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What is History
The branch of knowledge that deals with past events.
Understanding history can help us understand the present and
it can help us understand the complexity of things that
happen around us every day. It doesn't provide all the
answers (history does not always repeat itself), but it can
help us ask the right questions.
What is History?
History is the study and interpretation of the recorded past.
We often think of history as a set of
dates, names, and facts
to be memorized. Facts do help us study history, but they are
nothing more than trivia until we try to make some sense out
of them. Thoughtful, informed interpretation and synthesis of
these facts will help us understand the development and
interrelationships of human societies. History helps us
understand many events that at first seem inexplicable, and
it also helps us understand that the causes and effects of
these events are often very complex.
There are many ways to look at history, and we all have a
unique perspective we can bring to studying it. History is
often studied by period (such as the Middle Ages, or the
Renaissance), geographic
or cultural area
(such as Eastern Europe, Southeast Asia, Latin America), or
theme (such as "revolution", or "labor").
Let's say we want to examine the problem of "slavery". The
way we approach the problem might depend on our interests,
our location, available materials, or any one of hundreds of
factors.
We might study the life of a particular slave, slave trader,
or slave owner to bring us a closer view of how slavery
affected the lives of those involved in it. A comparative
historian might compare certain aspects or practices of the
slave trade in, say, Brazil and the southern
United States.
Someone with an interest in local history might study slavery
practices in a particular community or plantation. An
interest in African history might move us to try to discover
the social or economic effects of slavery in Western Africa.
If we're interested in economics, we might study the relative
costs and benefits of the slave trade in the U.S. Someone
with an interest in religion might look at the African
religions and how they blended with Christian religions of
slaveholding countries to form a unique set of syncretic
beliefs and practices.
There are few interests that could not be addressed. The
list of approaches could be endless; each approach brings us
new insights into how life was lived and into a very
important problem in world history.
Writing and thinking about history are often done in two
parts. The first part, the "rational" part, is the gathering
of information (the facts). There are many potential sources
for this: archaeological sources (stone
tablets, stone columns with pictographic symbols), chronicles,
books, newspapers, diaries, public records, and
many more. Traditionally, most records have been written,
but the development of electronic media has meant that we
also have access to audio and video recordings (interviews
for oral history, documentary films, etc.), and computerized records.
Once we have our facts, we need to synthesize them. This is
often called interpretation. How reliable is our information?
Do our sources conflict with one another? This is the most
difficult part, but it's also the creative part, the part that
makes history live and breathe and makes it much more than an
endless list of names and dates.
Uses and Abuses of History
History has had many uses ever since people started thinking
about it and writing it. In ancient China, for example, it
served as a way to preserve traditions and as an instructive
tool for leaders to learn from the examples of their
predecessors. In the early days of writing history, such
chronicles were often written as events happened.
Herodotus (484 BC to 428 BC), a Greek writer and historian,
was one of the first to take a broader view of history and to
try to interpret a variety of sources.
Christian churches long used history as a way to interpret
the unfolding of world events as the manifestation of God's
plan, and many leaders have used "official" histories
(chronicles) as a way to document what they perceive to be
their own greatness. Whenever we study history, it's a good
idea to use a wide variety of sources. Often, these sources
will contradict each other, and that's part of the challenge
of history.
Reading
A brief list of some important and interesting books:
- Zinn, Howard,
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People's History of the United States.
History,
not as a series of kings, presidents, and wars, but as it
happened to real people. Zinn's book acknowledges the
forgotten voices of those who have traditionally not been heard.
- Galeano, Eduardo,
-
Open Veins of Latin America.
A passionate,
forceful view of Latin American history as the robbing,
enslavement, raping, and bloodletting of the weak by the
strong.
- Nehru, Jawaharlal,
-
Glimpses of World History.
Nehru (the first prime
minister of India) was jailed several times by the British
for his efforts to bring about the independence of India.
He used his time wisely. He wrote a series of lengthy letters
to his daughter on the subject of world history. Unique in
that it shows a distinctly non-Western view of history in
general, and the British domination of India and other
countries in particular. In addition, he was a maker, and
not just an interpreter, of history.
- Boorstin, Daniel,
-
The Discoverers.
Great book on the
development of all types of discovery (scientific,
geographic, and others). Boorstin is a great researcher (he
has been Librarian of Congress since 1975) and he's a
wonderful thinker and writer.
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