************************************************************************
NY Times, July 27, 2020
Clash of the Historians: Paper on Andrew Jackson and Trump Causes Turmoil
************************************************************************

A paper accusing scholars of “historical malpractice” upended an academic 
society and stirred arguments about racism, history and the limits of debate.

Donald Trump with a portrait of Andrew Jackson he had ordered hung in the Oval 
Office. Credit... Andrew Harnik/Associated Press
Jennifer Schuessler ( https://www.nytimes.com/by/jennifer-schuessler )

By Jennifer Schuessler ( https://www.nytimes.com/by/jennifer-schuessler )

* 
Published July 24, 2020 Updated July 26, 2020

* 

* 
* 
* 
* 

* 

Andrew Jackson has been no stranger to rough-and-tumble conflict. In his own 
time, he upended the established political order and helped spearhead the 
violent expansion of America’s borders. In ours, he has become a toxic figure 
for many, as even the Democratic Party he helped found has distanced itself 
from his legacy ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/12/us/politics/state-by-state-democratic-party-is-erasing-ties-to-jefferson-and-jackson.html
 ) of slaveholding, Indian removal and populist demagogy.

Last week, Jackson cut a posthumously destructive path through another 
institution once centered on his legacy, when the Society for Historians of the 
Early American Republic was thrown into turmoil after a contentious scholarly 
panel about the man.

The panel, which was held via Zoom ( 
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=570735920260513 ) on July 17, featured 
discussion of a paper by Daniel Feller, the editor of the Andrew Jackson 
Papers. Titled “Andrew Jackson in the Age of Trump,” it set off a firestorm 
that led, within 72 hours, to the ouster of the group’s president, as well as 
the publication of open letters denouncing the talk and counterletters 
protesting the ouster. It also caused debate over whether the distinguished 
academic society was experiencing an overdue reckoning with racism or 
abandoning its commitment to robust scholarly debate in the face of a Twitter 
mob.

With Jackson and Mr. Trump, Mr. Feller was taking on two characters with few 
admirers in the often left-leaning historical profession. He began by recalling 
the day in 2017 when Mr. Trump visited the Hermitage ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/15/us/politics/trump-andrew-jackson-grave.html 
) , Jackson’s home in Nashville, before picking apart what he called the 
president’s distorted and self-serving efforts to wrap himself in the former 
president’s mantle.

ADVERTISEMENT

Continue reading the main story ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/24/arts/historians-andrew-jackson-trump.html#after-story-ad-1
 )

He also assailed journalists for what he said were misrepresentations of 
Jackson. But his most stinging words were reserved for his fellow historians, 
whom he accused of misreading the historical record, exaggerating his 
destructive policies toward Native Americans and generally painting a 
politically driven picture of Jackson as a “homicidal maniac” that was 
“untethered from reality.”

“Historical malpractice is indefensible, no matter how noble the cause it 
purportedly serves,” he declared.

Mr. Feller’s talk drew sharp challenges from some of the other panelists. But 
reaction exploded in the Zoom comments section and on social media, as viewers 
blasted his criticisms of female scholars (including one he suggested was 
“incompetent”), what some saw ( 
https://twitter.com/historianess/status/1284459556068876289?s=20 ) as 
corner-cutting in his reading of the historical record (including what some 
likened to genocide denial ( 
https://twitter.com/labrcq/status/1284622177405472769?s=20 ) ), and the 
all-white composition of the panel.

But things reached a boiling point in the last three minutes, when Mr. Feller, 
apparently repeating a misheard phrase uttered earlier by another panelist, 
referred to Jackson’s reputation for slaughter of “redcoats and redskins.” And 
tensions kept boiling as word of the talk spread.

--------------
Editors’ Picks
--------------

Why Did She Leave Me There?
---------------------------

He Might Have Been Able to Fake His Death, if Only He’d Spell-Checked
---------------------------------------------------------------------

‘One Day While I Was Shopping at Macy’s, I Lost Track of the Time’
------------------------------------------------------------------

Continue reading the main story ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/24/arts/historians-andrew-jackson-trump.html?action=click&module=editorContent&pgtype=Article&region=CompanionColumn&contentCollection=Trending#after-pp_edpick
 )

Image
In 2017, Mr. Trump visited the Hermitage, Jackson’s home in Nashville. 
Credit... Stephen Crowley/The New York Times

Twenty-four hours later, the society’s president, Douglas Egerton, issued a 
statement ( 
http://thepanorama.shear.org/2020/07/18/presidents-statement-on-shear2020-virtual-plenary/
 ) apologizing for the panel’s lack of diversity and calling the use of racial 
slurs unacceptable. But he also wrote that he didn’t want to “silence people he 
disagreed with.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Continue reading the main story ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/24/arts/historians-andrew-jackson-trump.html#after-story-ad-2
 )

But his statement itself, and that phrase in particular, drew strong 
condemnation from some members of the group, known as SHEAR. The next day, 13 
members of the group’s advisory council posted a letter calling for Mr. 
Egerton’s resignation, which he offered. Three more public letters criticizing 
the talk or the society’s leadership followed, along with privately circulated 
counterblasts (including one in the style of an anonymous 18th-century 
pamphlet) charging the advisory council of violating the group’s constitution.

It was a tempest in a teapot, as multiple society members (few of whom were 
willing to say more than a few words on the record) put it in interviews. But 
it also echoed a broader upheaval happening at institutions across America in 
the wake of the protests inspired by the death of George Floyd.

To some historians, the fracas represented an embarrassing abandonment of 
scholarly prudence amid a social media stampede.

“The SHEAR debacle has little to do with history and a whole lot to do about 
politics,” John Fea, a historian at Messiah University and a former society 
member, wrote on his blog ( 
https://thewayofimprovement.com/2020/07/21/when-an-organization-of-historians-shear-abandons-historical-perspective/
 ). “This is why many Americans,” he added, “don’t trust us and our 
scholarship.”

But to others, it represented part of a long-overdue racial reckoning within 
the white-dominated historical profession, with broader implications for how 
history gets written, and by whom.

ADVERTISEMENT

Continue reading the main story ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/24/arts/historians-andrew-jackson-trump.html#after-story-ad-3
 )

“What’s happening at SHEAR is not an interpretive disagreement over Andrew 
Jackson’s legacy,” said Seth Rockman, a historian at Brown who recently 
co-wrote a diversity report for the group, “but a broader struggle within a 
tight-knit scholarly community over how to produce an inclusive American 
history capable of rising to the challenges of 2020.”

The society, which has just over 600 members, was born of some of the tensions 
that have reshaped the historical profession, and the broader understanding of 
the American past, over the past few decades.

It was founded in 1977 to focus on the period between the American Revolution 
and the Civil War. Its founders were political historians who felt increasingly 
edged out of other associations by the rise of social history, with its 
emphasis on the experiences and perspectives of women, African-Americans and 
other groups marginalized from high politics.

It was a small, clubby group, whose early conferences, as one longtime member 
recalled, were “just 50 guys and a dog.” It was also a place where Jackson, and 
a sunny idea of the period as “the rise of American Democracy,” ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/13/books/review/the-rise-of-american-democracy-a-constant-struggle.html
 ) loomed large.

In recent years, both the field and the society have diversified, 
intellectually and demographically, as great men and high politics have become 
less central. There has been an explosion of work on Native Americans and 
enslaved people, who are seen as crucially important in shaping American 
democracy. The recent issue of the society’s journal focuses on connections 
between the early Republic and Africa. ( 
https://jer.pennpress.org/about/current-issue-abstracts/ )

Mr. Feller was described by friends and critics (as well as some who described 
themselves as both) as an old-guard political historian known for blunt, 
aggressive questioning at conferences and a view of himself as the guardian of 
the true Jackson.

ADVERTISEMENT

Continue reading the main story ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/24/arts/historians-andrew-jackson-trump.html#after-story-ad-4
 )

Image

During a recent scholarly panel, Daniel Feller, the editor of the Andrew 
Jackson Papers, criticized historians for promoting an exaggerated image 
“untethered from reality.” Credit... The University of Tennessee, Knoxville

In an interview, Mr. Feller, 69, a professor at the University of Tennessee, 
Knoxville, said it wasn’t the historian’s job to defend or condemn. What he 
questioned, he said, was the insistence on seeing Jackson purely as someone 
“who just wanted to kill everybody,” as well as what he sees as a politicized 
approach to writing history.

“The point in the paper is not that Andrew Jackson is a good guy or a bad guy,” 
Mr. Feller, who called himself a lifelong Democrat, said. “But because both 
sides have identified him with Trump, for opposite reasons, we are now reading 
Jackson through the lens of Trump.”

And he was unapologetic about the panel, which he noted had been approved by 
the society’s programming committee and Mr. Egerton last fall, as one of 39 at 
a planned conference. (The others have been postponed until next summer.) The 
paper had been circulated weeks in advance, he said, adding that he had 
received no criticism before the panel.

As for his use of the phrase “redcoats and redskins,” he said it was a 
reference to a common phrase ( https://www.jstor.org/stable/4231101?seq=1 ) in 
older scholarship, and had “implied quotation marks” around it. “I have never 
volitionally used the word ‘redskin’ in my life, period,” he said.

But to some in the society, his arguments fell outside the bounds of acceptable 
scholarly discourse. In its letter, ( 
http://thepanorama.shear.org/2020/07/19/statement-from-the-voting-members-of-the-shear-advisory-council-eegarding-shear2020/
 ) the advisory council — including the scholar who chaired the panel, Jessica 
Lepler — said the panel fell outside the society’s “ethical norms, academic 
standards and established procedures.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Continue reading the main story ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/24/arts/historians-andrew-jackson-trump.html#after-story-ad-5
 )

Amy Greenberg, a historian at Penn State and the society’s new president, 
seconded the notion. “I fully agree with that assessment,” she said in a terse 
response to emailed questions, adding: “I’m grateful to the many scholars who 
took the time to rightly critique a paper that does not represent either 
SHEAR’s values, or our standards of scholarship.”

(Mr. Egerton, the outgoing president, declined to comment.)

Other historians inside and outside SHEAR said that Mr. Feller’s dismissive 
attitude toward newer scholarship — and the fact that the scholars he attacked 
by name in his talk were all women — was deeply discouraging, and spoke to 
deeper problems at the society and in the field more broadly.

“I don’t really care about Jackson,” said Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor, ( 
https://www.nepm.org/post/tackling-n-word-campus-after-her-famous-father-used-it-stage#stream/0
 ) a historian at Smith College and society member, who said she did not watch 
the panel but was quickly flooded with messages about it. “But I do care about 
being inclusive. I do care about Indigenous scholars being left out. It’s just 
really offensive that happened.”

Professor Pryor won an award from the group several years ago for a paper about 
how African-Americans in the early 19th century claimed an infamous racial slur 
as a way of asserting themselves politically ( 
http://thepanorama.shear.org/2017/05/15/talking-about-the-n-word/ ). The whole 
idea of the society, and writing history, she said, “is to generate new 
scholarship, to understand what we study — and where we are as a country — 
better.”

Mr. Feller’s paper was lively, she said. “But it wasn’t responsible and it 
wasn’t generative. And now people are talking about the group and not the talk.”

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.

View/Reply Online (#45): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/45
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/75835232/21656
-=-=-
POSTING RULES &amp; NOTES<br />#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when 
replying to a message.<br />#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly &amp; 
permanently archived.<br />#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a 
concern.
-=-=-
Group Owner: [email protected]
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/marxmail/leave/8674936/1316126222/xyzzy  
[[email protected]]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Reply via email to