ALSO BY JEFF
RIGGENBACH: In Praise of Decadence
All rights
reserved. Written permission must be secured from the publisher
to use or reproduce any part of this book, except for brief quotations
in critical reviews or articles. For information write: Ludwig
von Mises Institute, 518 West Magnolia Avenue, Auburn, Alabama
36832; mises.org.
Copyright
2009 © by Jeff Riggenbach
History,
n. An account mostly false, of events mostly unimportant,
which are brought about by rulers mostly knaves, and soldiers
mostly fools. – Ambrose Bierce, The Devil’s Dictionary
(1906)
This book
is for Suzanne, who made it possible.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Portions
of Chapter Three and Chapter Five appeared earlier, in somewhat
different form, in Liberty magazine, on RationalReview.com,
and on Antiwar.com. David J. Theroux of the Independent Institute,
Andrea Millen Rich of the Center for Independent Thought, and
Alexia Gilmore of the Randolph Bourne Institute were generous
with their assistance during the researching and writing stages
of this project. Ellen Stuttle was her usual indispensable self.
And, of course, responsibility for any errors of fact, usage,
or judgment in these pages is entirely my own.
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
CHAPTER ONE:
THE ART OF HISTORY
I. Objectivity
in History
II. History
and Fiction
III. The
Historical Fiction of Kenneth Roberts
IV. The Historical
Fiction of John Dos Passos
CHAPTER TWO:
THE HISTORICAL FICTION OF GORE VIDAL: THE
“AMERICAN CHRONICLE” NOVELS
I. Burr
and Lincoln
II. 1876,
Empire, and Hollywood
III. Hollywood
and The Golden Age
CHAPTER THREE:
THE STORY OF AMERICAN REVISIONISM
I. The Birth
of American Revisionism and the Rise of Harry Elmer Barnes
II. Charles
A. Beard and William Appleman Williams: From Progressivism to
the New Left
III. Harry
Elmer Barnes and James J. Martin: From Progressivism to Libertarianism
IV. James
J. Martin: Historian and Pamphleteer
V. The Libertarian
Historians and Their Colleagues on the New Left
CHAPTER FOUR:
SOME AMERICAN WARS – BOTH HOT AND COLD – THROUGH REVISIONIST EYES
I. The U.S.
Civil War – the Revisionist View
II. America
in the World Wars – A Revisionist Perspective
III. A Revisionist
Look at America in the Cold War
CHAPTER FIVE:
THE POLITICS OF THE AMERICAN REVISIONISTS
I. “Left”
and “Right,” “Conservative” and “Liberal,” Differentiated Historically
II. The Decline
of American Liberalism – the Early Years
III. Conservative
Republicans and Liberal Democrats in 19th Century America
IV. Teddy
Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, and the Triumph of Conservatism
V. Herbert
Hoover’s New Deal
VI. The Myth
of the “Old Right”
VII. The
Goldwater Anomaly
VIII. The
Reagan Fraud – and After
CHAPTER SIX:
THE NEW AMERICAN HISTORY WARS
I. Why Textbooks
Matter
II. The
Breakdown of the Consensus – the Case of Howard Zinn
III. American
History According to Eric Foner
IV. Thomas
E. Woods, Jr. vs. Larry Schweikart and Michael Allen
V. History,
Fiction, and Objectivity – Some Concluding Observations
INDEX
“Now there
are some who would like to rewrite history – revisionist historians
is what I like to call them.” – George W. Bush, June 16, 2003
PREFACE
Americans
have been warring with each other for more than a century over
the contents of the American history textbooks used in the nation’s
high schools and colleges. Nor is the reason far to seek. If,
as seems to be the case, these textbooks encompass one hundred
percent of the information that most high school and college graduates
in this country will ever encounter on the subject of American
history, the American history wars would appear to be well worth
fighting. For what Americans know and understand about the history
of the society in which they live will determine the degree of
their willingness to honor and preserve its ideals and traditions.
More than that: it will determine what they regard as the ideals
and traditions of their society. It will determine nothing
less than the kind of society they will seek to strengthen and
perpetuate.
Until very
recently, however, the range of the conflict over American history
textbooks was narrow indeed. All sides tacitly agreed that the
story of the United States was the triumphant tale of a people
fervently devoted to peace, prosperity, and individual liberty;
a people left utterly untempted by opportunities of the kind that
had led so many other nations down the ignoble road of empire;
a people who went to war only as a last resort and only when both
individual liberty and Western Civilization itself were imperiled
and at stake. There had been injustices along the way, of course
– the Native Americans had been grossly mistreated, as had the
African Americans. Women had been denied the vote and even the
right to own property. Yet these injustices had been corrected
in time, and the formerly mistreated groups had been integrated
into full citizenship and full participation in the liberty, prosperity,
and peace that were the birthright of every American – the very
same liberty, prosperity, and peace that had made America itself
a beacon of hope to the entire world.
So the consensus
view of American history has long had it, at any rate. And so
almost all the textbooks involved in the American history wars
waged before the 1980s had it, too. The only question at issue
back then, really, was whether any given textbook gave one or
another of the various formerly aggrieved groups what was felt
to be its proper due. Was the suffering of the Native Americans
(or the African Americans or the women) detailed at sufficient
length? The many contributions the African Americans (or the
women or the Native Americans) had made to American culture –
contributions without which American culture would simply not
be the same – were these detailed sufficiently? The nobility
of the female (or the Native American or the African American)
leaders who helped bring about recognition of their people’s rights
– was this sufficiently stressed?
Then, a
little over a quarter-century ago, the terms of the debate changed
– radically. One might say the opening salvo in the new American
history wars was fired by Howard Zinn, in the form of a textbook
entitled A People’s History of the United States. First
published in 1980, this volume is still in print, was reissued
in a revised, updated, “20th Anniversary Edition” in
the year 2000, and has become one of the most widely influential
college level textbooks on American history currently in use in
this country. Today, Zinn faces intensified competition, however,
not only from peddlers of the traditional, America-as-pure-and-virtuous-beacon-of-liberty-prosperity-and-peace
version of our past, but also from a number of other writers who
have, in varying degree, adopted the rather different view of
American history that Zinn himself promotes.
This alternative
vision sees America’s past as a series of betrayals by political
leaders of all major parties, in which the liberal ideals on which
this country was founded have been gradually abandoned and replaced
by precisely the sorts of illiberal ideals that America officially
deplores. In effect, say Howard Zinn and a growing chorus of
others, we have become the people our founding fathers warned
us (and tried to protect us) against. And what may be the most
significant fact about this alternative or “revisionist” view
of American history is the remarkably hospitable reception it
has enjoyed both from the general public and from the selfsame
educational establishment that only a few short years ago was
assiduously teaching students something else entirely.
How can
we account for this? Why, suddenly, is there a substantial market
for a version of American history quite unlike anything most Americans
had ever encountered? Why are the combatants in the current American
history wars so different from each other, so different in their
fundamental assumptions about America? Why are the current wars
so much bloodier (figuratively speaking), so much more intense,
than ever before?
It seems
to me that the correct answer to this question is complex and
multifaceted. It seems to me that several different forces are
at work here simultaneously, combining synergistically to produce
the “single” effect we call “our current American history wars.”
One of these forces is generational change. It was in the 1980s
that college and university history departments came to be dominated
by a new generation of historians – historians who had earned
their Ph.D.s in the 1960s and ’70s and who had been strongly influenced
in their thinking about American history by a group of “revisionist”
historians, the so-called “New Left Historians,” whose books were
widely popular and widely controversial at that time. These “New
Left Historians” – William Appleman Williams, Gabriel Kolko, Gar
Alperovitz, a number of others – had in turn been strongly influenced
by an earlier group of “revisionists” – the so-called “New Historians”
or “Progressive Historians” – whose most prominent figures included
Charles A. Beard and Harry Elmer Barnes.
Another
of the forces involved in the recent heating up of the perennial
American history wars was the brilliant critical and popular success,
during the 1970s and early 1980s, of the first three books in
Gore Vidal’s six-volume “American Chronicle” series of historical
novels about the United States. Burr (1973), 1876
(1976), and Lincoln (1984) were enormous successes. They
proved beyond any doubt that the public would not rise up in indignation
and smite any author who dared to question the motives and the
wisdom of even the most venerated American presidents. They proved
that there was, in fact, a substantial market for just such skepticism
about the glorious American past.
Partisans
of the America-as-pure-and-virtuous-beacon-of-liberty-prosperity-and-peace
mythology attacked Vidal’s novels, of course, but Vidal made it
quite clear in a couple of detailed replies to his critics (first
published in the New York Review of Books) that he knew
at least as much about the history of the periods he depicted
in his novels as any of them did – Ph.D.s and members of the professoriate
though they might be. Still, doubts lingered in more than a few
minds. First there was the problem of Vidal’s well known political
views and his high-profile activities as a polemicist and proselytizer
for those views. Could a man so opinionated be counted upon to
provide an objective account of America’s past? Second, there
was the problem of historical fiction. Was it really advisable
to take any work of fiction seriously as a source of information
about history? Fiction was . . . well, you know – fiction.
It was “made up.” How could we rely on any information we picked
up about the events of the past from reading such a work?
To answer
these questions properly, it will be necessary to take a brief
but closely focused look at the discipline of history itself.
How does an historian go about determining the truth as regards
the past? Is the historian’s methodology in any way similar to
the fiction writer’s? Is the work the historian writes in any
way similar to a novel? Is it really appropriate to dismiss historical
fiction as “made up,” while looking to the writings of historians
for an objective assessment of past events?
And so we
begin . . . .