. Historians welcome questions about usefulness because history is a democratic practice that cherishes its connection with the people and the polity. History can be constructed at the dinner table, over the back fence, in parliament and in the streets, and not just in a tutorial room or at the scholar’s desk. Historians generally don’t try to hide behind jargon or intimidate others with professional bullying. They aim to give voice to common experience and seek to communicate with the widest audience. Ironically, it is this very inclusiveness that can expose their authority to challenge. History is so important, so ubiquitous, so integrated with our public and personal lives – with the very

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No matter how practised we are at history, it always humbles us. No matter how often we visit the past, it always surprises us. The art of time travel is to maintain critical poise and grace in this dizzy space. In this landmark book, eminent historian and award-winning author Tom Griffiths explores
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.