Appleby Joyce Oldham Hunt Lynn J
Appleby Joyce Oldham Hunt Lynn J
Appleby Joyce Oldham Hunt Lynn J
JOYCE APPLEBY
Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination
Capitalism and a New Social Order
Economic Thought and Ideology in Seventeenth-Century England
LYNN HUNT
The Invention of Pornography (editor)
The Family Romance of the French Revolution
The New Cultural History (editor)
Politics, Culture and Class in the French Revolution
Revolution and Urban Politics in Provincial France
MARGARET JACOB
The Politics of Western Science (editor)
Living the Enlightenment
The Cultural Meaning of the Scientific Revolution
The Radical Enlightenment
The Newtonians and the English Revolution
Telling the Truth ABOUT HISTORY
Telling the Truth ABOUT HISTORY
Joyce Appleby
Lynn Hunt
Margaret Jacob
Acknowledgments
Introduction
PART ONE
Intellectual Absolutisms
1 The Heroic Model of Science
2 Scientific History and the Idea of Modernity
3 History Makes a Nation
PART TWO
Absolutisms Dethroned
4 Competing Histories of America
5 Discovering the Clay Feet of Science
6 Postmodernism and the Crisis of Modernity
PART THREE
A New Republic of Learning
7 Truth and Objectivity
8 The Future of History
Acknowledgments
THIS BOOK has been a real collaboration, and as a consequence all of the
chapters express the views of all of the authors. Formal and informal
conversations with colleagues and students have helped us to clarify our
positions. None of them bears any responsibility for the positions we have
taken—indeed, on occasion some have argued with us vigorously. We are
especially grateful for detailed readings of an earlier version provided by
Sheryl Kroen, Ruth Bloch, Drew Gilpin Faust, Phyllis Mack, Thomas
Haskell, Frank Appleby, Martha Avery, Eric Hobsbawm, Donald Kalish,
Joseph Rouse, Gabrielle Spiegel, Karen Orren, Bonnie Smith, Spencer
Weart, James Miller, Virginia Yans, Carolyn Dewald, and Paula Scott.
Telling the Truth ABOUT HISTORY
Introduction
THIS BOOK confronts head-on the uncertainty about values and truth-
seeking and addresses the controversies about objective knowledge,
cultural diversity, and the political imperatives of a democratic education.
It does so by focusing on the project of history, specifically by asking what
people can know about the past that will help them elucidate the present.
Our central argument is that skepticism and relativism about truth, not
only in science but also in history and politics, have grown out of the
insistent democratization of Western society. The opening of higher
education to nearly all who seek it, the rewriting of American history from
a variety of cultural perspectives, and the dethroning of science as the
source and model for what may be deemed true, all are interrelated
phenomena. It is no accident that they occurred almost simultaneously.
More people have now been to college or university than was the case
at any time in the past. We should, and indeed do, know many things. Yet
confidence in the value and truth of knowledge eludes just about everyone.
This is especially true of historical knowledge. For example, once there
was a single narrative of national history that most Americans accepted as
part of their heritage. Now there is an increasing emphasis on the diversity
of ethnic, racial, and gender experience and a deep skepticism about
whether the narrative of America’s achievements comprises anything more
than a self-congratulatory story masking the power of elites. History has
been shaken right down to its scientific and cultural foundations at the
very time that those foundations themselves are being contested.
In the decades since World War II the old intellectual absolutisms have
been dethroned: science, scientific history, and history in the service of
nationalism. In their place—almost as an interim report—the postwar
generation has constructed sociologies of knowledge, records of diverse
peoples, and histories based upon group or gender identities. Women,
minorities, and workers populate American and Western histories where
formerly heroes, geniuses, statesmen—icons of order and the status quo—
reigned unchallenged. The postwar generation has questioned fixed
categories previously endorsed as rational by all thoughtful men, and has
denaturalized social behavior once presumed to be encoded in the very
structure of humanness. As members of that generation, we routinely, even
angrily, ask: Whose history? Whose science? Whose interests are served
by those ideas and those stories? The challenge is out to all claims to
universality expressed in such phrases as “Men are…,” “Naturally science
says…” and “As we all know…”
In contrast to the critics who have decried the impending death of
Western civilization under the impact of the democratization of education,
we endorse the insights and revisions made possible by that
democratization. This book embraces a healthy skepticism, but it rejects
the cynicism and nihilism that has accompanied contemporary relativism.
It lays out a vision of the past and takes an intellectual stance for the
present that seeks to promote an ever more democratic society. To achieve
this aim, it is essential to confront the perennial controversies over
national history, scientific integrity, and the possibility of truth and
objectivity.
A host of questions present themselves. Do people need history, and if
so, whose history and for what purposes? Is history a science or an art? Is
history always in some sense propaganda? The answers to these questions
might once have been obvious to educated people, but they are obvious no
longer. At least one thing seems clear, however: rarely has history been
such a subject of controversy. In the former communist world, aroused
citizens toppled statues of Lenin and other discredited national heroes and
threw out history professors and textbooks as hopelessly contaminated by
Marxist ideology. When repressive governments fall from power, whether
on the left or on the right, the citizens rush to find historical evidence of
the government’s previous misdeeds in order to fortify the will to
reconstitute their nation. Because history and historical evidence are so
crucial to a people’s sense of identity, the evidence itself often becomes
the focus of struggle. This is clear in the disturbing efforts of some groups
to deny the reality of Hitler’s final solution. Even in countries such as
Japan where the state reserves the right to publish school textbooks,
historians have fought in the courts for the ruling that the books must
strive for truth and not for what will make people feel good about
themselves.
In the United States, the effort to establish history standards for
elementary, middle, and high schools set off a controversy that some
interpreted as another round in the cultural wars begun in the 1960s.
Critics of the older textbooks found them Eurocentric, racist, sexist, and
homophobic, reinforcing the worst racial and sexual stereotypes rather
than helping children and young people go beyond them. They celebrated
the achievements, it was said, of dead white European males rather than
showing the contributions of women, minorities, and the oppression of
gays and other excluded groups. Whole new teams of writers have been
hired to produce histories with perspectives thought to be more in tune
with the values of a socially diverse society.
When new history standards were published in world and American
history that sought to incorporate recent scholarship on women, African
Americans, immigrants, and workers into the old story of male
accomplishments, a new host of critics emerged to castigate the textbook
reformers for negativity toward Western accomplishments, casting them
as bully propagandizers who valued politically motivated interpretations
more than the truth. They have been accused of deliberately exaggerating
the contributions of minority groups in order to make those minorities feel
good about themselves at the expense of impartiality and a common sense
of national identity. State commissions, professional conferences, and
government officials have issued reports, with the result that the public is
alternately confused, irritated, and intrigued. Is history supposed to create
ethnic pride and self-confidence? Or should history convey some kind of
objective truth about the past? Must history be continually rewritten to
undo the perpetuation of racial and sexual stereotypes? Or should it stand
above the tumult of present-day political and social concerns? Is the
teaching of a coherent national history essential to democracy?
The controversies could surprise many adults who remember their
history courses, if they remember them at all, as dreary catalogs of names,
dates, and events rather than as hothouses of debate about ethnic and
national identity. The great contemporary dilemma of relativism has
drawn history into the fray. Does every group or nation have its own
version of the truth? Is one history as good as another? What is the role of
the historian if truth is relative to the position of the author? Because
contesting visions of the past have failed to create a comfortable
consensus, and because change is the essence of historical experience,
some critics have argued there can be no stable, knowable past. They have
failed to understand that just because our definitions or descriptions
change, does not mean that the phenomenon being described does not exist
or cannot ultimately be known with some certainty. The relativist
argument about history is analogous to the claim that because definitions
of child abuse or schizophrenia have altered over time, in that sense
having been socially constructed, then neither can be said to exist in any
meaningful way.
Let us be clear about what we, the authors, believe. We view
skepticism as an approach to learning as well as a philosophical stance.
Since the Greeks, a certain amount of skepticism about truth claims has
been essential to the search for truth; skepticism can encourage people to
learn more and remain open to the possibility of their own errors.
Complete skepticism, on the other hand, is debilitating because it casts
doubt on the ability to make judgments or draw conclusions. It has only
paradoxes to offer.
Yet skepticism is built into the very marrow of the West’s cultural
bones. By the time of the Enlightenment in the eighteenth century, some
degree of skepticism had come to seem necessary for any true intellectual.
Denis Diderot, one of the leaders of the Enlightenment, insisted, “All
things must be examined, all must be winnowed and sifted without
exception and without sparing anyone’s sensibilities.” In the new age
announced by Diderot, thinkers would have to “trample mercilessly” upon
all the old traditions and question every barrier to thought.1 Nothing since
that time has been taken as given or beyond questioning, not the classics,
not the Bible, not the teachings of church or state.
Relativism, a modern corollary to skepticism, is the belief that truth is
relative to the position of the person making a statement. It has generated
a pervasive lack of confidence in the ability to find the truth or even to
establish that there is such a thing as the truth. Relativism leads directly to
a questioning of the ideal of objectivity, because it undermines the belief
that people can get outside of themselves in order to get at the truth. If
truth depends on the observer’s standpoint, how can there be any
transcendent, universal, or absolute truth, or at least truths that hold for all
groups for many generations? We are arguing here that truths about the
past are possible, even if they are not absolute, and hence are worth
struggling for.
Reaction to the experience of World War II with its horrendous new
weaponry and the genocidal policies of the Nazi regime temporarily
forestalled the progress of skepticism and relativism. The killing of Jews
seemed to show that absolute moral standards were necessary, that cultural
relativism had reached its limits in the death camps. But the lull was only
temporary. Doubts spilled over the restraints of conscience and pressed
against the maxims of Western philosophy. The inauguration of the atomic
age in 1945 and the increasing interconnection between big science and
big government impugned the disinterestedness of science itself.
America’s civil rights movement and the protests against the Vietnam War
called into question the ability of scientists, policy makers, and professors
to escape their own political prejudices. Ecologists complained that
modern science in the name of progress had invented the engines of mass
destruction and that industry was polluting the environment. In the
twentieth century, Western civilization produced the most technologically
sophisticated genocide ever seen in history. Progress, democracy, objective
knowledge, and modernity itself no longer seemed to march in step
towards the enrichment of humankind.
Skepticism and relativism are two-edged swords. They can be wielded
to question the powers that be to promote a greater inclusiveness, but they
can also be employed to question any kind of knowledge whatsoever. They
can be used to say that knowledge about the past is simply an ideological
construction intended to serve particular interests, making history a series
of myths establishing or reinforcing group identities. Skeptics and
relativists—sometimes known as postmodernists—often talk about the
social construction of scientific knowledge, leaving the impression that
the linguistic conventions of science have less to do with nature and more
to do with the sociology of the scientists. The conclusion seems inevitable:
because science is an elaborate power game coded mathematically, it
ensures the dominance of those who possess it. In this way they have
confused the social nature of all knowledge construction with the self-
interest of the constructors, forgetting that all social beings participate in
the search for knowledge and sometimes do so successfully. Success
comes when the found knowledge can be understood, verified, or
appreciated by people who in no sense share the same self-interest.
We believe that these difficult questions can be understood by anyone
willing to read a book about them. If the public is perplexed about the
meaning of history and how it is interpreted, then historians are at least
partly to blame. It is time historians took responsibility for explaining
what we do, how we do it, and why it is worth doing. Most people have
little sense of the historian’s vocation or how history teachers learned what
they write and lecture about. History courses, at all levels, convey a
specific subject matter—the American Revolution, late imperial China,
Russia under the czars—but they too rarely foster an understanding of
what historians do when they research and write history.
This book tackles in a general way the underpinnings of our history
writing, the assumptions and values that lead to the search for historical
truth. It examines critically the relevance of scientific models to the craft
of history. It confronts the role that history plays in shaping national and
group identity, and it offers some theories of our own about how
objectivity may be possible and what sorts of political circumstances
foster critical inquiry. Thus it takes up questions about relativism, truth,
and objectivity that have in the past been left to philosophers. The aims of
this book are simple and straightforward but also ambitious: to provide
readers with some sense of history’s relationship to scientific truth,
objectivity, postmodernism, and the politics of identity within a
democratic framework. Despite these ambitions, the book nevertheless
argues that what historians do best is to make connections with the past in
order to illuminate the problems of the present and the potential of the
future.
In the pages that follow we show how historians have conceptualized
their task in the past, particularly how history has gone from telling a
simple story to answering a complex array of questions about the human
experience. The ambitions of history have changed over time, expanding
to include general questions of historical development—itself a new idea
in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Yet even as the ambitions of
history have grown, so too have questions about history’s ability to tell a
story with any certainty.
A democratic practice of history encourages skepticism about
dominant views. At the same time, belief in the reality of the past and its
knowability is essential to a practice of history. To collapse this tension in
favor of one side or the other is to give up the struggle for enlightenment.
An openness to the interplay between certainty and doubt keeps faith with
the expansive quality of democracy. This openness depends in turn on a
version of the scientific model of knowledge, based on a belief in the
reality of the past and the human ability to make contact with it. Such faith
helps discipline the understanding by requiring constant reference to
something outside of the human mind. In a democracy, history thrives on a
passion for knowing the truth.
Even in a democracy, history involves power and exclusion, for any
history is always someone’s history, told by that someone from their
partial point of view. Yet external reality also has the power to impose
itself on the mind; past realities remain in records that historians are
trained to interpret. The effort to establish historical truths itself fosters
civility. Since no one can be certain that his or her explanations are
definitively right, everyone must listen to others. All human histories are
provisional; none will have the last word.
Such a democratic practice of history—one in which an ever-growing
chorus of voices is heard—will depend upon objectivity, defined anew as a
commitment to honest investigation, open processes of research, and
engaged public discussions of the meaning of historical facts. These offer
the best chance of making sense of the world. There is every reason for
democratic citizens to expand their commitment to pluralistic education
and continue their appraisal of the accounts that define them as a nation.
National histories will still be necessary; so too will be faith in the
ultimate goal of an education: the rigorous search for truth usable by all
peoples.
PART ONE
Intellectual Absolutisms
1
The Heroic Model of Science
BY THE TIME the United States became a nation in 1776, history had been
wrenched from the hands of balladeers and chroniclers and entrusted to the
philosophes, who were busy sinking the firm footings of rational inquiry
under all forms of knowledge. Still dazzled by the ability of Newton to
explain the solar system, many Western thinkers came to believe that the
movements of human beings, like those of celestial bodies, could be
comprehended through scientific laws. This intellectual shift made the
past more than a repository of facts, because it now seemed to contain
clues about the direction of the future.
In this transit from poetry and chronicles to social science, historians
took on the responsibility of sifting through the facts about past events in
search of the underlying logic shaping the course of social development.
Influenced by Herder and Hegel, they asserted that a new political entity,
the nation, embodied human purposes and hence should be studied for its
clues about the meaning in unfolding events. Thus history and science,
which had recently been converted into sources of information about the
human enterprise, became intimately associated with a third modern force,
the nation.
Nations themselves had become prominent parts of the European
landscape, because in the early nineteenth century the wars of the French
Revolution had carried radical reform to France’s neighbors, toppling
assorted European monarchs from their thrones. Where the word
“kingdom” indicated a territory belonging to a single ruler and “country”
suggested a land where people had lived long together as subjects,
“nation” evoked the very modern concept of men and women self-
consciously banded together into a political union. With nationalism as an
engine of political and social reform, people looked to national history to
illuminate the course of human progress that had brought modern nations
into being.
Nations figure as places on the map or as sovereign states
resplendently personified at international gatherings. Their definition as
collections of people is much more elusive despite the fact that nations
only exist because of the will of their citizens to accept themselves as a
unified body. Watching the fierce loyalties of ethnicity dissolve national
states in Eastern Europe, one cannot help but wonder what are the invisible
ties that weld a people into a nation. For Americans at the time of
independence, that question was highly pertinent, because they had to
create the sentiments of nationhood which other countries took for
granted. There was no uniform ethnic stock, no binding rituals from an
established church, no common fund of stories, only a shared act of
rebellion. Americans had to invent what Europeans inherited: a sense of
solidarity, a repertoire of national symbols, a quickening of political
passions.
The superior resources for fixing a national identity which Americans
lacked and other countries enjoyed were well depicted in a French
schoolboy’s geography text of the 1960s. The book’s centerfold featured a
line of French men and boys, visually paired by their clothing, stretching
across two pages like a string of paper dolls. At the far left, the man and
boy, obviously father and son, were dressed in contemporary clothes, the
man holding the hand of the next boy, who wore knickers and knee-high
boots with his father in a double-breasted suit and fedora. The next pair
were dressed in the fashion of the turn of the century, and so on across the
two pages, ending with a Carolingian father in doublet and hose. No
viewer could miss the essence of French nationhood; it sprang from an
unbroken chain of French fathers who had lived long in the land and
propagated. This imaginative drawing graphically captured that fact while
underscoring the masculine underpinnings of modern nationalism.
With the ratification of a new American Constitution in 1789, a
structure of central authority came into being in the United States (a noun
used with a plural verb at the time), but only a handful of Americans—
most of them revolutionary leaders—felt the national sentiments
necessary for the survival of the new political creation. As one
contemporary metaphorically noted, the new Constitution had raised a
federal roof without federal walls. Twenty years later, the problem was
less acute, but still a subject of concern. In 1809, during the last month he
spent in the White House, Thomas Jefferson received a letter from the
Westward Mill Library Society of New Brunswick County, Virginia,
inviting his patronage. “Our society,” the secretary wrote the president, “is
composed of farmers, mechanics, Justices of the Peace, ministers of the
Gospel—Military Officers, Lawyers, School masters—merchants—
postmasters, one member of the Assembly & one member of Congress.”
He then gave the names of the six directors for the year: “Hubbard Hobbs
—John Harrison (both planters) Joseph Percivall (a naturalized citisen),
Jesse Coe (an Elder in the Methodist Church) Joseph Saunders (a Deacon
in the Baptist church) and Mark Green (a Major in the Militia of
Virginia).” In closing his letter the secretary posed an arresting question:
“Query will such an heterogeneous body ever firmly…coalesce?”1 Here in
microcosm was the macrocosmic problem of the American people, the
ideological imperative of E Pluribus Unum, the intensely felt need to
create a union from the disparate groups that formed their country.
Absolutisms Dethroned
4
Competing Histories of America
DURING THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY the absolutist state came to represent all
of the ills of society. Castigated as hierarchical, intolerant, repressive, and
implacably opposed to all change, the old-regime monarchies furnished
most of the targets for reform literature. In contrast to these moribund
institutions, Enlightenment writers imagined a free and open social world
where citizens, savants, and statesmen would reason together to encourage
enterprise, expand the ambit of liberty, foster learning, and promote the
interests of humankind. In the United States the Enlightenment program
passed quickly from theory to practice. Through most of the nineteenth
century, American citizens viewed their nation as the embodiment of
Enlightenment ideals as well as the template for social advances that
would one day come to all peoples.
Even in Europe, where the radical reforms of the French Revolution
were blunted by a powerful reactionary movement, science, technology,
and industrialization marched together toward impressive material and
intellectual accomplishments. Pacing this record of mastery were the
ambitions of philosophers who envisioned a coordinated assault upon the
mysteries of nature, society, and human behavior. The positive laws of
social development revealed for their believers a future of beneficent
change. The abuses of the new industrial system, like the enduring
miseries left uncorrected from past times, came to be categorized as parts
of an unfinished agenda, mere examples of cultural lags rather than
intractable aspects of the human condition. During most of the nineteenth
century, success sealed off the prophets of progress from exactly the kind
of scrutiny which their predecessors had brought to bear on traditional
institutions. And so the enlightened enemies of absolutism ended up by
erecting a new kind of absolutism—only now it reigned in science,
philosophy, and enlightened public policy. History came to play a major
role in propagating this modern orthodoxy, particularly in the United
States. And just because their national history was so integral to
Americans’ identity, the new orthodoxy became a part of the political
conflicts generated by industrialization.
The appalling destruction of the Civil War remained a vivid memory
during the closing decades of the nineteenth century, the carnage itself
being replicated when the Union Army moved west to wage savage
campaigns against the Plains Indians. In the South the white supremacist
Redeemers used selective violence and systematic terror to drive freed
men and women back to a state of servile dependence once federal troops
were removed with the end of Reconstruction in 1877. Lynch law became
the law of the land for African-Americans, with lynchings reaching a
cumulative total in the thousands in the early years of the twentieth
century. Historians after the Civil War dropped a discreet veil over this
discreditable record, focusing instead upon the valor of the white soldiers
which had made the Emancipation Proclamation possible. Abrading the
sensibilities of white Americans more than violence against Indians and
blacks were the threats posed by immigration, labor unrest, and declining
profits in farming, all traceable to the profound restructuring of the
American economy.
American industry revealed its astounding potential for growth
between 1880 and 1920. A new breed of national leaders emerged—the
winners in an utterly unprecedented competition for control of entire
trades like meat packing, sugar processing, and oil refining. Swiftly the
myriad of locally owned enterprises disappeared into giant national firms,
leaving the new institutional leviathans—the corporations and trusts—
with centralized control over the economic lives of the farmers,
mechanics, and shopkeepers dispersed across the continent. Increasingly
the future for their children meant leaving the countryside to join the
swelling population of factory workers.
What had once been islands of manufacturing enterprise became
national networks drawing labor and resources to new hubs of economic
activity. The private decisions of bankers and manufacturers created
complex, interlocking systems of industry, commerce, and finance which
pushed to the margins of national life the country’s rural communities.
Maintaining the concept of an undifferentiated people—so long a
resonating theme in America’s self-understanding—proved impossible.
The rich were not only getting richer, their conspicuous riches advertised a
new, more modern, and more menacing era. Journalists raided the lexicon
of aristocratic societies and found “tycoon,” “magnate,” and “robber
baron” to label America’s triumphant industrialists. Since references to
feudal Europe uniformly evoked the thought of a privileged class lording
it over hardworking ordinary folk, talk of the nation’s new robber barons
called into question the permanence of America’s revolutionary legacy.
Evidence of material progress abounded, but opportunities for
individuals to connect independently with the country’s economic
expansion declined during its sudden industrial transformation. The
minimalist government which had been the proud manifestation of the
Jeffersonian faith in the ability of ordinary men and women to run their
own affairs now appeared hopelessly outmatched by the giant
corporations. The possibility that there might be material improvement
concurrent with the corruption of democratic practices threatened to sever
that ideological link between materialism and morality that had enabled
Americans to interpret their prosperity as proof of their superior values.
Philosophy too seemed to have turned against the United States. The
optimism about man’s rational capacities—and it always was man’s—
which characterized attitudes at the nation’s founding had been supplanted
by a tough-minded skepticism about the power of thought to affect the
larger forces shaping human existence. The mechanistic depiction of the
genesis of Homo sapiens in Darwin’s evolutionary theory published in The
Origin of Species in 1859 had struck a blow at the Judeo-Christian
foundations of the nation’s culture. By the end of the nineteenth century,
Europe again was providing intellectual ammunition for an assault on the
new absolutism grounded in the natural laws of progress. Only this time it
would be liberalism itself that fell under the analytical gaze of scholars.
Marx’s radical reinterpretation of the root causes of social action,
Darwin’s subversion of Christian dogma, and Freud’s startling disclosures
about infant sexuality—all of these critical investigations of human nature
and society—acted like enormous boulders thrown into waters that had
been calmed by Enlightenment confidence in man’s mastery of the
universe.
Outside the realm occupied by philosophers, the lives of millions of
men and women on both sides of the Atlantic were being wrenched out of
familiar agrarian patterns by the relentless progress of economic
development. By the end of the nineteenth century, Darwin’s bleak
depiction of the struggle for survival imposed on all living creatures
offered a grim analogy to actual social developments in the United States.
Mines, foundries, sweatshops, factories, and tenement houses sprawled
across the urban landscape, while suburbs were laid out to shelter the
families of the well-off from the stench of progress. Industrial advance
came with lightning speed to an America barely recovered from the
devastating bloodbath that had pitted North against South. The bounteous
nature that had been so profligate with its gifts to America’s charter
settlers had yielded to Darwinian laws that explained how the scarcity of
goods forced people to fend for themselves in the great scramble of life.
Where, within this biological dynamic of chance and destiny, was there a
place for the United States, whose national history orbited around the twin
stars of liberty and equality? More to the point, how was the American
legacy going to be distributed in an industrial society of dispossessed
farmers and deracinated immigrants?
It is one of the great strengths of ideologies that they defy logic and
hence are able to weld together incongruous, even conflicting, ideals. The
American identification of national mission with the clean slate of the
frontier West is a case in point. The opportunity for free men and their
families to fashion their own lives was deemed generally fulfilling
because of desires embedded deep in all human hearts, while the nation’s
bounty of undeveloped land was accorded the specialness of a divine
dispensation. The universal and particular fused. All men and women
wanted the fresh start America offered. This uniform yearning lifted
American history above the specificity of time and place. Still for the
world, as for most of the citizens of the United States, the West was more
inspirational than real. Its invitation to quit established settlements created
a kind of psychic space in which men and women could fantasize about
other possibilities in life while its actual awesome emptiness and exotic
indigenous peoples possessed more appeal as subjects for dime novels
than as future homesites and neighbors. When the superintendent of the
U.S. Census announced that there was no longer a frontier line, he cut off
one of the escape routes of the American imagination, and he did so at the
very time that a host of other changes challenged the nation’s collective
capacity to adapt to industrialization.
By 1893 when Turner offered his frontier thesis as a way of
understanding the American character, the very idea of an American
people had become problematic. What challenged it was the unexpected
arrival of millions of uprooted Europeans. Beginning in the 1870s and
swelling with each succeeding decade until the outbreak of World War I,
people from Greece, Italy, Ireland, Croatia, Serbia, Germany, the Baltic
states, Poland, and Russia streamed into America—fifteen million in the
first fourteen years of the twentieth century alone. Many of these new
arrivals were Catholics and Jews, whose alien religious practices stirred
deep prejudices in the native-born white population. Bred to believe in
toleration, the predominantly Protestant citizens of the United States were
sorely perplexed by their own intolerant responses to the immigrants’
peculiar ways. What became quite evident was that America’s religious
diversity had been pretty much confined to the Protestant strain of
Christianity, and within that strain common folkways had ameliorated the
friction from divurging patterns of faith and worship. Whether they were
Catholic or Jewish, the conspicuous differences in the immigrants’ looks,
behavior, and patterns of sociability disturbed American Protestants. They
drank beer in the parks, enjoyed boxing matches, followed religious rituals
in foreign tongues, and crowded into makeshift tenements. Their very
cultural diversity implicitly challenged the universal validity of American
norms, just as their dark coloring brought to the surface the contradictions
between Americans’ ideals and their racial prejudices.
Despite the nation’s commitment to religious liberty, the preponderant
descendants of the white American colonists were highly sensitive to
variations from their own mores even when they were sanctioned by a
religious denomination. The Mormons, for instance, were subject to
persecution in the 1840s. In a largely unself-conscious way the oldest
white immigrants—a group often referred to now as WASPs—had defined
as universal values which, in fact, came from their Protestant background.
The love of individual liberty that they extolled along with self-reliance
were qualities closely identified with the Protestant side of that great
divide in Christendom created by the Reformation. Thrift, disciplined
effort, and the deferral of pleasure were such conspicuous traits of early
modern Calvinists that the German sociologist Max Weber labeled them
the Protestant work ethic. Even the “invisible hand of the market” which
Adam Smith had evoked to describe the uncoerced operation of a free
economy owed far more to the Protestant orientation of the British people
that he observed than to any universal tendencies in human nature.
American Protestants tended to treat these personal dispositions as
natural endowments rather than social characteristics. These qualities
emerged particularly strongly in the United States, they argued, because it
took a free environment to cultivate man’s natural tendency toward
individual autonomy. Even though these personal traits have to be
carefully instilled at childhood, it has only been in our own time that the
cultural component of behavior—the learned behavior that requires
models and mentors—has been thoroughly explored. In the nineteenth
century, American history, like American intellectual life in general,
pivoted around the successful male white Protestant, whose features were
turned into ideals for the entire human race. When lacking, their absence
indicated an unnatural deviation, except in the case of women, who were
viewed as naturally deficient and hence dependent upon men.
The middle class’s unacknowledged universalizing of Protestant values
became conspicuous in its public denunciations of the mores, politics, and
religion of the recent arrivals. For the American WASPs whose lives
spanned the turn of the twentieth century, the foreigners flooding into their
cities represented a threat just because they were so un-American. The
southern and Eastern European origins of the new immigration stirred
fears of a mongrelization of the native stock, leading to calls for
congressional restrictions on immigration. The very term
“mongrelization” evoked images of a civilization-destroying animality.
Darwin’s theory of evolution with its sociological corollaries gave
nineteenth-century Europeans and Americans, already acutely aware of the
divide of race, a scientific rationalization for counting others as inferior.
The idea of progress lent itself to these preoccupations, for if one
assumed that human society was inexorably improving, then some
explanation needed to be given for the relative indifference to material and
social innovations among those outside Western Europe and America.
Evolutionary theory, applied to entire societies in the world, provided an
answer. Melding the physical with the social, scientists announced a new
hierarchy of racial types which ranked human beings according to their
group’s measurable advance toward progress evident in the West.
These prevailing anthropological theories invited an intense scrutiny
of faces, body types, and intelligence quotients for signs of inferiority in
the immigrants coming to the United States. Disposed to think in these
terms, public commentators concluded that the new immigrants were not
so much different as backward. Stressing as they did genetic endowments,
evolutionary theories were used to add a specious scientific underpinning
to the hostile passions of prejudice. A virulent new form of racism took
root in the country at large, leading many to declare blacks, Indians, and
the new immigrants unfit for American citizenship.
Added to these tensions was the powerful sense of national failure in
the effort to “reconstruct” the Old South following the Civil War. Not only
did the federal government withdraw effective protection from the
millions of freed men and women in the South, but many Americans on
both sides of the old Mason-Dixon line came to accept as routine the
attacks on black Americans. At the same time, the vaunted independence
of American farmers crumbled before the economic muscle of the trusts
while the industrialists’ voracious demand for labor insistently lured
Europe’s own dispossessed peasants to the United States. The sense of an
organic nation, which at best had always been fragile, collapsed altogether.
By the beginning of the twentieth century, the conventional history of
the American people as the heroic champions of democracy had lost much
of its credibility—not because Americans had abandoned their belief in
progress, but rather because conditions in the United States at the time
mocked the high moral purposes embedded in that faith. Something had
clearly gone wrong. The patriotic history that had originally worked to
unify a disparate people had been turned into an icon of conservatism used
to ward off criticism of the political institutions now firmly under the
control of a wealthy elite. Fears about declining economic opportunities
with the closing of the frontier mixed with anxiety about the loss of
democratic virtue and the dilution of the nation’s old bloodlines. A new
generation of historians, following Karl Marx’s lead, stopped talking about
the whole American people, as Bancroft had done, and began discussing
class. Unwilling to grasp the nettle of American race prejudices, this
scholarly cohort was ready to examine the role of class conflict in the
American past just as a new group of Progressive reformers emerged to
take on the plutocrats whose exercise of power was making a mockery of
American democracy.
Relativism Redux
Since the 1960s, American universities have established whole
departments devoted to the history of science and technology and have
awarded annually about thirty Ph.D.s in the history and philosophy of
science.27 Professionalization and democratization combined with
increased funding for the social history of science from the National
Science Foundation contributed decisively to the triumph of the social turn
taken by the discipline. Within the postwar context, all these innovations
in American universities encouraged a break with the Enlightenment faith
in heroic science which had prevailed since the eighteenth century. By the
last quarter of the twentieth century the Enlightenment’s vision of
disinterested, unfettered, value-free truth conquering superstition and
ignorance, and always in the service of human progress, no longer
appeared entirely relevant or even credible. Effective challenges to the
neutrality of science shattered a once innocent faith. Critics saw science
and technology not as enterprises in the service of humanity, but as
disciplines whose content reflected the interests of government sponsors,
military projects, or more generally, the needs of Western men, women
having largely been excluded from the laboratories.
Influenced by this same disillusionment with the universalist claims of
science, by the 1960s historians looked back at the history of Western
science and found a very different story from what had been believed
throughout much of this century. In the very sinews of heroic science they
located concepts of masculine domination as well as biases toward women
and non-Europeans.28 In the eighteenth-century colonies of the European
nations, for instance, historians discovered scientists and doctors in the
age of Enlightenment eager to apply their methods and treatments in the
interest of extracting more and better labor from their slaves.29 Then there
were the horrors of their own century. New research on German science
during the Third Reich revealed an even more disturbing paradox. Once
the believers in value-free science had said that all Nazi science had been
pseudo-science, but historical research showed that the Nazis did indeed
have their natural and social sciences which served the ideological and
military needs of the regime right to its end.30 Nazi science could be both
quite good in scientific terms and singularly evil in political and moral
ones. Some cynical critics have even tried to argue that the second was a
consequence of the first.
To the acknowledgment of Nazi science was added a new awareness
about the workings of science and technology in the former Soviet Union.
Suddenly at the end of the twentieth century, the rest of the world
discovered its relative backwardness. As true believers in heroic science
(even Marxism was supposed to be scientific) the Soviets had built the
largest scientific and technological establishment in the world, and still
managed to be industrially and environmentally backward.31 The
conclusion becomes inescapable: the inevitable progress promised by the
model of heroic science does not fit with reality. The strong programme or
social constructionist approach offered relativism in response, but most
historians and philosophers of science, although accepting the importance
of social context and social framing, did not find that relativism could
adequately account for the truths found in science. The solution that
seemed to make the most sense entailed understanding the historicity of
science, of scientists and scientific texts, while at the same time
recognizing the interpenetration of rational and social processes.
The implications of the Internalist/Externalist War and of social
constructionism have been missed or ignored by innovators in other fields
of history, in hermeneutics, and especially in theory. On the face of it, the
history of Soviet physics, or steam engines and turbines would not seem to
have much to say to people reading Sartre, or later Foucault and the
postmodernists. Yet saying, as some theorists do, that science is part of the
West’s uniquely universalist and hegemonic discourse does not adequately
address the knowledge it offers and represents. It may seem liberating to
assert, and claim as feminism, that “the subject of technique and its
technologies is the ego cogito—Man in history.”32 The argument implies
that because the Cartesian prescriptions for truth-seeking were offered
primarily to men, the enterprise of scientific knowing cannot have a
universal meaning. The method of doubting and investigating nature in the
search for usable knowledge is relative only to the seventeenth-century
men for whom it was primarily intended, and late-twentieth-century
women should liberate themselves from these conventions.
Relativism does not help us understand the power of some methods
and the knowledge those methods are capable of producing. Sometimes
gendered human beings working in laboratories, enveloped in linguistic
conventions and cultural matrices of values and beliefs, can solve a
problem in such a way that it need not be reopened. Put another way,
although he feared atheism and irreligion and cherished a baroque
metaphysics while practicing alchemy along with mechanics and optics,
Newton came up with a physical and mathematical formulation—
compatible with his beliefs and values—which became for him and
subsequent generations in all cultures the law of universal gravitation.
Perhaps, in a curious way, the heroic model of science helped to breed
contemporary relativism because its heroic conception of scientific
rationality served so many masters, because it was used to undergird
standards of right and wrong, along with the self-serving and imperial
belief in Western and male superiority. The absolutist defenders of
scientific truth thought that if heroic science did not hold up, then
relativism would be the only position logically available. Ironically, the
old positivists sound much like the new postmodern relativists. Both deal
in absolutes; neither can imagine the complexity of a human situation in
which workable truths appear as the result of messy, ideologically
motivated, self-absorbed interventions undertaken by myopic people
whose identities may be vastly different and distant from one’s own. Both
absolutists and relativists seem uncomfortable when asked to address
simultaneously the historicity and the successes of human inquiry.
As disillusionment with the scientific model of historical truth has
grown among historians, an option imagined as new has attracted
adherents: why not embrace the historian’s version of a strong programme
and take up philosophical relativism? But if embraced, the resulting
relativism fails to address adequately the search for historical truths, and
the need for causal explanations and narratives. Once again relativism
fails the needs of historians just as it skirts the possible existence of truths
in science. Every time people go down the relativist road, the path darkens
and the light recedes from the tunnel.
FROM THE 1960S ONWARD, new trends in the writing of history combined
with larger social and political transformations to dethrone many of the
long-standing absolutisms about the nature of the American nation and the
certainty provided by the heroic model of science. Social history
challenged American unity by telling about competing and conflicting
ethnic and racial groups whose experience could not be fitted easily, if at
all, into a single story line glorifying an essentially white Protestant
nation. In growing numbers the new social historians also subverted the
happy tale of the self-reliant, ever-entrepreneurial individual who made
his (always his) own choices and thereby fortuitously contributed to the
strengths of the American capitalist economy. Similarly, social histories of
science showed that even the heroes and geniuses of science had lived
lives fully enmeshed in the social and political relations of their time.
Newton and Darwin would not have articulated theories of such universal
breadth without the push and pull of religious, political, and social
interests. Suddenly, science, like the forging of the nation, only made
sense in a social context.
As might be expected, the social historians’ challenge to the
foundations of America’s (and more generally the West’s) faith in itself
has provoked attacks, particularly from the political right. Defenders of
the traditional views about American history and Western culture berate
the new generation of historians for their supposed cynicism about
national and Western values. The new historians’ critical stance, it is
alleged, prevented them from telling an edifying national saga and from
explicating transcendent Western values. Gertrude Himmelfarb, for
example, took social historians to task for “devaluing the political realm”
and thus denigrating history and even reason itself. Their “revolution in
the discipline” undermined the rationality inherent in the historical
enterprise, she claimed. They did this by focusing on the irrational and
nonrational infrastructures of life—ranging from the economic interests of
legislators to the eating habits of ordinary folk—rather than on “the
constitutions and laws that permit men to order their affairs in a rational
manner.”1
In her report to Congress in 1988, the chairwoman of the National
Endowment for the Humanities, Lynne V. Cheney, stopped just short of
attributing the recent decline in the number of history majors to social
history itself. Students no longer grasp the importance of studying history,
she asserted, because the increasing specialization of the disciplines and
the enthusiasm for quantitative techniques—both central to the
development of social history—had undermined the necessary sense of a
unified educational purpose. The “crisis” in the humanities the “isolation”
and “disarray” she found among scholars had been caused, she concluded,
by politicization. The humanities had been reduced to “arguing that truth
—and beauty and excellence—are not timeless matters, but transitory
notions, devices used by some groups to perpetuate ‘hegemony’ over
others.”2 Social history was thus deeply implicated in the whole debate on
Western culture.
These attacks stung but they did not kill. Social history had been
predicated on the assumption that more was better; if more was known
about the lives of ordinary people, workers, women, and slaves (or about
the values and belief systems of scientists), accounts of the past would be
fuller. Social historians did not oppose the standards of objectivity or the
codes of professional discipline; they used those very standards to
challenge the traditional interpretations which had excluded marginal or
nonconforming historical groups.
Social historians hoped to fill out the record by offering a more
complex picture of the past, but one of the main effects of their work has
been to reveal how limited the previous histories were. In effect, they
underlined the fact that history writing had always been intensely
ideological. The story of “one nation under God,” for example, served the
interests of some, not all, of the people. American history—and the history
of Western civilization more generally—could be construed as political
propaganda for ruling elites. Thus, the new social history can be used (and
sometimes abused) by those who insist that history can no longer offer one
national narrative, that it is always partial, always political, always
propagandistic, indeed, mythical. Ironically, then, the work of social
historians fostered the argument that history could never be objective. It is
as if the social historians with their passion for breaking apart the
historical record had dug a potentially fatal hole into which history as a
discipline might disappear altogether.
This opening has been seized upon by a new group of critics called
postmodernists who question the objectivity of the social sciences more
generally. Their critique has gone beyond specific denunciations of the
ideological character of American history or Western science to attack the
very foundations of historical and scientific knowledge. Although
“postmodernism” has become a ubiquitous term in the latest cultural wars
between traditionalists and their opponents, it is a notoriously slippery
label.3 At times, it seems as if everyone is a postmodernist; at others, that
everyone avoids a category that can be synonymous with nihilism and
ridiculous self-posturing. (If you think of both Jacques Derrida and
Madonna as postmodernists you get some sense of the definitional
problem.) Defining postmodernism involves three related terms:
“modernity,” “modernism,” and “poststructuralism.” Briefly put,
modernity is the modern, industrial, and urban way of life; modernism is
the movement in art and literature that aims to capture the essence of that
new way of life (the skyscraper, for example); and poststructuralism is the
theoretical critique of the assumptions of modernity found in philosophy,
art, and criticism since the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
The term “postmodernism” first gained currency in the arts and
especially architecture as a way of designating anti-modernist forms of
art. Postmodernist architects rejected the pragmatic, efficient, rationalist
functionalism of modernist architecture in favor of more whimsical,
historical, and unpredictable shapes and lines. As the use of the term
spread outward from the arts, it came to mean more generally the critique
of modernity as a set of assumptions about industrial and technological
forms of life. As we have defined it, modernity stands for a specifically
Western set of notions that took root in the eighteenth century; it entails a
new periodization of history (ancient, medieval, modern) in which the
modern denotes the period when reason and science triumphed over
Scripture, tradition, and custom. At the heart of modernity is the notion of
the freely acting, freely knowing individual whose experiments can
penetrate the secrets of nature and whose work with other individuals can
make a new and better world.
Postmodernists’ primary goal has been to challenge convictions about
the objectivity of knowledge and the stability of language. This is not the
place for a history of theories of language, or for an account of the
transformation of poststructuralism into a more general form of
postmodernist cultural criticism.4 We focus instead on the questions raised
by postmodernism about the meaning and writing of history. Our goal is to
navigate a course between the traditionalist critics and the postmodernists,
by defending the role of an objective and inclusive history while
recognizing the need for exploring its conceptual fault lines.
Postmodernism renders problematic the belief in progress, the modern
periodization of history, and the individual as knower and doer. The very
notion of the individual self, so central both to the Enlightenment’s
philosophy of human rights and to historians’ accounts of American
destiny, is threatened when postmodernists stress the inevitable
fragmentation of personal identity. In one of the most striking
formulations of the so-called death of the subject, Michel Foucault
proclaimed that the concept of man “is an invention of recent date” and
would soon disappear, “like a face drawn in sand at the edge of the sea.”5
Postmodernists assert that the individual self is an ideological construct, a
myth perpetuated by liberal societies whose legal systems depend upon the
concept of individual responsibility. By making this argument against the
unified self—postmodernists call it “the subject” to underline its lack of
autonomy—they also, perhaps inadvertently, undermine the premises of
multiculturalism. Without an identifiable self, there would be no need to
worry about differing cultures, ethnic pride, and battered identities.
Without a subject, there could be no identity politics, no politics of
cultural self-affirmation.
Postmodernist critics of history and science operate in the attack
mode. They take on all that the modern has come to represent. They insist
that the experiences of genocide, world wars, depressions, pollution, and
famine have cast doubt on the inevitability of progress, enlightenment, and
reason, even while they implicitly deny human access to certain
knowledge of these same disasters. Indeed, they argue against the
possibility of any certain knowledge. Postmodernists question the
superiority of the present and the usefulness of general worldviews,
whether Christian, Marxist, or liberal. For them, as Foucault has claimed,
“each society has its regime of truth, its ‘general politics’ of truth.”6 With
them, there is no truth outside of ideology.
Since science has supplied the foundation of Western knowledge from
the eighteenth century onward, it has predictably drawn the attention of
postmodernists. One postmodernist explains, “Science was the alpha and
omega of the modernists and the structuralists; they saw science as…the
ultimate given of modernity.”7 According to Foucault, “in societies like
ours, the ‘political economy’ of truth…is centered on the form of
scientific discourse and the institutions which produce it; it is subject to
constant economic and political incitement.”8 Science and technology, in
this view, are seen as constantly propelled by hegemony-seeking interests.
The claims scientists make for objectivity and truth are part of an
intellectual economy in which paucity and manipulation characterize
truth-seeking, a tortured enterprise trapped within discourses, themselves
the products of biased institutions.
Other postmodernists ask if the cognitive methods of science can be
neutral when the larger aims of scientists figure in gendered, ideological,
and political agendas. They argue that the emphasis on the objectivity of
scientific facts is itself an ideological construction put forward by
scientists to mask the active role that they play in selecting and shaping
the facts. Seeing the laboratory as primarily the nexus for power relations
and political gestures, postmodernists believe that they have been
successful in “dissipating previous beliefs surrounding science.” “Nothing
special,” they maintain, “nothing extraordinary, in fact nothing of any
cognitive quality” occurs in the laboratory. In this view, scientific
laboratories are entirely shaped by political agendas. Paradoxically, they
assign historians and sociologists the task of figuring out how the
laboratories got to have so much political power in the first place.9
Postmodernists often put the word “reality” in quotation marks to
problematize the “there” out there. To them, no reality can possibly
transcend the discourse in which it is expressed.10 Scientists may think that
the disciplined practices employed in laboratories—the seeing in the
microscope or telescope—brings them closer to reality, but they are
simply privileging the language that they speak, the technologies of their
own self-fashioning.11 And, needless to say, such privileging has led to the
horrors of our century. In this line of argument, Westerners are particularly
prone to the conceit that reality is fixed and knowable.
As this brief review shows, postmodernists have not yet developed a
unified critique of science. Some consider it to be simply another form of
discourse, and hence no more privileged than any other; others relegate it
to the status of information and separate it from society and the disputes
about social knowledge. In general, postmodernist critics devote more of
their energy to the realm of history, especially narrative, and even to the
modern idea of time itself. Appropriately Delphic, one postmodernist
critic called attention to the coming time when “the tellable time of
realism and its consensus become the untellable time of postmodern
writing.” This entails nothing less than “the disappearance of history,” a
prediction accompanied by the promise that “the postmodern subversion
of historical time” will in turn threaten the idea of human rights, the
definition of disciplines, the possibility of representation in politics and
art, and the informational functions of language.12 These are not small
stakes!
The nature of historical truth, objectivity, and the narrative form of
history have all been targeted by postmodernists. The mastery of time
becomes merely the willful imposition on subordinate peoples of a
Western, imperialistic historical consciousness; it provides no access to
true explanation, knowledge, or understanding. The mastery of facts
disguises the wily ruse of the aggrandizing master historian who—like the
idea of the author or the scientist—is simply a figment of the Western,
capitalist imagination. Moreover, these are figments that do damage. They
reinforce the hegemony of white Western men over women, other races,
and other peoples. In the postmodern account of Western history,
totalitarianism refers not to specific regimes or governments but to every
possible form of domination: “The historical names for this Mr. Nice Guy
totalitarianism are no longer Stalingrad or Normandy (much less
Auschwitz), but Wall Street’s Dow Jones Average and Tokyo’s Nikkei
Index.” By this account, the very idea of development is a form of terror,
and democracy is simply more “discreet” than Nazism.13
Where does this fury of negation come from? And can it be taken
seriously? It is not hard to understand why events since the 1930s have
cast doubt on the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century idea of ineluctable
progress. The experience of the twentieth century shows that science and
technology can be used to build death camps and atom bombs as easily as
they can be used to light streets, increase crop yields, and prolong life.
History professors went to work for Nazis, communist regimes, and right-
wing dictators as often as for democratic governments. The discipline of
history does not disengage its practitioners from the demands of politics,
nor does the objectivity of science guarantee benign applications. Progress
can be a double-edged sword.
Although the general sources of discontent with modernity are easy
enough to identify, it is much harder to follow the logic of postmodernist
arguments or determine their political agenda. The aims of postmodernists
have been the subject of intense debate. Although they tend to believe that
all knowledge is deeply political, their own politics are only obliquely
expressed, and usually as criticism rather than as prescription. Their
notions about power have been questioned because two of their most
important intellectual forebears, the German philosophers Friedrich
Nietzsche and Martin Heidegger, made notoriously antidemocratic, anti-
Western, and antihumanist pronouncements and were associated,
sometimes fairly, sometimes not, with anti-Semitism. Hitler cited
Nietzsche’s writings in support of his racial ideology, and Heidegger
himself joined the Nazi Party. Although most theorists of postmodernity
have clearly rejected the proto-fascist and anti-Semitic implications of the
work of Nietzsche and Heidegger, doubts remain about the ease with
which one can separate the strands in their thought.
In our view, postmodernists are deeply disillusioned intellectuals who
denounce en masse Marxism and liberal humanism, communism and
capitalism, and all expectations of liberation. They insist that all of the
regnant ideologies are fundamentally the same because these ideologies
are driven by the desire to discipline and control the population in the
name of science and truth. No form of liberation can escape from these
parameters of control. In many ways, then, postmodernism is an ironic,
perhaps even despairing view of the world, one which, in its most extreme
forms, offers little role for history as previously known. On the other hand,
postmodernism raises arresting questions about truth, objectivity, and
history that cannot simply be dismissed. Moreover, these questions hit the
nerve exposed by the widespread realization that the nineteenth-century
models of science and history are in urgent need of refashioning.
The Historical Lineage of Postmodernism
The foremost contemporary apostles of postmodernism are two French
philosophers, Michel Foucault (1926–84) and Jacques Derrida (1930-).
Much of postmodernist criticism can be traced to their influence and
through them back to Nietzsche and Heidegger. This is not to say that
Foucault and Derrida endorsed the claims made by all those calling
themselves postmodernists. Many other (mostly French) names might be
cited in an honor roll of poststructuralist and postmodernist critics—
Jacques Lacan in psychoanalysis, Roland Barthes in literary criticism, and
Jean-François Lyotard in philosophy. But Foucault and Derrida provided
the crucial arguments for postmodernism, particularly for postmodernism
as it has taken shape in America.
Both philosophers grew to adulthood in the difficult postwar years of
the late 1940s and early 1950s. They were not personal friends, but they
helped shape a common intellectual agenda with a wide international
resonance. In their work, they made poststructuralism, if not exactly a
household word, at least a label to conjure with—even if both of them
rejected most exercises in labeling. Moving beyond French intellectual
circles, Foucault worked in Sweden, Germany, Tunisia, and California, and
Derrida, born in Algeria, has taught extensively in the United States.
Despite their considerable differences in approach—and their polemics
against each other—both Foucault and Derrida sought to challenge the
most fundamental assumptions of Western social science.14 Put most
schematically, they deny our ability to represent reality in any objectively
true fashion and offer to “deconstruct” (a word made famous by Derrida
and his followers) the notion of the individual as an autonomous, self-
conscious agent. With writings that are part literary criticism and part
philosophy (and in Foucault’s case, part historical commentary), they
leveled their sights on Western Man, defined as rational, capable of
objectivity, and in possession of knowledge that corresponds to the truth of
nature and society. In short, they attacked the entire Enlightenment
project.
Taking Nietzsche as their inspiration, Foucault and Derrida made
Western Man into a modern-day Gulliver, tied down with ideological
ropes and incapable of transcendence because he can never get beyond the
veil of language to the reality “out there.” The Nietzschean vision,
conveyed through irony and satire, permits varying interpretations, and
postmodernists offer a multiplicity of responses to his iconoclastic
writings. Foucault described reading Nietzsche as a “philosophical shock”
and a “revelation,” but that hardly distinguishes him from most American
undergraduates.15 Thus the Nietzschean influence could be partly stylistic
and literary, partly philosophical. Foucault and Derrida often tried to
emulate aspects of Nietzsche’s difficult, aphoristic, and allusive writing
style because they saw it as consonant with his central intellectual
argument that all concepts are in the end illusory creatures of the moment.
Knowledge, Nietzsche taught, is an invention that masks a will to power.
Nietzsche fashioned himself into the ultimate philosophical ironist and
amoralist. He insisted that the West’s “infinitely complex cathedral of
concepts” was built “on a movable foundation and as it were on running
water.”16 Human beings do not discover a truth in concordance with nature;
they invent it, so that truth is always changing just as the water in a river is
always changing. Claims for truth can therefore only be dissimulations,
invariably advanced by those who have power. The noble, true, and good in
Western values is only what the ancient nobility claimed them to be; then
came the transgressive revolution of Christianity that led the underclasses
to effect a fateful reversal of values. In Christianity, according to
Nietzsche, the meek, weak, and lowly got their revenge. Democracy
furthered the reversal of values because the “herd” of humanity made
itself the arbiter of truth and reinforced the Christian “slave” morality.
Nietzsche’s argument often approached the morally repugnant. In The
Genealogy of Morals, for example, he exclaimed, “Let us face facts: the
people have triumphed—or the slaves, the mob, the herd, whatever you
wish to call them—and if the Jews brought it about, then no nation ever
had a more universal mission on this earth…. I don’t deny that this
triumph might be looked upon as a kind of blood poisoning, since it has
resulted in a mingling of the races….”17 Perhaps unaware of the proven
historical dangers of such statements, some postmodernists have wandered
recklessly into commenting upon Nietzschean perspectives. Alice Jardine
confidently asserts that “the shock of recognition that Western Truth, and
the Western desire for Truth, have been a terrible error is what Nietzsche
leaves for the twentieth century to gain the hard way.”18 In a more extreme
rendition, Jean-François Lyotard advanced the hypothesis that “the
characteristic features of the Judaic religion, and of the West to the extent
that it is a product of that religion, are not to be sought in obsessional
neurosis but in psychosis.” Lyotard has devoted much of his work to
criticism of the “defaillancy [in French défaillance means extinction or
decay] of modernity,” the collapse of all emancipatory narratives.19
Like Nietzsche, the postmodernists want to use history against itself,
to attack the certainties and absolutes that provided the foundation for
positivism and for the human sciences that emerged in the course of the
nineteenth century. Foucault, for example, described his version of history
in Nietzschean language: it “disturbs what was previously considered
immobile;…fragments what was thought unified;…shows the
heterogeneity of what was imagined consistent with itself.” Foucault
proclaimed grandly that “I am well aware that I have never written
anything but fictions.” He nevertheless insisted, in typically Nietzschean
ironic terms, “I do not mean to go so far as to say that fictions are beyond
truth (hors vérité). It seems to me that it is possible to make fiction work
inside of truth….”20 Yet Foucault never specified how he could determine
this “truth” or even what its epistemological status might be.
Assistance in the enterprise of going “beyond truth” came also from
Martin Heidegger. This debt to Heidegger has further embroiled
postmodernism in political controversy, for his unrepentant membership in
the Nazi Party has long raised questions about the political meaning of his
work. Like Nietzsche before him, Heidegger depicted Western philosophy
and culture in dire crisis. We are “latecomers in a history now racing
toward its end,” he insisted in 1946. Heidegger rejected Enlightenment
values of reason and objectivity even more extremely than Nietzsche. In
an essay titled “The Word of Nietzsche: ‘God is Dead,’” Heidegger
insisted that “thinking begins only when we have come to know that
reason, glorified for centuries, is the most stiff-necked adversary of
thought.”
Unlike Nietzsche, who could identify with aspects of scientific
method, at least in the study of language, Heidegger explicitly attacked
science for assaulting nature. The “technological frenzy” of modern man
treats nature—and human beings—only in terms of pure manipulation and
thus manifests a “spiritual decline” in the West.21 For Heidegger,
“agriculture is today a motorized food industry, in essence the same as the
manufacture of corpses in gas chambers and extermination camps, the
same as the blockage and starvation of countries, the same as the
manufacture of atomic bombs.”22 Faced with this moral sensibility—or
lack thereof—many have denounced Heidegger for advocating an attitude
of Gelassenheit, of “letting beings be.” His conflation of mechanized
agriculture and death camps seems to be all too much in line with his own
political self-interest as a former Nazi who never expressed any regret for
his actions in the 1930s.23 His attack on modernity concealed an
insensitivity with deeply disturbing moral implications.
Although writing in different eras, both Nietzsche and Heidegger
attacked historicism and its central concern, man. History, they argued, did
not unfold in linear fashion, revealing truth in the process of development
over time, but rather moved through an arbitrary set of crises,
disjunctures, and disruptions. Nothing necessarily followed from what
came before, so causation should be pitched out along with human agency
and social structuring. The historians who invented the myths of
modernity could no more hope to be objective than any other social
scientists. Human beings do not achieve a separation from the objects they
study; they simply invest them with their own values. Thus along with
modern history, the idea of the human being as an autonomous,
subjectively willing, rational agent was brought into question. As Foucault
said, Nietzsche killed man and God “in the interior of his language.”24
Heidegger, like Nietzsche before him, insisted that thinking always
generates further complexity, further murkiness.
Foucault and Derrida endorsed many of these perspectives on history,
but they cannot be described as disciples of Nietzsche and Heidegger in
any usual sense. Nor did they do philosophy in the expected manner, even
in the style of Nietzsche or Heidegger. Foucault composed a series of
historical works on madness, medicine, prisons, and sexuality (among
other topics) that aimed to show how the modern individual or self was
produced by the disciplines and discourses of institutions. Derrida wrote
essays that criticized thinkers from Plato to Foucault, arguing that all of
them were trapped in the binary categories of Western metaphysics: good
vs. evil, being vs. nothingness, truth vs. error, nature vs. culture, speech vs.
writing. In order to draw attention to the straitjacket of Western literary
and philosophical expectations, Derrida deliberately upset the conventions
of writing with his unusual typography, constant flow of neologisms, and
strange titles (The Postcard: From Socrates to Freud and Beyond;
“wriTing, encAsIng, screeNing”). What the two authors shared was an
emphasis on the effects of language, or what Foucault called discourse.
Discourse produced knowledge, not the other way around. Thus Foucault
and Derrida opened up the possibility that the search for truth itself might
be seen as the prime Western illusion.
Some might argue that neither Foucault nor Derrida should be read as
relativist because neither posited a subject who might hold a subjective
position (you cannot be a relativist unless you occupy a position that is
relative to others). Both aimed to decenter the subject, that is, question her
or his primacy as a location for making judgments and seeking truth. They
challenged the entire Enlightenment project that rested on a concept of
autonomous subjectivity. Foucault in particular, although at moments
respectful of the eighteenth century’s search for a new foundation for
knowledge, urged rebellion from it in the form of a practical critique of
reason that “takes the form of a possible transgression.”25 In many ways,
then, their critiques of the subject and of language fostered a deeper
skepticism about the (disappearing) self and truth.
Foucault made truth nothing more than the will to power within
discourse, whereas Derrida questioned the enterprise of seeking something
called “truth” in the face of the endless play of signifiers. Although their
approaches were radically different and in some respects opposite, both
aimed to deconstruct truth as a value in the West.26 The influence of such
views can be seen in many places. In criticizing a biography of Foucault,
which dealt explicitly with his homosexuality, one disciple argued,
“‘Truth,’ then, is not the opposite of error; ‘truth’ is a discursive strategy
that (among other things) blocks inquiry into the conditions—dynamic and
erotic—of its own production.”27
Language thus stands as an insuperable barrier to truth. Foucault and
Derrida depict human beings as caught in a prison of language, a prison
even more confining than the economic determinism attributed to Marx or
the psychological determinism of Freud. Marx and Freud, after all,
believed themselves to be scientists capable of establishing an objective
relationship to historical or psychological reality, which was open to
further elaboration. They believed that their theories gave them a vantage
point on reality—and a means for transforming it. Foucault and Derrida
reject this kind of fix on reality and with it the possibility of an objectivity
predicated upon the separation of the self and the object of knowledge.
They deny any direct, personal relation to the reality of the world out there
because reality is the creature of language.
Foucault and Derrida built upon the fundamental work of Ferdinand de
Saussure on the nature of language.28 At the beginning of the twentieth
century, Saussure’s work suggested that language provides no direct access
to reality because it itself is based on difference and distance, beginning
with the essential difference between the signifier (the sound or
appearance of the word) and the mental signified (the meaning or concept
of the word). Signifier and signified are not the same; the word “s-n-o-w”
is not snow itself but rather a representation or signifier of the tiny white
frozen crystals we call snow. The signifier represents the signified, but is
not identical to it, and in the process of representation lies the possibility
for veiling, distortion, obfuscation. Language is constructed on the basis of
difference, on the relationship of signifier to signified and of words to
each other, not on the basis of a direct correspondence to reality. This can
be seen if the usual contexts for snow are reversed. “The snow melted as
the temperature dropped” is technically a sentence which nevertheless
throws the reader into consternation about the meaning of snow.
Thus, it could be argued, reality, or what metaphysics called
“presence” (logos, whether in the form of reality, presence, reason, or the
Word of God), is never directly available to us. Reality is always shrouded
by language, and the workings of language are in turn veiled by the
operation of cultural codes.29 Derrida summed up his position in one of his
typically elliptical pronouncements:
Whose discourse tells you: the column is this or that, is there…the column
has no Being, nor any being-there, whether here or elsewhere. It belongs to
no one…. And from this column’s not being (a being), from its not falling
under the power of the is, all of Western metaphysics, which lives in the
certainty of that is, has revolved around the column.30
Practical Realism
In the post-heroic situation, the world described by science is separate
from language and yet inextricably tied to it.6 Contemporary
understanding of how knowledge is created now prompts calls for a
different, more nuanced, less absolutist kind of realism than that
championed by an older—we would say naive—realism. The newer
version—what is called practical realism—presumes that the meanings of
words are never simply “in our head,” nor do they lock on to objects of the
external world and fix reality for all time. Linguistic conventions arise
because human beings possessed of imagination and understanding use
language in response to things outside of their minds. The structure of
grammar is a linguistic artifice, but significantly one that has been
developed through an interaction with the objective world, through a
struggle to name things that human beings would encounter, even if
unnamed. In contrast to poststructuralists, practical realists emphasize the
function of words in articulating the multifarious contacts with objects.
Communicative and responsive, words serve the goal of truth-seeking
exactly because they are not the arbitrary tools of solipsists. Grammar
may be deeply embedded in the human mind, but words result from
contact with the world.
Contemporary philosophers have reminded historians, as well as
readers of histories, that there cannot be an exact correspondence between
words and what is out there, between the conventions employed when
speaking about the world itself and its contents. Their admonitions point
to the fact that the myth of correspondence inherited from the
philosophical realists owed much too much to heroic science and not
enough to the intuitive wisdom of the practitioners of history.
Let us try now to conceptualize the relationship of the world and
human investigators shorn of a belief in correspondence, i.e., in the precise
fit between what is in the human head and what is out there. Put in terms
useful to the historian, there are the records of the past and there is the
interpretation of those records. The gap between them is the source of
concern. At best, the past only dimly corresponds to what the historians
say about it, but practical realists accept the tentativeness and
imperfections of the historians’ accounts. This does not, however, cause
them to give up the effort to aim for accuracy and completeness and to
judge historical accounts on the basis of those criteria. By contrast,
relativists (who are antirealists) say that such confidence in historical
narrative is self-serving and untenable, because any kind of
correspondence is impossible.
Making modified, practical realism an ally in the campaign against
relativism does require some explaining of motives. The aesthetic appeal
should not be overlooked. Some historians, like old-fashioned artists, find
realism attractive.7 They are attracted by the challenge of reconstructing
what appears in the mind when it contemplates the past, much as Vermeer
might have been attracted to the challenge of representing the city of
Delft. However, historians must deal with a vanished past that has left
most of its traces in written documents. The translation of these words
from the documents into a story that seeks to be faithful to the past
constitutes the historians’ particular struggle with truth. It requires a
rigorous attention to the details of the archival records as well as
imaginative casting of narrative and interpretation. The realist never
denies that the very act of representing the past makes the historian
(values, warts, and all) an agent who actively molds how the past is to be
seen. Most even delight in the task.
The experience—as distinct from the writing—of history can help to
make practical realism more concrete. The very effect of historical
change, the ending of wars, for example, and the influence that such
external changes have upon thinking give the lie to the notion that words
are arbitrarily connected to things. Events can irretrievably alter the way
words are arranged in our minds. Yet, as the phrase “better dead than red”
illustrates, words can also be arbitrarily affixed. Once the phrase described
a bellicose mind-set and, for those who possessed it, a conviction. Yet the
time may soon come when children will need an explanation for the
statement lest they think it to have been the rallying cry of an especially
violent school of expressionist painters. Descriptions of “reality” can on
occasion lose their meaning, and then the words become unstuck from the
reality which their believers once so ardently endorsed.
People who think or write about the past should take consolation from
knowing that no philosopher (whether from Paris or Vienna) has ever
succeeded in proving that meanings are simply “in our head” or, the
reverse, that human language can be fixed on objects and describe for all
time the way the external world is. In other words, the “facts” need the
“conventions” and vice versa. Put another way, the historian does not say
that an interpretation can exist separate from the practices and discourses
employed by the author. The historian is not the alchemist who invented
the reality of the past by happily mixing the black facts of the past with
white verbal descriptions nor the scientific observer who claims to
produce a gray narrative that transparently corresponds to what went on
back there, then. The historian is someone who reconstructs a past pieced
together from records left by the past, which should not be dismissed as a
mere discourse on other discourses.
Practical realists are stuck in a contingent world, using language to
point to objects outside themselves about which they can be
knowledgeable because they use language. This slightly circular situation
in which the practical-minded find themselves may not make for heroes,
but it does help locate truths about the past. More important, practical
realism thwarts the relativists by reminding them that some words and
conventions, however socially constructed, reach out to the world and give
a reasonably true description of its contents. The practical realist is
pleased to have science as an ally, because the study of nature suggests
that having knowledge of a thing in the mind does not negate its being
outside of the mind behaving there as predicted.
Well over a century ago, the American pragmatist Charles S. Peirce
said that the realist makes “a distinction between the true conception of a
thing and the thing itself…only to regard one and the same thing from two
different points of view; for the immediate object of thought in a true
judgment is the reality.”8 That something exists as an image of
something’s being in the mind does not in the least diminish its external
existence or its knowability through the medium of language. That it could
be in both places, out there and in here where words reside, seems only to
verify the objective nature of everything from buildings to time. They are
knowable, usable things separate from the linguistic expressions used to
describe them, yet capable of being “captured” in the mind by words that
point back out toward the thing itself.
The modified, or practical, realism endorsed here connects words to
things by using words, but it does more than that. Practical realism serves
another goal: it fuels, rather than debunks, the passion to know the past.
Practical realism endorses knowability experienced by human agents able
to use language, whether alphabetical or numerical. This is not, however,
to presume that there can be any “algorithm” or single path to truth. At the
philosophical level, realism permits historians to aim language at things
outside themselves. Being practical realists means valuing repositories of
records as laboratories. The archives in Lyon, France, are housed in an old
convent on a hill overlooking the city. It is reached by walking up some
three hundred stone steps. For the practical realist—even one equipped
with a laptop computer—the climb is worth the effort; the relativist might
not bother. Historians find more than dust in archives and libraries; the
records there offer a glimpse of a world that has disappeared. Assuming a
tolerance for a degree of indeterminacy, scholars in the practical realist
camp are encouraged to get out of bed in the morning and head for the
archives, because there they can uncover evidence, touch lives long
passed, and “see” patterns in events that otherwise might remain
inexplicable.
From the seventeenth century onward, science made such spectacular
progress that almost everyone fell under its sway. Historians once called
their methods scientific and strove for detachment because they thought
science provided the only road to truth. Having become less awestruck,
less convinced that all truth must be packaged in an equation, historians
now look back on the yearning to behave like scientists as part of their
own past. It is time to move on, but not without retrospective gratitude.
TALK ABOUT THE FUTURE OF HISTORY pivots around the question of how
best to deploy the passion to know. Focusing that passion is the
investigators’ belief that the past can reveal an aspect of what it is to be
human. The desire to touch the past is a yearning to master time, to anchor
oneself in worldliness, to occupy fully one’s own historical context by
studying its antecedents. Given the immediacy of human passion, the
present is always implicated in the study of the past. Lived experience
alters the questions historians ask, foreclosing some research agendas
while inspiring new ones. This sensitivity of historians to the lived
moment is particularly visible at times of deep and significant historical
change such as the world is witnessing now.
The Cold War riveted international affairs to the foreign policies of the
United States and the Soviet Union. For almost a half century, it
determined identities, magnified anxieties, and permeated every
intellectual enterprise. All that has now abruptly ended. The future of
history, like the future of much else in the world, can now be imagined in
markedly different ways. A new republic of learning is possible because
bunkerlike positions staked out on the treacherous landscape of battle can
be abandoned, because old absolutisms have fallen, taking down with them
many of the absolutist elements within Western democracies. New
thinking is possible, even required. A part of this new thinking will
include a return to the intellectual center of the Western experience since
the seventeenth century, to scientific knowledge and its philosophical
foundations, revitalized and reconceptualized.
A Summing Up
History springs from the human fascination with self-discovery, from
the persistent concern about the nature of existence and people’s
engagement with it. Men and women have learned to externalize this
curiosity—even to distance themselves from its impertinent subjectivity—
by directing their questions to concepts and abstractions like the growth of
democracy or the ascendancy of modernity, but the renewable source of
energy behind these inquiries comes from an intense craving for
information about what it is to be human.
Human beings are born into a group which provides answers to the
first and most basic questions they pose about life. Few outlive the
impress of that first organization of consciousness. Hence, ethnocentrism
is common to all folk. Nonetheless, it presents special problems to a
pluralistic democracy like that of the United States. Similarly, the desire to
rewrite the past to accommodate group pride is too human to be viewed as
a part of a conspiracy. Nor is there anything particularly sinister about the
impulse to manipulate national history, even though its effects are far from
neutral. Professional historians are most acutely aware of this temptation
to sacrifice accuracy to the goals of glorification or lesson-teaching, but
all people are the historians of their own lives and know something of the
urge to point their past toward a useful moral precept. Even when people
have no motive to bend history in a particular direction, they have
difficulty getting it straight. There is an additional perceptual problem:
once the outcome of an action is known, it is almost impossible not to
project back into the past the knowledge of what happened subsequently.
Or to be more psychological, it is hard to take in the fact that those living
in the past were ignorant about the future. Similarly, when people reflect
upon their previous actions, they tend to ascribe to stupidity what more
justly should be charged to lack of foreknowledge.
Despite the naturalness of distorting or fudging the past, the cost of
suppressing information comes high. Nothing could be less true than the
old bromide that what you don’t know doesn’t hurt you. The very opposite
seems more the case. What you don’t know is especially hurtful, for it
denies you the opportunity to deal with reality. It restricts choices by
decreasing information. The health of the nation may require a careful
winnowing of memory, but a democratic, and hence American, creed
argues otherwise. It endorses the individual’s right to liberty—and
implicitly freedom of inquiry—without reference to the goal of political
solidarity. The instrumental logic of keeping the nation’s shape by causing
people to forget those experiences incompatible with the nation’s
righteous image is doubly ironic for Americans because the righteous
image of the United States places ideals above utility. Moreover, the
freedom to explore the full record of the nation’s past unimpeded by “off-
limits” signs can easily be deduced from those rights to life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness which initially endowed the nation with a moral
personality.
The commitment to truth and to those intellectual traditions that
underpin this resonating affirmation needs defending today from two
broad attacks. The one stems from the discovery of social structuring and
its restrictive impact upon the individuals whose freedom to pursue truth
is being affirmed. The other comes from skepticism about the validity of
the representations of reality made by freedom-seeking inquirers. To meet
these provocative challenges we have summoned history, particularly the
history of the idea of objectivity. Far from banishing relativism,
postmodernism, nihilism, and various forms of solipsistic thinking, we
authors have pooled our learning in order to locate the relationship of
these critiques to the long dialogue about knowledge that began in the
seventeenth century, gained momentum in succeeding centuries under the
rubric of modern science, and today has yielded to a variety of noisy
conversations.
Fundamental to our own engagement with reality has been a
conception of women and men as creatures driven to know and to chart
their lives by what they believe to be true. History can help here, for it
offers a variety of tools for effecting liberation from intrusive authority,
outworn creeds, and counsels of despair. Historical analysis teaches that
members of society raise structures that confine people’s actions and then
build systems of thought that deny those structures. It also suggests that
all bodies of knowledge acquire ideological overtones, because their
meaning is too potent to be ignored. What is to be concluded from myth-
dispelling disclosures like the ones offered here? We think they point to
the power of a revitalized public, when operating in a pluralistic
democracy with protected dissent, to mediate intelligently between society
and the individual, knowledge and passion, clarity and obfuscation, hope
and doubt. Telling the truth takes a collective effort.
1. In his article “Encyclopedia,” in the Encyclopédie, as translated in Keith Michael Baker, ed., The Old Regime and the French
Revolution (Chicago, 1987), p. 84.
1. From Bulletin of the American Association of University Professors (1948), quoted in Robert N. Proctor, Value-Free Science?
Purity and Power in Modern Knowledge (Cambridge, Mass., 1991), p. 176.
2. Thomas L. Pangle, The Ennobling of Democracy: The Challenge of the Postmodern Age (Baltimore, 1992), p. 3.
3. The history was woven into the physics lectures of Prof. S. Koenig, given in The Hague, 1751–52 (University Library,
Amsterdam, MS X.B. 1).
4. René Descartes, Discourse on Method [1637] (London, 1968), p. 78. For the title page of the original French edition we have
used the copy in the Van Pelt Library, University of Pennsylvania. The engraving with its radiating sun also suggests divine
illumination.
5. Noted in Joyce Appleby, Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination (Cambridge, Mass., 1992), p. 300,
citing Papers of Thomas Jefferson, ed. Boyd et al., vol. 15, pp. 384–98; vol. 14, p. 561.
6. Birmingham Reference Library, Birmingham, U.K., M. Boulton to J. Smeaton, 14 March 1778, on their “experiments” and
“theories.” Supplied through the kindness of Eric Robinson. Cf. A. E. Musson and Eric Robinson, Science and Technology in the
Industrial Revolution (1969; reprint New York, 1989).
7. Michael Adas, Machines as the Measure of Men: Science, Technology, and Ideologies of Western Dominance (Ithaca, N.Y.,
1989), ch. 2.
8. This research on the gendering of science and its implications is examined in Sandra Harding, Whose Science? Whose
Knowledge? (Ithaca, N.Y., 1991), ch. 1 and 2.
9. Archives nationales, Paris, F12 502.
10. L.W.B. Brockliss, French Higher Education in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries: A Cultural History (Oxford,
England, 1987), p. 366; also p. 455.
11. We have been helped in this discussion by Lorraine Daston, “The Ideal and Reality of the Republic of Letters in the
Enlightenment,” Science in Context, 4 (1991): 367–86.
12. For a copy of it, see Thomas Jefferson, The Jefferson Bible: The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth, introduction by F.
Forrester Church (Boston, 1989).
13. Others have also been imprisoned there without trial for blasphemy. See Human Rights Watch World Report 1993: Events of
1992 (New York, 1992). p. 336; also Washington Post, October 1, 1992, pp. A18–19.
14. Rex A. Barrell, ed., Anthony Ashley Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury (1671–1713), and ‘le Refuge Français’ Correspondence
(Lewiston, N.Y., 1989), p.92.
15. From his article on eclecticism in the Encyclopédie (1751), see Denis Diderot, Encyclopédie ou Dictionnaire raisonné des
sciences, des arts et des métiers, Nouvelle impression en facsimilé de la premiére édition de 1751–1780 (Stuttgart, 1966), vol. 5,
p. 270.
16. Histoire de la République des Lettres en France (1780), pp. 4–5.
17. Francis Bacon, The Advancement of Learning, ed. Arthur Johnson (Oxford, England, 1974), p. 42.
18. Quote from the inaugural address of James B. Angel given in the 1880s, in Bradley J. Longfield, “From Evangelicalism to
Liberalism: Public Midwestern Universities in Nineteenth-Century America,” in George M. Marsden and Bradley J. Longfield,
eds., The Secularization of the Academy (New York, 1992), p. 55.
19. Ibid., p. 56.
20. As quoted in James R. Moore, “Geologists and Interpreters of Genesis in the Nineteenth Century,” in David C. Lindberg and
Ronald L. Numbers, eds., God and Nature: Historical Essays on the Encounter Between Christianity and Science (Berkeley,
Calif., of 1986), pp. 322–50, quote p. 337.
21. Quoted in David C. Lindberg, “Science and the Early Church,” in Lindberg and Numbers, God and Nature, p. 19.
22. Andrew D. White, A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom, vol. 2 (New York, 1960), p. 387.
23. Ibid., vol. 1, pp. 413–14. Many state universities owe their existence to this act.
24. Ibid., p. 414.
25. Dorothy Ross, The Origins of American Social Science (Cambridge, England, 1991), pp. 70–75, and ch. 4 on the threat of
socialism.
26. For examples see R. S. Westfall, Science and Religion in Seventeenth Century England (New Haven, Conn., 1958); G. R.
Cragg, From Puritanism to the Age of Reason (Cambridge, England, 1950). For a meditation on where the subject of science and
religion is now, see James R. Moore, “Speaking on ‘Science and Religion’—Then and Now,” History of Science, 30 (1992):
311–23.
1. David S. Landes, Revolution in Time: Clocks and the Making of the Modern World (Cambridge, Mass., 1983).
2. Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origins and Spread of Nationalism, rev. ed. (London, 1991),
especially pp. 9–36.
3. Gerald A. Press, The Development of the Idea of History in Antiquity (Kingston and Montreal, 1982).
4. On the general question, see Martin J. S. Rudwick, “The Shape and Meaning of Earth History,” in David C. Lindberg and
Ronald L. Numbers, eds., God and Nature: Historical Essays on the Encounter Between Christianity and Science (Berkeley,
Calif., 1986), pp. 296–321.
5. J.G.A. Pocock, The Ancient Constitution and the Feudal Law (Cambridge, England, 1957).
6. As quoted in Ernst Breisach, Historiography: Ancient, Medieval, and Modern (Chicago, 1983), p. 207. Breisach offers a
useful overview of concepts of history.
7. William Weber, The Rise of Musical Classics in Eighteenth-Century England: A Study in Canon, Ritual, and Ideology
(Oxford, England, 1992).
8. See, for example, Richard Olson, The Emergence of the Social Sciences, 1642–1792 (New York, 1993).
9. Christopher Hill, “The Word ‘Revolution,’” in A Nation of Change and Novelty: Radical Politics, Religion and Literature in
Seventeenth-Century England (London, 1990), pp. 82–101.
10. Louis Trenard, “Manuels scolaires au XVIIIe siècle et sous la Révolution,” Revue du Nord (1973): 107.
11. Miriam Brody, ed., A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (New York, 1992), p. 122.
12. As quoted in Isaiah Berlin, Vico and Herder: Two Studies in the History of Ideas (New York, 1976), pp. 191, 182.
13. On the rapid proliferation of lexicographical endeavors to found nations, see Anderson, Imagined Communities, especially
pp. 67–82.
14. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, The Philosophy of History, tr. J. Sibree (New York, 1956), p. 10.
15. Karl Löwith, Meaning in History (Chicago, 1949), pp. 72, 90.
16. Breisach, Historiography, p. 298.
17. G. P. Gooch, History and Historians in the Nineteenth Century (Boston, 1959), quote p. 107.
18. As quoted in George H. Nadel, “Philosophy of History Before Historicism,” History and Theory, 3 (1964): 291–315, quote
p. 315.
19. For a good discussion of Ranke, see Lionel Gossman, Towards a Rational Historiography, in Transactions of the American
Philosophical Society, vol. 79, part 3, 1989, p. 32; and Peter Novick, That Noble Dream: The “Objectivity Question” and the
American Historical Profession (Cambridge, England, 1988), pp. 28–29.
20. Gabriel Monod, La Revue historique, 1876, as quoted in Guy Bourdé and Hervé Martín, Les Ecoles historiques (Paris,
1983), p. 141.
21. As quoted in Novick, That Noble Dream, pp. 37–38.
22. Breisach, Historiography, p. 284.
23. J. M. Winter and D. M. Joslin, eds., R. H. Tawney’s Commonplace Book, Economic History Review, Supplement 5
(Cambridge, England, 1972), pp. 41–42.
24. As quoted in Fritz Stern, The Varieties of History: From Volatire to the Present (Cleveland and New York, 1956), pp. 336–
38.
25. As quoted in Breisach, Historiography, p. 371. For the history of the Annales school, see Traian Stoianovich, French
Historical Method: The Annales Paradigm (Ithaca, N.Y., 1976); and Bourdé and Martin, Les Ecoles historiques. The Annales
school got its name from the journal Annales d’histoire économique et sociale, founded in 1929 by Marc Bloch and Lucien
Febvre. The journal moved to Paris in the 1930s and took its current name, Annales: Economies, Sociétés, Civilisations, in 1946.
26. Fernand Braudel, The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II, 2 vols., tr. Siân Reynolds (New
York, 1972; French edition 1949), quote vol. 1, p. 21.
27. Georg G. Iggers and Harold T. Parker, eds., International Handbook of Historical Studies (Westport, Conn., 1979).
28. Alain Corbin, “La Revue historique: Analyse du contenu d’une publication rivale des Annales,” in Charles-Olivier Carbonell
and Georges Livet, eds., Au Berceau des Annales: Le milieu strasbourgeois, L’histoirie en France au début du XXe siècle
(Toulouse, 1979), p. 136. For other journals, see Lynn Hunt, “French History in the Last Twenty Years: The Rise and Fall of the
Annales Paradigm,” Journal of Contemporary History, 21 (1986): 209–24.
29. Daniel Lerner, as quoted in Charles Tilly, Big Structures, Large Processes, Huge Comparisons (New York, 1984), p. 46.
30. S. N. Eisenstadt as quoted in Tilly, Big Structures, p. 54. For Rostow’s theory of industrial takeoff see, W. W. Rostow, The
Stages of Economic Growth (Cambridge, England, 1960).
31. James Harvey Robinson defined the new history as including “every trace and vestige of everything that man has done or
thought since first he appeared on earth…. Its sources of information extend from the rude flint hatchets of Chelles to this
morning’s newspaper.” As quoted in Stern, Varieties of History, pp. 265, 258.
32. This ranking is based on the index to Michael Kammen, ed., The Past Before Us: Contemporary Historical Writing in the
United States (Ithaca, N.Y., 1980), pp. 511–24.
1. Jefferson Papers, Firestone Library, Princeton, MS. #45052.
2. These themes are developed in Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities (London, 1983).
3. Lawrence J. Friedman and Arthur H. Shaffer, “Mercy Otis Warren and the Politics of Historical Nationalism, William and
Mary Quarterly, 48 (1975): 194–215.
4. Warren, History of the Rise, Progress and Termination of the American Revolution (Boston, 1805), vol. 3, p. 435.
5. The phrase comes from the eighteenth-century French statesman Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot.
6. Trumbull, A General History of the United States of America (Boston, 1810), iii, as cited in Friedman and Shaffer, “Mercy
Otis Warren,” pp. 213–14.
7. Ruth Miller Elson, Guardians of Tradition: American Schoolbooks of the Nineteenth Century (Lincoln, Neb., 1964), p. 62.
8. Ibid., p. 70.
9. Mary Douglas, How Institutions Think (Syracuse, N.Y., 1982), p. 112.
10. As quoted in Perry Miller, The New England Mind: From Colony to Province (Boston, 1953), p. 135.
11. Jefferson to William Short, January 3, 1793, in Adrienne Koch and William Peden, eds., The Life and Writings of Thomas
Jefferson (New York, 1944), pp. 321–22.
12. Jefferson to J. B. Say, February 1, 1804, in Writings of Thomas Jefferson, ed. Andrew A. Lipscomb and Albert Ellery Bergh
(Washington, D.C., 1903–5), vol. 11, pp. 2–3.
13. John M’Culloch, Elements of Geography and Astronomy (Philadelphia, 1789), p. 30, as cited in Elson, Guardians of
Tradition, p. 87. See also p. 88.
14. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America (New York, 1835), vol. 1, pp. 258–71; vol. 2, pp. 99–105, 240–43, 336–47.
15. This theme is explored in David Thelen, ed., The Constitution and American Life (Ithaca, N.Y., 1988).
16. March 21, 1801, in The Writings of Thomas Jefferson, ed. Paul L. Ford (New York, 1892–99), vol. 18, pp. 54–56.
17. Bancroft, History of the United States, 3 vols. (Boston, 1834–40). For a fascinating discussion of the imperviousness of
revolutionary history to critical attack, see Sydney G. Fisher, “The Legendary and Myth-Making Process in the Histories of the
American Revolution,” Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 51 (1912): 53–75.
18. William Henry Harrison to Legislative Council and House of Representatives of Indiana Territory “Annual Message,”
November 12, 1810, in Logan Esarey, ed., Messages and Letters of William Henry Harrison, in Indiana Historical Collections,
7 (1922): 492–93.
19. Frederick Jackson Turner, “The Significance of the Frontier in American History,” Annual Report of the American Historical
Association for the Year 1893 (1893), pp. 199–227.
20. Ibid., pp. 226–27.
1. As quoted in Max Lerner, “The Constitution and Court as Symbols,” Yale Law Journal, 46 (1937): 32.
2. See David Hollinger, “Perry Miller and Philosophical History,” History and Theory, 7 (1968).
3. “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” is the title of a famous sermon preached by Jonathan Edwards in which he compares
the fate of the damned to that of a spider falling into an open fire.
4. Perry Miller, The New England Mind: The Seventeenth Century (Boston, 1939); The New England Mind: From Colony to
Province (Boston, 1953), p. 269.
5. See especially George Marsden, “Perry Miller’s Rehabilitation of the Puritans: A Critique,” Church History, 39 (1970).
6. Ralph Barton Perry, Puritanism and Democracy (Boston, 1945), p. 627.
7. We are grateful to the American Historical Association for providing these statistics.
8. In 1975 3.9 percent of doctorates in history were earned by minority students; in 1990, 6.9 percent. But these figures represent
percentages of those willing to identify their ethnicity (more than 90 percent of respondents). Summary Report 1990: Doctorate
Recipients from United States Universities (Office of Scientific and Engineering Personnel, National Research Council,
Washington, D.C., 1991), pp. 40–41, 88.
9. Robert Darnton, “Intellectual and Cultural History,” in Michael Kammen, ed., The Past Before Us: Contemporary Historical
Writing in the United States (Ithaca, 1980), p. 334.
10. Philip Greven, Four Generations (Ithaca, N.Y., 1970).
11. John Donne, “The Anatomy of the World.”
1. Ann Markusen, Peter Hall, Scott Campbell, and Sabina Deitrick, The Rise of the Gun Belt: The Military Remapping of
Industrial America (New York, 1991), p. 3. And for prescriptions, Ann Markusen, “Dismantling the Cold War Economy,”
World Policy Journal, Summer 1992, pp. 389–99. See also Arnold Thackray, ed., Science After ’40 (Chicago, 1992) and Stuart
W. Leslie, American Science and the Cold War (New York, 1992).
2. John U. Nef, Cultural Foundations of Industrial Civilization (Cambridge, England, 1958), pp. 23, 64.
3. Herbert Butterfield, The Origins of Modern Science 1300–1800 (New York, 1957), p. 201.
4. The following essay offers a similar analysis of what Kuhn said: Steve Fuller, “Being There with Thomas Kuhn: A Parable
for Postmodern Times,” History and Theory, 31 (1992): 241–75.
5. We owe our emphasis here to Ruth Bloch.
6. Israel Scheffler, Science and Subjectivity (New York, 1967), p. 18.
7. James B. Conant, On Understanding Science: An Historical Approach (New Haven, 1947), pp. xii–xiii.
8. Ibid., p. 5.
9. Written with irony by Philip Kitcher, The Advancement of Science: Science without Legend, Objectivity without Illusions (New
York, 1993), p. 3.
10. In the interest of brevity we have necessarily elided the differences between Popper and many logical positivists. We take
Popper as the emblematic figure because of his enduring interest in the questions that concern us here; cf. Robert Proctor, Value-
Free Science? Purity and Power in Modern Knowledge (Cambridge, Mass., 1991), pp. 209–12.
11. Karl P. Popper, Realism and the Aim of Science (Totowa, N.J., 1983), p. xxv. Much of this was written in the 1950s, but
publication was delayed into the 1980s.
12. In saying there are no universal laws of history, we do not seek to deny the possibility of there being patterns of cause and
effect that may even on occasion be replicable. For covering laws, see C. G. Hempel, “The Function of General Laws in
History,” Journal of Philosophy, 39 (1942): 35–48; and for a discussion of Hempel’s position, see Louis O. Mink, Historical
Understanding, eds. Brian Fay, Eugene O. Golob, and Richard T. Vann (Ithaca, N.Y., 1987).
13. Popper, Realism, p. xxv.
14. James R. Jacob, Robert Boyle and the English Revolution (New York, 1977).
15. See A. Rupert Hall and Marie Boas Hall, trans. and eds., Unpublished Scientific Papers of Isaac Newton (Cambridge, 1962),
pp. 142–43.
16. Betty Jo Teeter Dobbs, The Foundations of Newton’s Alchemy (Cambridge, England, 1975), p. 253, quoting from his
manuscript “The Key.”
17. Prefecture of the Police, Paris, Aa / 5 / 218, the arrest (c. 1704) of Marie Magnan.
18. We are indebted here to Betty Jo Teeter Dobbs, The Janus Faces of Genius: The Role of Alchemy in Newton’s Thought
(Cambridge, England, 1991).
19. Adrian Desmond and James Moore, Darwin (New York, 1991), p. 215, quoting Herschel. The quotation about his delight is
on p. 140 and comes from a letter Darwin wrote to a friend. The mention of the “gradual birth and death of species” comes from
his notes taken on the Beagle and refers to his reading of Lyell (p. 159).
20. Ibid., p. 216.
21. David R. Oldroyd, “How Did Darwin Arrive at His Theory? The Secondary Literature to 1982,” History of Science, 22
(1984): 325–74; on the barbarians, see Charles Darwin, The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex, vol. 1 (London,
1871), p. 239.
22. Paul H. Barrett, Peter J. Gautrey, Sandra Herbert, et al., eds., Charles Darwin’s Notebooks, 1836–1844. Geology,
Transmutation of Species, Metaphysical Enquiries (Ithaca, N.Y., 1987), pp. 524, 535. Both excerpts were written in 1838.
23. Darwin, Descent of Man, vol. 1, pp. 225, 97.
24. One of the main papers is by B. Barnes and D. Bloor, “Relativism, Rationalism and the Sociology of Knowledge,” in M.
Hollis and S. Lukes, eds., Rationalism and Relativism (Oxford, England, 1982).
25. W. Schmaus, U. Segerstrale, and D. Jesseph, “Hard Program: A Manifesto,” Social Epistemology. A Journal of Knowledge,
Culture and Policy, 6 (1992): 243–65. In the same issue is a particularly helpful response by Helen Longino.
26. For a good discussion of Darwin and many of the philosophical issues raised by the social history of science, see David L.
Hull, Science as a Process: An Evolutionary Account of the Social and Conceptual Development of Science (Chicago, 1988), pp.
1–37.
27. Survey of Earned Doctorates, Sponsored by Five Federal Agencies: National Science Foundation (NSF); National Institutes
of Health (NIH); U.S. Department of Education (USED); National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH); and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA); and conducted by the National Research Council (NRC), available from the National
Research Council, Washington, D.C. Covers the period from 1940 to the present and shows that the doctorates in the field of the
history of science were not disaggregated from history degrees until 1967 and since then have averaged fewer than thirty per
year.
28. Londa Schiebinger, The Mind Has No Sex? Women in the Origins of Modern Science (Cambridge, Mass., 1989).
29. James E. McClellan III, Colonialism and Science: Saint Domingue in the Old Regime (Baltimore, 1992). Slaves owners
included the king and many clergymen.
30. Alan Beyerchen, “What We Now Know About Nazism and Science,” Social Research, 59 (1992): 615–41.
31. For background see Paul R. Josephson, Physics and Politics in Revolutionary Russia (Berkeley, Calif., 1991).
32. Alice A. Jardine, Gynesis: Configurations of Woman and Modernity (Ithaca, N.Y., 1985), p. 73.
33. René Descartes, Discourse on Method and The Meditations (New York, 1968), p. 50.
34. Helen E. Longino, Science as Social Knowledge: Values and Objectivity in Scientific Inquiry (Princeton, N.J., 1990), p. 231.
35. Joseph Rouse, Knowledge and Power: Toward a Political Philosophy of Science (Ithaca, N.Y., 1987), p. 47.
36. See Charles S. Peirce, “Critical Review of Berkeley’s Idealism,” in Values in a Universe of Chance: Selected Writings of
Charles S. Peirce, ed. Philip P. Wiener (New York, 1958), p. 84.
1. Gertrude Himmelfarb, The New History and the Old (Cambridge, Mass., 1987), pp. 18–23.
2. “Text of Cheney’s ‘Report to the President, the Congress, and the American People’ on the Humanities in America,”
Chronicle of Higher Education, September 21, 1988, pp. A17–A23, quotes p. A18. History majors have begun to grow again
since then.
3. For a convenient and sensible overview, see Pauline Marie Rosenau, Post-modernism and the Social Sciences: Insights,
Inroads, and Intrusions (Princeton, 1992).
4. We are grateful to Gabrielle Spiegel for pushing us to refine our sense of the difference between poststructuralism and
postmodernism. Many commentators, it should be noted, consider them synonymous; others see them as radically different. See,
for example, Rosenau, Post-modernism, p. 3.
5. Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences (New York, 1970), p. 387.
6. Michel Foucault, Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews and Other Writings, 1972–1977, ed. Colin Gordon, trans. Colin
Gordon, Leo Marshall, John Mepham, and Kate Soper (New York, 1980), p. 131.
7. F. R. Ankersmit, “Historiography and Postmodernism,” History and Theory, 28 (1989): 140.
8. Foucault, Power/Knowledge, p. 131. For a more nuanced, yet similar, view, see Steven Shapin and Simon Schaffer, Leviathan
and the Air-Pump: Hobbes, Boyle and the Experimental Life (Princeton, 1985), pp. 333–43: “There are three senses in which we
want to say that the history of science occupies the same terrain as the history of politics…. The politics that regulated
transactions within the philosophical community was equally important, for it laid down the rules by which authentic knowledge
was to be produced.”
9. Bruno Latour, “Give Me a Laboratory and I Will Raise the World,” in Karin D. Knorr-Cetina and Michael Mulkay, eds.,
Science Observed: Perspectives on the Social Study of Science (London, 1983), p. 161. Latour calls himself an “a-modernist,” but
his position seems indistinguishable from postmodernism.
10. Mari Sorri and Jerry H. Gill, A Post-Modern Epistemology: Language, Truth and Body (Lewiston, N.Y., 1989), p. 198.
11. Some postmodernists are completely indifferent to the relationship between science and society. In one view, science simply
supplies information and any attention that is paid to it should come not from philosophers or historians but from politicians. In
this view, the postmodernist maintains “the same aloofness with respect to science as…towards information…science and
information are independent objects of study which obey their own laws.” Ankersmit, “Historiography and Postmodernism,” pp.
140–41.
12. Elizabeth Deeds Ermarth, Sequel to History: Postmodernism and the Crisis of Representational Time (Princeton, 1992), pp.
6, 7, 9.
13. Jean-François Lyotard, Toward the Postmodern, ed. Robert Harvey and Mark S. Roberts (Atlantic Highlands, N.J., 1993),
pp. 159–62.
14. For a similar approach to these thinkers, see Richard Wolin, The Terms of Cultural Criticism: The Frankfurt School,
Existentialism, Poststructuralism (New York, 1992), part 3.
15. As quoted in James Miller, The Passion of Michel Foucault (New York, 1993), p. 67.
16. From “On Truth and Falsity in an Extra-Moral Sense,” as quoted in Alan Megill, Prophets of Extremity: Nietzsche,
Heidegger, Foucault, Derrida (Berkeley, 1985), p. 52.
17. From The Birth of Tragedy and the Genealogy of Morals, tr. Francis Golffing (New York, 1956), p. 169.
18. Alice Jardine, Gynesis: Configurations of Woman and Modernity (Ithaca, N.Y., 1985), p. 148.
19. Jean-François Lyotard, The Lyotard Reader, ed. Andrew Benjamin (Cambridge, Mass., 1989), quote p. 102. In the same
source see also “Universal History and Cultural Differences,” pp. 314–23.
20. As quoted in Megill, Prophets of Extremity, pp. 235, 234.
21. As quoted in ibid., pp. 145, 106, 140.
22. As cited in Wolin, Terms of Cultural Criticism, p. 239, quoting Wolfgang Schirmacher, Technik und Gelassenheit (Freiburg
and Munich, 1983), p. 25.
23. For a useful survey of Heidegger’s thought, see George Steiner, Martin Heidegger (New York, 1979).
24. As quoted in Megill, Prophets of Extremity, p. 101.
25. See Michel Foucault, “What Is Enlightenment?” in Paul Rabinow, ed., The Foucault Reader (New York, 1984), p. 45.
26. We recognize that postmodernists, including Foucault and Derrida, have held a variety of (not always consistent) positions
about truth. We have elided some of those differences here, no doubt to the consternation of some readers, in the interest of
moving forward with our own account about history. We thank Joseph Rouse for bringing to our attention the complexities of
the postmodernist response to the question of truth. He bears no responsibility for our rendition of this question, with which he
most likely disagrees. For an attempt to sort out the postmodernist positions on these issues, see Christopher Norris, What’s
Wrong with Postmodernism: Critical Theory and the Ends of Philosophy (Baltimore, 1990). For an example of the ambiguity
surrounding truth found among postmodernists, see Lyotard, Toward the Postmodern.
27. David M. Halperin, “Bringing out Michel Foucault,” Salmagundi, 97 (Winter 1993): 69–93, quote p. 88.
28. The essential text derived from Saussure is based upon notes taken by his students. Ferdinand de Saussure, Course in
General Linguistics, ed. Charles Bally and Albert Sechehaye, tr. Roy Harris (La Salle, Ill., 1983). For Foucault on Saussure, see
The Order of Things, pp. 294–300. For Derrida on Saussure, see Of Grammatology, tr. Gayatri Spivak (Baltimore, 1976). Note
that Saussure was himself a believer in science; see Course, p. 16.
29. A useful presentation of Derrida’s views can be found in Barbara Johnson’s introduction to Jacques Derrida, Dissemination,
tr. Barbara Johnson (Chicago, 1981), pp. vii–xxxiii.
30. Derrida, Dissemination, p. 352.
31. As quoted in Rosenau, Post-modernism, p. 30.
32. For a review of Becker and Beard’s positions and the controversy aroused by them, see Peter Novick, That Noble Dream:
The “Objectivity Question” and the American Historical Profession (Cambridge, 1988), pp. 250–64; quote from Beard on p.
257.
33. Clifford Geertz, “Thick Description: Toward an Interpretive Theory of Culture,” in The Interpretation of Cultures (New
York, 1973), p. 14.
34. Between 1976 and 1990, the percentage of English-language publications in French history that were devoted to political and
diplomatic history decreased by half and publications in economic and social history declined by one-fourth, while those in
intellectual and cultural history doubled. The trend toward decline in social history was even more pronounced in France, the
home of the Annales school. The percentage of French-language publications in French history devoted to political and
diplomatic history declined by about one-fourth and those in social and economic history declined by half, whereas those in
intellectual and cultural history doubled. Based on Tables 1 and 2 in Thomas J. Schaeper, “French History as Written on Both
Sides of the Atlantic: A Comparative Analysis,” French Historical Studies, 17 (1991): 242–43.
35. See, for example, Robert Darnton, The Great Cat Massacre and Other Episodes in French Cultural History (New York,
1984), for an explicit affiliation with Geertz.
36. As quoted in A. Pozzolini, Antonio Gramsci: An Introduction to His Thought, tr. Anne F. Showstack (London, 1970), p.
109.
37. As quoted in Ellen Kay Trimberger, “E. P. Thompson: Understanding the Process of History,” in Theda Skocpol, ed., Vision
and Method in Historical Sociology (Cambridge, 1984), p. 219. Thompson’s The Making of the English Working Class was first
published in 1963.
38. E. P. Thompson, The Povery of Theory and Other Essays (New York, 1978).
39. Bryan D. Palmer, Descent into Discourse: The Reification of Language and the Writing of Social History (Philadelphia,
1990), pp. 198–99.
40. Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgment of Taste, tr. Richard Nice (Cambridge, Mass., 1984), pp. xiii,
1. For a critical overview, see Richard Jenkins, Pierre Bourdieu (London and New York, 1992).
41. Volker Sellin traces the history of the word and of the concept in “Mentalität und Mentalitätsgeschichte,” Historische
Zeitschrift, 241 (1985): 555–98.
42. For an influential statement of the recent Annales view, see Roger Chartier, “Intellectual History or Sociocultural History?
The French Trajectories,” in Dominick LaCapra and Steven L. Kaplan, eds., Modern European Intellectual History:
Reappraisals and New Perspectives (Ithaca, N.Y., 1982).
43. We are grateful to Ruth Bloch for her comments on this question. See also Wolin, Terms of Cultural Criticism, pp. 185–86.
44. Clifford Geertz, “Blurred Genres: The Refiguration of Social Thought,” in Local Knowledge: Further Essays in Interpretive
Anthropology (New York, 1983), p. 30.
45. John E. Toews, “Intellectual History After the Linguistic Turn,” American Historical Review, 92 (1987): 879–908, especially
pp. 901–2.
46. Joan Wallach Scott, Gender and the Politics of History (New York, 1988), quote p. 4. Scott has been the target of much
criticism directed against historians’ use of such theories. Traditional historians, Marxists, and other feminists have all criticized
her for an excessive allegiance to postmodernism, for a stance of extreme relativism, and for a tendency to reduce history to the
perception of meaning. See, for example, Palmer, Descent into Discourse, pp. 172–86. For a philosophical response to
deconstruction, see Hilary Putnam, Renewing Philosophy (Cambridge, Mass., 1992), ch. 6.
47. For a critical review of this tendency in cultural anthropology, see Frances E. Mascia-Lees, Patricia Sharpe, and Colleen
Ballerino Cohen, “The Postmodernist Turn in Anthropology: Cautions from a Feminist Perspective,” Signs, 15 (1989): 7–33.
48. For this point, see Phyllis Mack, Visionary Women: Ecstatic Prophecy in Seventeenth-Century England (Berkeley, Calif.,
1992), pp. 6–7.
49. On irony as a trope in historical writing, see Hayden White, Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century
Europe (Baltimore, 1973).
50. For a discussion of some of these issues, see especially Hayden White, “The Question of Narrative in Contemporary
Historical Theory,” in The Content of the Form: Narrative Discourse and Historical Representation (Baltimore, 1987), pp. 26–
57. For an account of the attempt to revive narrative, see Novick, That Noble Dream, pp. 622–25.
51. See the account in White, Content of the Form, p. 35.
52. Descombes as quoted in Rosenau, Post-modernism, p. 62.
53. Ermarth, Sequel to History, p. 212.
54. Sande Cohen, Historical Culture: On the Recoding of an Academic Discipline (Berkeley, 1986), p. 326.
55. Ibid., p. 77.
56. Ibid., quotes pp. 8, 12, 21.
57. Putnam, Renewing Philosophy, p. 133.
58. David Carr, “Narrative and the Real World: An Argument for Continuity,” History and Theory, 25 (1986): especially pp.
117–31.
59. White, Content of the Form, pp. 1,168.
60. Ermarth, Sequel to History, p. 22.
61. Andrew P. Norman, “Telling It Like It Was: Historical Narratives on Their Own Terms,” History and Theory, 30 (1991):
119–35, quote p. 128.
62. William Reddy, “Postmodernism and the Public Sphere: Implications for an Historical Ethnography,” Cultural Anthropology,
7 (1992): 135–68, quote p. 137.
1. Peter Novick, That Noble Dream: The “Objectivity Question” and the American Historical Profession (Cambridge, 1988).
The Becker quote appeared in Carl Becker, “Detachment and the Writing of History,” Atlantic Monthly, CVI (October 1910):
528.
2. Clifford Geertz, “The Impact of the Concept of Culture on the Concept of Man,” in The Interpretation of Cultures (New York,
1973), p. 44.
3. There are differences and disagreements between postmodernists and strong programmers. See Andrew Pickering, ed.,
Science as Practice and Culture (Chicago, 1992).
4. As quoted in Sande Cohen, “Structuralism and the Writing of Intellectual History,” History and Theory 17 (1978): 184–85.
5. Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison, “The Image of Objectivity,” Representations, 40 (Fall 1992): 81–128.
6. We are indebted here to Hilary Putnam in James Conant, ed., Realism with a Human Face (Cambridge, Mass., 1990), pp.
274–75.
7. For such artists, see Michael Fried, Courbet’s Realism (Chicago, 1990); and Svetlana Alpers, The Art of Describing: Dutch
Art in the Seventeenth Century (Chicago, 1983). For another perspective on realism, see Christopher Braider, Refiguring the
Real: Picture and Modernity in Word and Image, 1400–1700 (Princeton, 1993).
8. Charles S. Peirce, “Critical Review of Berkeley’s Idealism,” in Philip P. Wiener, ed., Values in a Universe of Chance: Selected
Writings of Charles S. Peirce (New York, 1958), p. 84. (Originally published in 1871.)
9. Mark Johnson, Body in the Mind: The Bodily Basis of Meaning, Imagination, and Reason (Chicago, 1987), p. 212.
10. As quoted in Cushing Strout, “Border Crossings: History, Fiction, and Dead Certainties,” History and Theory, 31 (1992),
p. 153.
11. An extreme form of skepticism would argue that people have no way of disconfirming the assertion that the world was
created yesterday complete with fossils, a geological record, and our memories of the past.
12. Seyla Benhabib, Situating the Self: Gender, Community and Postmodernism in Contemporary Ethics (New York, 1992), p.
5.
1. New York Times, April 5, 1992, Op Ed page.
2. Ibid.
3. Dinesh D’Souza, Illiberal Education: The Politics of Race and Sex on Campus (New York, 1991), p. 85.
4. Thomas L. Pangle, The Ennobling of Democracy: The Challenge of the Postmodern Era (Baltimore, 1992), p. 79.
5. Ibid., pp. 75–76.
6. Ibid. p. 84.
7. D’Souza, Illiberal Education, p. 158.
8. One place to start, with regard to industrial development, is Ann Markusen, Peter Hill, Scott Campbell, and Sabina Deitrick,
The Rise of the Gun Belt: The Military Remapping of Industrial America (New York, 1991).
9. We are grateful here to the discussion in Stuart W. Leslie, “Science and Politics in Cold War America,” in Margaret C. Jacob,
ed., The Politics of Western Science, 1640–1990 (Atlantic Highlands, N.J., 1993).
10. For some of these critics, see Ziauddin Sardar, ed., The Revenge of Athena: Science, Exploration and the Third World (New
York, 1988).
11. For the mainstream philosophy of science in which its participants routinely say, “I have nothing to say to ‘the Skeptic,’” see
Paul M. Churchland and Clifford A. Hooker, eds., Images of Science: Essays on Realism and Empiricism with a Reply from Bas
C. van Fraassen (Chicago, 1985); the quotation, of Richard N. Boyd is on p. 4. For philosophers of science who deny realism
and assign relativism the status of “the Big Bang” in their discipline of science studies, see the essays in Andrew Pickering, ed.,
Science as Practice and Culture (Chicago, 1992).
12. For part of this argument we are indebted to Helen Longino, Science as Social Knowledge (Princeton, N.J., 1991).
13. On the problems in science education, see Sheila Tobias’s essay in W. Stevenson Bacon, ed., Revitalizing Undergraduate
Science (Tucson, 1992).
14. For a general discussion of these issues as they apply to Charles Peirce, Hilary Putnam, and Richard Rorty, see Richard J.
Bernstein, “The Resurgence of Pragmatism,” Social Research, 59 (1992): 825–26.
15. Federalist No. 10, in Edward Mead Earle, ed., The Federalist (New York, 1937), pp. 54–59. (Originally published in 1787–
88.)
16. Out of this rationale arose the pluralism of the political scientist as exemplified in David B. Truman, The Governmental
Process: Political Interests and Public Opinion (New York, 1951). This pluralism is not to be confused with the cultural
pluralism of Horace Kallen, who wrote in the 1920s. On this see John Higham, “Ethnic Pluralism in Modern American
Thought,” in Send These to Me: Immigrants in American Life (Baltimore, 1984). See also James A. Banks, “Multicultural
Education: Characteristics and Goals,” in Banks and Cherry A. McGee Banks, eds., Multicultural Education: Issues and
Perspectives (Boston, 1989), pp. 7–11.
17. Earle, ed., The Federalist, p. 337. See also the discussion in Chapter 4.
18. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America (New York, 1835).
19. Molefi Kete Asante, “The Afrocentric Idea in Education,” Journal of Negro Education, 60 (1991): 170–80.
20. Ibid., pp. 177, 172, 178.
21. Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia, ed. William Peden (Chapel Hill, 1955), p. 138.
22. For a powerful fictional exploration of this phenomenon see Ralph Ellison, The Invisible Man, New York, 1947.
23. Louis Hartz, The Liberal Tradition in America: An Interpretation of American Political Thought since the Revolution (New
York, 1955), p. 29.
24. Mary Douglas, How Institutions Think (Syracuse, 1986), p. 112.
25. Gunnar Myrdal, An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy (New York, 1944).
26. Ibid., p. 1028.
27. Letter of John Rolfe to Sir Edwin Sandys, January 1620, in Susan Myra Kingsbury, ed., The Records of the Virginia
Company of London (Washington, D.C., 1933), vol. 3, pp. 241–48; U.S. Bureau of the Census, Historical Statistics of the
United States, Colonial Times to 1957 (Washington, 1960), pp. 756, 8.
28. Ira Berlin, “The Revolution in Black Life,” in The American Revolution: Explorations in the History of American Radicalism,
ed. Alfred Young (Dekalb, Ill., 1976).
29. John Higham, “Multiculturalism and Universalism: A History and Critique,” American Quarterly, 45 (June 1993).
30. As quoted in Robert Dallek, The American Style of Foreign Policy: Cultural Politics and Foreign Affairs (New York, 1983),
p. 248.
31. Higham, “Multiculturalism and Universalism,” p. 210.
32. Edward Hallett Carr, What Is History? (New York, 1961), p. 137.
33. F. M. Barnard, “Accounting for Actions: Causality and Teleology,” History and Theory, 20 (1981): 291–312.