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Authoring the Past: Writing and Rethinking History PDF

220 Pages·2012·2.791 MB·English
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AUTHORING THE PAST Why do you think about and write history as you do? Collecting together the responses to this question from fifteen of the world’s foremosthistoriansandtheorists,AuthoringthePastrepresentsapowerfulreflectionon and intervention in the historiographical field. Edited by Alun Munslow and presented in concise digestible essays, the collection covers a broad range of contemporary interests and ideas and offers a rich set of rea- sonedalternativethoughtsonourculturalengagementwithtimesgoneby.Emerging from an intensely fertile period of historical thought and practice, Authoring the Past examines the variety ofapproaches to the discipline that have takenshapeduring this time and suggests possible future ways of thinking about and interacting with the past. It provides a unique insight into recent debates on the nature and purpose of history and demonstrates that when diverse metaphysical and aesthetic choices are made, the nature of the representation of the past becomes a matter of legitimate dispute. Students, scholars and practitioners of history will find it a stimulating and invaluable resource. Alun Munslow is a founding and UK editor of Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice. His recent publications include Narrative and History (2007) and The Future of History (2010). AUTHORING THE PAST Writing and Rethinking History Edited by Alun Munslow Firstpublished2013 byRoutledge 2ParkSquare,MiltonPark,Abingdon,OxonOX144RN SimultaneouslypublishedintheUSAandCanada byRoutledge 711ThirdAvenue,NewYork,NY10017 RoutledgeisanimprintoftheTaylor&FrancisGroup,aninformabusiness ©2013AlunMunslowforselectionandeditorialmatter;individualchapters, thecontributors TherightofAlunMunslowtobeidentifiedasauthorofthisworkhas beenassertedbyhiminaccordancewithsections77and78ofthe Copyright,DesignsandPatentsAct1988. Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthisbookmaybereprintedorreproduced orutilisedinanyformorbyanyelectronic,mechanical,orothermeans, nowknownorhereafterinvented,includingphotocopyingandrecording, orinanyinformationstorageorretrievalsystem,withoutpermissionin writingfromthepublishers. Trademarknotice:Productorcorporatenamesmaybetrademarksor registeredtrademarks,andareusedonlyforidentificationand explanationwithoutintenttoinfringe. BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationData AcataloguerecordforthisbookisavailablefromtheBritishLibrary LibraryofCongressCataloginginPublicationData LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Authoringthepast:writingandrethinkinghistory/editedbyAlunMunslow. p.cm. Includesindex. 1.Historiography.I.Munslow,Alun,1947- D13.A872012 907.2–dc23 2012011896 ISBN:978-0-415-52038-6(hbk) ISBN:978-0-415-52039-3(pbk) TypesetinBembo byTaylor&FrancisBooks CONTENTS Acknowledgements vii Introduction 1 Alun Munslow 1 Writing, Rewriting the Beach: An Essay 7 Greg Dening 2 ‘After’ History 26 Keith Jenkins 3 History is Public or Nothing 39 Alice Kessler-Harris 4 I Am Not a Baseball Historian 53 Steven A. Riess 5 Beyond History 66 Elizabeth Deeds Ermarth 6 Practices of Historical Narrative 84 Richard Price 7 More Secondary Modern Than Postmodern 91 Patrick Joyce 8 Rethinking History 105 Frank R. Ankersmit vi Contents 9 Confessions of a Postmodern (?) Historian 127 Robert A. Rosenstone 10 The Story of My Engagements with the Past 142 Peter Munz 11 In Search of Ariadne’s Thread 153 Beverley Southgate 12 Invitation to Historians 165 C. Behan McCullagh 13 An Intellectual Self-Portrait or the History of a Historian 171 Peter Burke 14 History, the Historian, and an Autobiography 183 Jeremy D. Popkin 15 Invitation to Historians 196 Alexander Lyon Macfie Glossary 204 Index 210 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ThepublisherwouldliketothankRethinkingHistory:TheJournalofTheoryandPractice for their kind permission to republish the following articles: ‘Writing, Rewriting the Beach: An Essay’ – vol. 2 no 2 1998 pp 143–72, ‘After History’ – vol. 3 no 1 1999 pp 7–20, ‘History is Public or Nothing’ – vol. 5 no 1 2001 pp 11–26, ‘I Am Not a Baseball Historian’ – vol. 5 no 1 2001 pp 27–41, ‘Beyond History’ – vol. 5 no 2 2001 pp 195–215, ‘Practices of Historical Narrative’ – vol. 5 no 3 2001 pp 357–65, ‘More Secondary Modern Than Postmodern’ – vol. 5 no 3 2001 pp 367–82, ‘RethinkingHistory’–vol.7no32003pp413–37,‘ConfessionsofaPostmodern(?) Historian’ – vol. 8 no 1 2004 pp 149–66, ‘The Story of My Engagements with the Past’ – vol. 8 no 3 2004 pp 465–78, ‘In Search of Ariadne’s Thread’ – vol. 9 no 1 2005 pp 91–104, ‘Invitation to Historians’ – vol. 12 no 2 2008 pp 273–9, ‘AnIntellectualSelf-Portrait,ortheHistoryofaHistorian’–vol.13no22009pp269–81, ‘History, the Historian, and an Autobiography’ – vol. 14 no 2 2010 pp 287–300, ‘Invitation to Historians’ – vol. 15 no 3 2011 pp 431–9. INTRODUCTION Alun Munslow Thisbookisacollectionofshortessaysbypractitionerhistoriansandhistoricaltheorists (although this distinction is somewhat arbitrary) who answered the call of the editors of Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice to explain why they think about and write history as they do. The first Invitation was made in 1998 and since then the editors havepublished on average one each year.While wehave a varietyof Invitationswhichdefyeasyclassification,whatseemsclearisthatalltheinviteesmade eclecticauthorialdecisionsabouthowtheyviewtheconnectionbetweenthecontent of the past and how they think about the historical form they give to it. InthisIntroductionIshallnottrytoevaluatewhateachinviteehaswritten.Ioffer a very brief description for eachInvitation but you will have toreadthemfor yourself and make of them what you will. However, what I want to do now is offer some sort of broad conceptual framework for the essays. The title of this collection should indicate itsnatureandthatwhatisbasictoeach Invitationisthat‘doinghistory’isan authorial activity. This seems to suggest that the past is always authored as history. I believe it is. So,unlikemostothertextsthatdealwithwhathistoriansthinkanddo,thiscollection doesnotconstituteahandbookofhistoricalmethodsbecausethemostbasicprinciple of‘historying’isthatitisanauthorialactivity.Sothereis,asonemightexpect,much discussion among contributors on the nature of their individual authorial engage- mentswiththetimebeforenowandwhytheybecamehistorians.However,Idonot believethatitispossibletobuildsomesortofcollectiveego-histoireunderstandingout of these Invitations in regard to any collective agreement on the nature of history. But,leavingtheiregosaside(whichinpracticeisofcoursenotpossible),Ithinkall the invitees took the Invitation as an opportunity to explain why they are engaged with the time before now and of what kind of understanding they have about the nature of their engagement with the time before now. Although the act of ‘doing history’cantellusmuchaboutthepast,ofcourse,itisstillrareforhistorianstoclaim 2 AlunMunslow to be able to seize its reality in their histories. As invitee and co-founder of the journal Rethinking History, Robert A. Rosenstone, said elsewhere, historians knowtoomuchaboutframingimagesandstories,toomuchaboutnarrative, too much about the problematics of causality, too much about the subjectivity of perception,toomuchaboutourownculturalimperativesandbiases,toomuch about the disjuncture between language and the world it purports to describe to believe we can actually capture the world of the past on the page.1 So, there is noprogrammatic structure to this book.It simply comprisesthe thoughts of fifteen historians who have answered the request in their own words. Accordingtoconventionalcustomandpracticehistoriansinterprettheirsourcesby comparing and contrasting them and then locating and explaining the most likely meaning that is presumed to exist in them. This meaning is widely understood as being the most likely narrative that is presumed to exist in the series of the causally connected past events that are examined. This ambition is achieved through the mechanisms of empiricism, inference and representation. However, the intention in issuing these Invitations was that the invitees might explain what they do with and how they think about the past and why this classic empirical, analytical and representationalist procedure may or may not be followed. As you will read, few of the invitees addressed why they wanted to know what happened in the past. At first blush this might seem odd. But is it? Becoming a his- torian is probably not to be summarized as merely wanting to know what happened inthepastand–asweshallsee–notnecessarilytoexplainitsmeaningbydeploying precisely that empirical, analytical and representationalist procedure. Moreover, from myreadingofthesefifteenInvitationsIdonotseeanyattempttovalorizethediscovery of the nature of human destiny by learning the lessons of the past. There is, in sum- mary, little evidence of a desire to generate ‘insights’ that might help us avoid the ‘mistakes of the past’. Doing history is all rather more complex than that. And perhaps it might seem surprising that there is little effort to defend social science historying as such. Only three of the invitees actually use the term social science – the philosopher of history C. Behan McCullagh; Richard Price uses it in passingtodescribeaphaseinhisgraduatetraining;andStevenRiess,whoistheonly invitee to note social science historying as a phase he passed through (I would also describemyownengagementwithsuchapracticeofhistory–aphasebeforemoving on).OfcoursethismighthavesomethingtodowiththeperiodinwhichtheInvitations wereissuedandtowhom.Itmustbeacknowledgedthatthesefifteenyearswereprobably the high tide of the postmodern or multi-sceptical insurrection and social science historying was not on the journal’s intellectual agenda and hence the Invitations. So, what criteria prompted an Invitation? The majority of Invitations were issued by me although two were made by guest editors of a themed issue, as in the case of Alice Kessler-Harris and Steven A. Riess. Over the years I found that these criteria were never fixed as they tended to reflect my own writing and other intellectual interests at the time of the Invitation. This goes some way to explaining what a few Introduction 3 readers may find to be the idiosyncrasy of the selection of invitees. I should say only two historians declined an Invitation. In one case it was pressure of time because of their writing obligations and the other was a professional commitment, viz., being President of the American Historical Association. I hope that Invitation – which remains open – will be taken up sooner rather than later. IfweinsistonhavingarationalefortheInvitations(andthiscollection)itprobably has at least four elements. The first is that the past fifteen years have been among the most intellectually fertile periods in historical thinking and practice. The Invitations were intended to offer an intellectual space to reflect upon and mediate an intensely fruitful period of historical thinking and practice which was primarily the product of theriseofsocialsciencehistoryingsincethe1960s/1970s,theintellectualinsurrection of Hayden White, and the work of other narrativist theorists of history like Maurice Mandelbaum, W. H. Dray, David Carr, W. B. Gallie, Andrew P. Norman, David Carr, Louis Mink, Noël Carroll and of course Frank R. Ankersmit. The latter’s acceptance of an Invitation in the journal is very significant because of his centrality to the debates on the nature of history since the early 1980s. And this leads to the second reason for this collection. It is intended to be a contribution to and a reflection on the force and passion of the recent debates in rethinking history in terms of theory, practice and understanding the cultural purposes ofboth upper and lower-case H/history. It seems opportune to offer sucha collection as this in the hope that it will fall into the hands andthereby influence the thinking of historians who would not usually read a journal, the aim of which is not to publish history understood as the epistemologically and representationalist inspired pursuit of the past. This collection is intended to demonstrate that history is a highly complex process of authorial insight, invention and experimentation that is not in thrall to the exclusivity of the understanding that history is wholly an empirical, analytical and representationalist undertaking. So, and connectedly, the third reason for publishing this collection is the practical one of bringing to a wider audience the reflections of a range of significant historical thinkersandpractitionerswhohave variouslyexaminedtheprocess of‘doing history’ during a period of intense professional self-analysis. Each of the fifteen contributors reflects carefully on how they and how other historians might engage with the time beforenow.ButwhatIfindparticularlyinterestingisthevariedandshareduseofthe concept of ‘story’. While in all the Invitations there is a strong and highly self-conscious sense of the complexities in the processes of authoring of ‘the-past-as-history’ all of the invitees have argued directly that they are creating stories about the time before now. Frank Ankersmit describes his Invitation as a story. Peter Burke acknowledges that he has tried to tell ‘the story’ of his intellectual development. Greg Dening is constantly aware that he is creating a story. Elizabeth Deeds Ermarth refers directly to her story while asking what her true story is and concludes there isn’t one – all we have is writing. Richard Price evaluates authorialism. Patrick Joyce refers to his story. Alice Kessler-Harrisreferstoherstory.AlexanderLyonMacfiereferstothestoryofthepast. C. Behan McCullagh acknowledges he is telling – storying – history. Peter Munz has

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