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Rethinking American History in a Post-9/11 World

By Eric Foner

September 12, 2004, History News Network

http://hnn.us/articles/6961.html

In 1948, Roy F. Nichols, a distinguished scholar of the Civil
War era, published a short essay about the Second World War's
likely impact on American historians. Nichols predicted a
sweeping 'reorientation of historical thinking.' 'Any great
disturbance in the world of action or intellect,' he wrote,
'produces very noticeable effects upon the methods and
controlling thought patterns of historians. It is probable
that the recent war will prove no exception.'

We have recently lived through our own 'great disturbance.'
September 11 was not -- at least, not yet -- as
transformative an event as World War II. Yet it undoubtedly
will lead historians to rethink how we study and teach the
American past. This, indeed, is as it should be. All history,
the saying goes, is contemporary history. The past forty
years have demonstrated how people instinctively turn to the
past to help understand the present and how events draw our
attention to previously neglected historical subjects. The
'second wave' of feminism gave birth to a flourishing
subfield of women's history. The Reagan Revolution inspired a
cottage industry in the history of American conservatism.
These and other such developments have enriched our
understanding of American history and expanded the cast of
characters who occupy the historical stage.

The owl of Minerva takes flight at dusk -- historians, that
is, prefer to wait until events have concluded before
subjecting them to historical analysis. Nichols's essay
itself demonstrates that it is difficult while caught up in
momentous events to predict how they will shape historical
understanding. He anticipated that the uncertainties and
anxieties produced by World War II, compounded by the nuclear
sword of Damocles it left suspended over the collective head
of mankind, would lead American historians to abandon their
traditional 'optimism' in favor of a stance of 'wary
disillusionment.' Quite the opposite, in fact, transpired. As
the Cold War came to dominate the country's thought and
culture, leading historians were drawn to an account of our
past that celebrated American 'exceptionalism' and downplayed
instances of inequality and social conflict in the nation's
history.

Historians are still uncertain how September 11 will affect
their craft. The clearest blueprint for new directions in
historical education, indeed, have come from outside the
academy, in a spate of statements by conservative
commentators. In a speech less than a month after the
tragedy, Lynne Cheney, wife of the vice president and former
head of the National Endowment for the Humanities, insisted
that calls for more intensive study of the rest of the world
amounted to blaming America's 'failure to understand Islam'
for the attack on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. A
letter distributed by the American Council of Trustees and
Alumni, which she once chaired, chastised professors who fail
to teach the 'truth' that civilization itself 'is best
exemplified in the West and indeed in America.'

Then, Dinesh D'Souza weighed in with What's So Great About
America (note that there is no question mark in the title), a
book that sought to rally the American people by contending
that principles like freedom and religious toleration are
uniquely 'Western' beliefs. For D'Souza, the only reason to
study other parts of the world is to point out our
superiority to them. The publisher's ad for his book
identified those who hold alternative views as 'people who
provide a rationale for terrorism.' William Bennett, in his
book Why We Fight, claimed that scholars with whom he
disagrees 'sow widespread and debilitating confusion' and
'weaken the country's resolve.'

Like all momentous events, September 11 is a remarkable
teaching opportunity. But only if we use it to open rather
than to close debate. Critical intellectual analysis is our
responsibility -- to ourselves and to our students.
Explanation is not a justification for murder, criticism is
not equivalent to treason, and offering a historical analysis
of evil is not the same thing as consorting with evil.

The philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche identified three
approaches to history � the monumental, antiquarian, and
critical. Recent calls to narrow the range of acceptable
discussion to what Nietzsche called monumental or celebratory
history, themselves have a long lineage. In every country,
versions of the past provide the raw material for nationalist
and patriotic sentiments. In this country, such calls have
mounted at times of nation-building (such as the first half
of the nineteenth century), perceived national fragmentation
(such as the 1890s and 1990s, both decades of widespread
concern over mass immigration and cultural disunity), and
during wars. In World War I, distinguished scholars produced
pamphlets to government specifications explaining, for
example, the 'common principles' shared by Jean-Jacques
Rousseau, Oliver Cromwell, and Thomas Jefferson, to
illustrate the historical basis of the Franco-British-
American alliance. During the Cold War leading historians
celebrated the solution of major social problems, the 'end of
ideology' and the triumph of a liberal 'consensus' in which
all Americans, except malcontents and fanatics, shared the
same mainstream values.

Walter Lippmann once wrote that the function of good
journalism is to ensure that people are not surprised. The
same can be said of good history. The past historians portray
must be one out of which the present can plausibly have
grown. The problem with the consensus history of the 1950s,
for example, was not simply that it was incomplete but that
it left students utterly unprepared to understand American
reality. The civil rights revolution, divisions over Vietnam,
Watergate � these seemed to spring from nowhere, without
discernible roots in the American past. The self-absorbed,
super-celebratory history promoted in the aftermath of
September 11 -- a history lacking in nuance and complexity --
will not enable students to make sense of our increasingly
interconnected world. We need a historical framework that
eschews pronouncements about our own superiority and prompts
greater self-consciousness among Americans and greater
knowledge of those arrayed against us.

Of course, there is nothing inherently wrong with young
people taking pride in their nation's accomplishments.
Lippmann's point, however, is that the role of the journalist
or the historian is neither to celebrate nor to condemn but
to explain. September 11 rudely placed certain issues on the
historical agenda. Let me consider briefly three of them and
their implications for how we think about the American past:
the invocation of freedom as an all-purpose explanation for
the attacks and a justification for the ensuing war on
terrorism and invasion of Iraq; widespread acquiescence in
significant infringements on civil liberties; and a sudden
awareness of considerable distrust abroad of American actions
and motives. The first step in thinking about these
'surprises' is to historicize them -- to understand that they
all have histories.

No idea is more quintessentially American than freedom. And
throughout our history, in moments of crisis, the question of
freedom -- what it is, why it is worth defending, who should
enjoy it -- seems to come to the fore. Many commentators,
nonetheless, were surprised by how quickly, in the aftermath
of September 11, freedom became an all-purpose explanation
for both the attack and the ensuing war against 'terrorism.'
'Freedom itself is under attack,' President Bush announced in
his speech to Congress of September 21, and he gave the title
Enduring Freedom to the war in Afghanistan. Our antagonists,
he went on, 'hate our freedoms, our freedom of religion, our
freedom of speech, our freedom to assemble and disagree with
each other.' A year later, in calling for increased attention
to the teaching of American history so that schoolchildren
can understand 'why we fight,' Bush observed, 'ours is a
history of freedom, ... freedom for everybody.'

The 2002 National Security Strategy, the document that
announced the doctrine of preemptive war, opens not with a
discussion of global politics but with an invocation of
freedom, defined as political democracy, freedom of
expression, religious toleration, and free enterprise.'
These, the document proclaims, 'are right and true for every
person, in every society.' There is no sense that this
constellation of values is the product of a particular moment
and a specific historical experience, or that other people
might have given thought to the question of freedom and
arrived at somewhat different definitions. Naturally, the
invasion of Iraq was called name Operation Iraqi Freedom. And
in April 2004, in explaining the continuing resistance to the
occupation, the president declared: 'We love freedom and they
hate freedom � that's where the clash occurs.' Freedom, he
added, was not simply an American idea; 'it is God's gift to
the world.'

There is nothing unusual in the invocation of freedom as an
American rallying cry, or in the idea that American
policymakers are implementing God's will. The Revolution gave
birth to a definition of American nationhood and national
mission that persists to this day, in which the new nation
defined itself as a unique embodiment of liberty in a world
overrun with oppression. The Civil War and emancipation
reinforced the identification of the United States with the
progress of freedom. In the twentieth century, the discourse
of a world sharply divided into opposing camps, one
representing freedom and the other its antithesis, was
reinvigorated in the worldwide struggles against Nazism and
communism. The sense of American uniqueness, of the United
States as an example to the rest of the world of the
superiority of free institutions, remains very much alive as
a central element of our political culture.

As I suggested in The Story of American Freedom, a book
published in 1998, groups from the abolitionists to modern-
day conservatives have realized that to "capture" a word like
freedom is to acquire a formidable position of strength in
political conflicts. Freedom is the trump card of political
discourse, invoked as often to silence debate as to
invigorate it. The very ubiquity today of the language of
freedom suggests that we need to equip students to understand
the many meanings freedom has had and the many uses to which
it has been put over the course of our history. We need to
teach how freedom has been, in the words of the political
theorist Nikolas Rose, both a 'formula of power' (as it is
today) and a 'formula of resistance.'

The dominant meanings of freedom for the past generation have
tended to center on political democracy, free markets, low
taxes, limited government, and individual self-determination
in private matters ranging from dress and leisure activities
to sexual orientation. These definitions are promoted as both
quintessentially American and universally applicable. Yet the
meaning of freedom and the definition of who is entitled to
enjoy it have changed many times in our past. Rather than a
single fixed category inherited from the founding fathers,
freedom has always been an evolving, multifaceted, and
contested idea. Calling our past a history of freedom for
everybody makes it impossible to discuss seriously the
numerous instances when groups of Americans have been denied
freedom, or the ways in which some Americans today enjoy a
great deal more freedom than others. It makes it impossible
to appreciate how battles at freedom's boundaries � the
efforts of racial minorities, women, and other groups to
secure freedom as they understood it -- have both deepened
and transformed the meaning of freedom. The modern idea that
freedom is equally an entitlement of all Americans regardless
of race, for example, owes as much to slaves and
abolitionists who insisted that liberty is a truly human
ideal than to the founders, who spoke of freedom as a
universal entitlement but established a slaveholding
republic. The modern extension of freedom into private life
was pioneered by generations of feminists who insisted that
the idea is applicable to the most intimate personal
relationships.

Today, if one asks your man or woman in the street to define
freedom, they will soon mention the liberties enshrined in
the Bill of Rights -- freedom of expression, of the press,
etc. Yet all patriotic upsurges run the risk of degenerating
into a coercive drawing of boundaries between 'loyal'
Americans and those stigmatized as aliens and traitors. Like
other wars, the 'war on terrorism' has raised troubling
questions concerning civil liberties in wartime, the rights
of noncitizens, and the ethnic boundaries of American
freedom. It is not difficult to list the numerous and
disturbing infringements on civil liberties that followed in
the wake of September 11. Legal protections such as habeas
corpus, trial by impartial jury, the right to legal
representation, and equality before the law regardless of
race or national origin were curtailed. At least 5,000
foreigners with Middle Eastern connections were quickly
rounded up and more than 1,500 arrested and held for long
periods of time without charge or even public acknowledgment
of their fate. To this date, not a single one has been
charged with involvement in the events of 9/11. (Zaccarias
Moussaoui, the so-called twentieth hijacker, was already in
custody on that day.) An executive order authorized the
holding of secret military tribunals for noncitizens deemed
to have assisted terrorism, and the Justice Department has
argued in court that even American citizens could be held
indefinitely and not allowed to see a lawyer, once the
government designates them 'enemy combatants.'

One 'surprise' of the post-September 11 period has been how
willing the majority of Americans are to accept restraints on
time-honored liberties, especially when they seem to apply
primarily to a single ethnically-identified segment of our
population. Like other results of September 11, this surprise
needs to be understood in its historical context. That
history suggests that strong protections for civil liberties
is not a constant feature of our 'civilization' but a recent
and still fragile historical achievement. Our civil liberties
are neither self-enforcing nor self-correcting. Especially in
times of crisis, the price of freedom is eternal vigilance.

America, of course, has a long tradition of vigorous
political debate and dissent, an essential part of our
democratic tradition. Less familiar is the fact that until
well into the twentieth century, the social and legal
defenses of free expression were extremely fragile. A broad
rhetorical commitment to this ideal coexisted with stringent
restrictions on speech deemed radical or obscene. Labor
activists, socialists, advocates of birth control,
campaigners for racial equality and others faced numerous
legal and extra-legal obstacles to their ability to publicize
their views, hold meetings, picket, and distribute
literature. Not until the late 1930s did civil liberties
assume a central place in liberal definitions of freedom. Not
until the 1960s did the modern jurisprudence of civil
liberties become fixed in the law. Equality before the law
regardless of race is a very new principle in American life.
For most of our history, Asians were prohibited from becoming
naturalized citizens, and blacks were denied many of the
basic rights of other Americans. Only in the last few years
did racial and ethnic profiling by public authorities come to
be seen as illegitimate � a position apparently reversed in
the aftermath of September 11.

Civil liberties have been severely abridged during previous
moments of crisis, from the Alien and Sedition Acts in 1798
to the jailing and deportation of socialists, labor leaders,
and critics of American involvement during and immediately
after World War I, to the internment of tens of thousands of
Japanese-Americans, most of them American citizens, during
World War II, and McCarthyism during the Cold War. Historians
generally view these past episodes as shameful anomalies. But
we are now living through another such experience, and there
is a remarkable absence of public outcry.

Although the Supreme Court recently moved to curtail the
government's power to arrest individuals without charge and
throw away the key, history does not suggest that the Supreme
Court is likely to offer a vigorous defense of civil
liberties against governmental infringement so long as a war
exists. In the famous Milligan case, arising out of the use
of military tribunals to try civilians during the Civil War,
the Court issued the stirring comment that the constitution
is not suspended in wartime, 'it is a law for rulers and
people, equally in time of war and peace.' But this decision
was issued in 1866, after the crisis had passed, just as the
Court upheld restrictions on free speech during World War I,
only to begin to defend freedom of expression during the
1920s. In once obscure decisions now deserving of classroom
attention -- Fong Yue Ting (1893), the Insular Cases of the
early twentieth century, Korematsu during World War II -- the
Court allowed the government a virtual carte blanche in
dealing with aliens and in suspending the rights of specific
groups of citizens on grounds of military necessity. We
should not forget the ringing dissents in these cases. In
Fong Yue Ting, which authorized the deportation of Chinese
immigrants without due process, Justice Brewer warned that
the power was now directed against a people many Americans
found 'obnoxious,' but 'who shall say it will not be
exercised tomorrow against other classes and other people?'
In Korematsu, which upheld Japanese-American internment,
Justice Robert Jackson wrote that the decision 'lies about
like a loaded weapon ready for the hand of any authority than
can bring forward a plausible claim to an urgent need.'

This history does not offer simple lessons or a single easy
answer to current concerns about the proper balance between
liberty and security. But it does suggest that like other
aspects of freedom, the right to criticize the government,
equality before the law, and legal protections against the
unfettered exercise of police powers by the state are not
part of a straight-line trajectory of continual progress with
a few temporary interruptions that are soon self-corrected.
They are the inheritance of a long history of struggles in
which victories often prove temporary and retrogression often
follows progress. As the abolitionist Thomas Wentworth
Higginson remarked at the end of the Civil War, 'revolutions
may go backwards.' Recent infringements on civil liberties do
not compare with the massive suppression of dissent during
World War I or the internment of Japanese-Americans. But
recent events do mark a significant shift in public policy
after several decades of expanding liberty.

September 11 will also undoubtedly lead historians to examine
more closely the history of the country's relationship with
the larger world. We are constantly being reminded that the
world we inhabit is becoming smaller and more integrated and
formerly autonomous nations are bound ever more tightly by a
complex web of economic and cultural connections. The popular
short-hand term for these processes is globalization.

Our heightened awareness of globalization � however the term
is delimited and defined � should challenge historians to
become more cognizant of how our past, like our present, is
embedded in a history larger than our own. The institutions,
processes, and values that have shaped American history --
from capitalism to political democracy, slavery, and consumer
culture -- arose out of global processes and can only be
understood in an international context. This, of course, is
hardly a new insight. Back in the 1930s, Herbert E. Bolton
warned that by treating the American past in isolation,
historians were helping to raise up a 'nation of chauvinists'
� a danger worth remembering when considering the drumbeat of
calls for a self-absorbed patriotic history.

A year and a half before September 11, in my presidential
address to the American Historical Association, I called on
scholars to deprovincialize the study of American history.
Internationalizing our history does not mean abandoning or
homogenizing the particular experience of the United States.
International dynamics operate in different ways in different
countries. In internationalizing American history we must
also be careful not to reproduce traditional American
exceptionalism on a global scale -- such as in the statements
quoted above equating civilization with 'the West' and 'the
West' with the United States. This is a special temptation in
the wake of September 11, which has produced a spate of
historical commentary influenced by Samuel P. Huntington's
mid-1990s book, The Clash of Civilizations. It is all too
easy to explain September 11 as a confrontation between
Western and Islamic civilizations (a position oddly
reminiscent of that of Osama bin Laden).

But the notion of a 'clash of civilizations' is monolithic,
static, and essentialist. It reduces politics and culture to
a single characteristic -- race, religion, or geography --
that remains forever unchanged, divorced from historical
development. It denies the global exchange of ideas and the
interpenetration of cultures that has been a feature of the
modern world for centuries. It also makes it impossible to
discuss divisions within these purported civilizations. The
construct of 'Islam,' for example, lumps over one billion
people into a single 'civilization,' and makes it difficult
to explain why Iran and Iraq went to war. The idea that the
West has exclusive access to reason, liberty, and tolerance,
ignores both the relative recency of the triumph of such
values within the West and the debates over Creationism,
abortion rights, and other issues that suggest that
commitment to such values is hardly unanimous. Many self-
proclaimed defenders of the superiority of Western
civilization fail to notice that the Western tradition of
their imagination is highly selective -- it includes the
Enlightenment but not the Inquisition, liberalism but not the
Holocaust, Charles Darwin but not the Salem witch trials. The
difference between positing civilizations with unchanging
essences and analyzing change within and interaction between
various societies is the difference between thinking
mythically and thinking historically.

It certainly seems to be true that the various ideas of
freedom with which we are familiar have not sunk deep roots
in Islamic societies. But like everything else, terror itself
has a history. To explain terrorism as the inevitable outcome
of the innate pathologies of Islamic civilization ignores the
fact that many societies, including our own, have spawned
terrorists. The Ku Klux Klan during Reconstruction murdered
more innocent Americans than Osama bin Laden. In the first
two decades of the twentieth century, Americans experienced a
wave of terrorist attacks and bombings -- the assassination
of President McKinley by an anarchist in 1901, the 1910
explosion at the Los Angeles Times that killed twenty
persons, the Wall Street bombing of 1920 that took thirty-
eight lives. The Oklahoma City bombing of 1995 and the
post-9/11 circulation of anthrax through the mails were both
initially attributed to foreign terrorists, yet both appear
to have been home grown. The point is not to deny the
unprecedented scale of the September 11 attacks or to
denigrate the achievements of American and Western societies,
but to underscore that terrorism springs from specific
historical causes and can emerge in many times and places.
Its roots require historical analysis

Ironically, September 11 highlighted not only our
vulnerability but our overwhelming power. Never, perhaps,
since the days of the Roman empire has one state so totally
eclipsed the others. In every index of power -- military,
economic, cultural, scientific -- the United States far
exceeds any other country. It accounts for just under one-
third of the world's gross domestic product, 36 percent of
all military spending (more than the next several powers
combined), and 40 percent of world spending on scientific
research. It is not surprising in such circumstances that
many Americans feel that the country can establish rules of
international conduct for others, while operating as it sees
fit. Since September 11, the word 'empire' has come back into
unembarrassed use in American political discourse. The need
to shoulder the burdens of empire is a common theme in
discussion among the foreign policy elite, and in a number of
popular books. Even 'imperialism,' once a term of opprobrium,
is now in common use.

Like other responses to September 11, the idea of the United
States as an empire has a long history, one linked to the
belief that the country � by example, force, or a combination
of the two � can and should remake the world in its own
image. Jefferson spoke of the United States as an 'empire of
liberty.' When the nation stepped onto the world stage as an
imperial power in the Spanish-American War, President
McKinley insisted that ours was a 'benevolent imperialism,'
and that our governance of the Philippines ought not to be
compared to the territorial conquests of European powers.
Woodrow Wilson insisted that only the United States possessed
the combination of military power and moral righteousness to
make the world safe for democracy. In 1942, Henry Luce, the
publisher Time and Life magazines, called for the United
States to assume the role of 'dominant power in the world' in
what he famously called 'The American Century.'

The history of the idea and practice of empire might help
Americans understand why other countries sometimes resent our
tendency to pursue our own interests as a world power while
proclaiming that we embody universal values and goals. A
recent Gallup poll revealed that few Americans have any
knowledge of other countries' grievances against the United
States. But the benevolence of benevolent imperialism lies in
the eye of the beholder. Indians and Mexicans did not desire
to surrender their lands to the onward march of Jefferson's
empire of liberty. Many Filipinos did not share President
McKinley's judgment that they would be better off under
American rule than as an independent nation. A study of the
history of our relationship with the rest of the world might
enable us to find it less surprising that despite the wave of
sympathy for the United States that followed September 11,
there is widespread fear outside our borders, including among
longtime allies in Europe, that the war on terrorism is
motivated in part by the desire to impose a Pax Americana in
a grossly unequal world.

Local situations and complex motives throughout the world
cannot be subsumed into a single either/or dichotomy of
friends and enemies of freedom or terrorists and their
opponents. At a time when half the college history
departments in the country lack a faculty member capable of
teaching the history of the Middle East, it is worth
remembering that anti-Americanism in that part of the world
is a recent phenomenon, not primordial hatred, and that it is
not confined to Islamic fundamentalists but can be found
among secular nationalists and democratic reformers. It is
based primarily on American policies -- toward Israel, the
Palestinians, oil supplies, the region's corrupt and
authoritarian regimes, and, most recently, Iraq. It is not
simply American freedom, but American power and its uses,
that arouses international suspicion.

At the height of the Cold War, in his brilliant and sardonic
survey of American political thought, The Liberal Tradition
in America, Louis Hartz observed that despite its deepened
worldwide involvement, the United States was becoming more
isolated intellectually from other cultures. A few years ago,
another prominent historian, Daniel Rodgers, contrasted the
Progressive era, when American reformers scoured Europe for
examples of social policy that could be adopted in the United
States, with the 1990s, when Americans seemed to be convinced
that they had nothing to learn from the rest of the world.
September 11 has produced an odd combination of
cosmopolitanism and myopia - a recognition that we exist as
part of a wider world, and demands that we once again
emphasize what sets us apart from the rest of mankind.

When Alexis de Tocqueville visited the United States in the
1830s, he was struck by Americans' conviction that 'they are
the only religious, enlightened, and free people,' and 'form
a species apart from the rest of the human race.' Yet
American independence was proclaimed by men anxious to
demonstrate 'a decent respect to the opinions of mankind.' It
is not the role of historians to instruct our fellow citizens
on how they should think about our turbulent world. But it is
our task to insist that the study of history should transcend
boundaries rather than reinforcing or reproducing them. In
the wake of September 11, it is all the more imperative that
the history we teach must be a candid appraisal of our own
society's strengths and weaknesses, not simply an exercise in
self-celebration - a conversation with the entire world, not
a complacent dialogue with ourselves. If September 11 makes
us think historically -- not mythically -- about our nation
and its role in the world, then perhaps some good will have
come out of that tragic event. 13

[Mr. Foner is a professor of history at Columbia
University and past president of both the AHA and the OAH.
TThis article was first published by Liberal Education
in 2003]
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