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thousands of years political thinkers have recognized that
myths are essential instruments of political power. Plato’s
vision of a well-ordered republic famously employed a Myth
of Metals to justify inequality. Similarly, Nietzsche argued
that myths were necessary in the creation of national
identity and, indeed, for human life to propel itself
forward.
Two recent books, Dana
Lindaman and Kyle Ward’s History Lessons and Ray
Raphael’s
Founding Myths, make great strides toward challenging
some conventional myths and broaden our understanding of
American history. Raphael works within the interstices of
American mythology to reveal the genealogy of fictional
stories central to the American “founding.” Lindaman and
Ward demythologize American history by compiling textbooks
from nations with which the US has engaged. From their
vantage points, both reveal the highly myopic and provincial
perspective that often shape American understanding of
American history and, indeed, all national myths.
Two central questions
underscore both books: Why is it important to challenge the
myths that constitute American folklore? And what have been
and are likely to be the consequences of these myths? If
they are simply benign stories of heroism that make
Americans feel proud and help forge a national identity, why
not let them persist?
One of the brightest
and most illustrative moments of Raphael’s book is his short
chapter on the famed order given by American generals at the
Battle of Bunker Hill to “wait until you see the whites of
their eyes,” which has taught generations of Americans that
the Revolutionary War was an intimate and personal war of
brave individuals confronting their British oppressors. As
Raphael explains, “In Revolutionary times, we prefer to
believe, the glory of war was not diminished by impersonal
slaughter.” Thus, the war of independence would be seen
quite differently if the bloodshed were the result of out
and out massacre, as war often is. More importantly, this
myth propagates a dangerous view of war that World War I
diaries have refuted and the poems of Siegfried Sassoon have
given voice to; the fact is that people can often motivate
themselves to kill other humans only so long as they
can’t see the “whites” of their opponents eyes, that is,
dehumanization drives war. It is for this very reason that
generations of war psychologists have had to desensitize
soldiers in order to kill – victory often depends upon the
namelessness and facelessness of “the enemy.”
The glorification of
war, as Raphael illustrates with his demystification of Paul
Revere’s ride, the fictitious Molly Pitcher, and Sam Adams
as patriot par excellence, requires that heroes and their
stories be continuously created and maintained. Raphael sees
a paradox, here, arguing that “The image of a perfect
American in a mythic past hides our Revolutionary roots, and
this we do not need.” In reconsidering American history,
Raphael contends that Americans will be able to discover
that only stories of real people doing real deeds can be the
source of a true patriotism, and to do he seeks to peal away
the layers.
While Raphael questions
the widespread historical assumptions that constitute
American identity, Lindaman and Ward are revisionist
historians in the most literal sense. Revisionist history is
an inevitably controversial practice as Americans—as is true
of any people—are uncomfortable questioning the veracity of
the stories they were told as children. But Lindaman and
Ward return “revisionism” to its perspectivist roots to
re-vision, or take a second look at, a historical moment
from a different vantage point.
This is precisely what
anyone truly concerned with understanding history must do.
As we have seen, from Herodotus and Thucydides to such
contemporary historians as Doris Kearns Goodwin and Arthur
Schlesinger, all historians take perspectives. Sometimes
they even lie for tragic effect or narrative flow.
Recognizing this, Lindaman and Ward help us to reconsider
our own history from perspectives that official American
doctrine does not allow. As one might expect, these
perspectives are not attempts at rewriting “Truth,” but
rather of making it clear that Americans are as biased in
the writing of history as other nations. Just as Raphael
shows us how perspective and the national imperatives that
shape it effect how we see ourselves, Lindaman and Ward
demonstrate how other nations view the history of their
involvement with the United States.
One of the most
exciting of their chapters deals with what Cubans simply
call “The Missile Crisis.” Unlike American textbooks, which
point to an unprovoked act of aggression by Soviet Premiere
Nikita Khrushchev, Cuban textbooks describe the “crisis” as
a reaction to continued threats from American “imperialist
forces” such as the Bay of Pigs Invasion of 1961, as well as
a logical response to assassination attempts on Fidel
Castro. An excerpt from a Canadian text reveals yet another
perspective, focusing on Kennedy’s unilateralism: “Neither
[Canadian PM] Diefenbaker nor his ministers were
consulted—much less informed—about the decision [to ready
American military forces and nuclear capabilities for war].
The prime minister was furious that a megalomaniac American
president could, in effect, push the button that would
destroy Canada.”
Several of Lindaman and
Ward’s entries serve to broaden the usual treatment of
events offered by American textbooks. A chapter from Nigeria
on the Atlantic slave trade, for example, frankly
acknowledges the financial benefits Nigeria received from
selling off its own people, while an excerpt from Zimbabwe
blasts its master, Great Britain, for forcing the African
colony into slavery. The British entry, in turn, praises
itself for being among the first nations to ban slavery.
Lindaman and Ward’s
book is timely and important. At a moment when the
credibility and standing of the United States in the world
has been called into question, and where political
candidates increasingly need to prove their willingness to
act unilaterally in order to be considered “strong” by the
American electorate, understanding how the world is taught
to see America is in the best interest of the nation. This
is a matter of pragmatic political strategy – if not to
attain respect and trust, then as a matter of long term
national security. Whether or not he is right, George W.
Bush’s claim that the United States has always been a force
for good is not a view shared around the world, and many
important clues to the “global test” that John Kerry rightly
suggested the United States should consider can be found in
History Lessons.
Perhaps more important,
these books call into question whether a nation so deeply
invested in a set of national myths can make decisions that
will make it stronger or help it to pursue the equality or
justice to which American founding documents lay claim. For
example, the contemporary myth of a cheerful heterosexual
nuclear family that has never in fact existed is being used
to deny rights to gay and lesbian citizens. Similarly, a
decade ago, Reagan’s legend of the “welfare queen”
conditioned many Americans to believe that efforts to combat
poverty were nothing more than a waste of tax dollars.
National mythologies that conveniently serve the interests
of economic or religious factions, or that are used to
mobilize a nation for war, can have real and serious
consequences.
These revisionist
historians do not advocate denying America the right to a
past. But the spirit that unites both books is the
conviction that any nation’s guiding assumptions must be
continually re-examined before they can serve as a sound
basis for future action.
History Lessons and Founding Myths show that
looking back and reconsidering history is a prerequisite of
the very possibility of moving forward.
Dan Skinner is a
graduate student in political science at the CUNY Graduate
Center.
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