Historians Run Amok
by Daniel Pipes
Apr 4, 2017
Cross-posted from _National Review Online_ 
(http://meforum.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b7aa7eddb0f2bb74bfa4f6cb5&id=85a9705864&e=d0674a6693)
 
 
 
 
The  eminent historian Niall Ferguson has devastatingly skewered his (and 
my) field  of study in a _talk_ 
(http://meforum.us12.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=b7aa7eddb0f2bb74bfa4f6cb5&id=90881732e3&e=d0674a6693)
   for the 
American Council of Trustees and Alumni, subsequently published as "_The  
Decline 
and Fall of History_ 
(http://meforum.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b7aa7eddb0f2bb74bfa4f6cb5&id=f4cad326f1&e=d0674a6693)
 ." 
He  starts with the empirical fact that undergraduates are running away 
from  studying history: compared with 1971 (coincidentally, the year I got my 
A.B.  degree), "the share of history and social sciences degrees has halved, 
from 18%  in 1971 to 9%. And the decline seems likely to continue."
 
 
 
Why  so? Data from the _American  Historical Association_ 
(mip://0c91f1a8/American%20Historical%20Association%2040%20years%20historians%20women%20and%20
gender,%201...)  finds that the past 40 years have seen 
a  very big increase in the number of historians who specialize in women 
and  gender, which has risen from 1% of the total to almost 10%. As a result,  
gender is now the single most important subfield in the academy. Cultural  
history (from under 4% to nearly 8%) is next. The history of race and  
ethnicity has also gone up by a factor of more than three. Environmental  
history 
is another big winner.


The  losers in this structural shift are diplomatic and international 
history  (which also has the oldest professors), legal and constitutional 
history, and  intellectual history. Social and economic history have also 
declined. 
[Almost]  all of these have fallen to less than half of their 1970 shares 
of the  profession.

This  means that the most significant events are ignored. Limiting oneself 
to modern  Western history, courses barely cover such topics as the French 
Revolution, the  Industrial Revolution, World War I, World War II, and the 
Cold War. Instead, one  encounters a course such as Harvard's History 1954: 
"_Emotions  in History_ 
(http://meforum.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b7aa7eddb0f2bb74bfa4f6cb5&id=e05442e051&e=d0674a6693)
 " whose course 
description reads: 
What  is the place of emotion in history? The question itself holds 
multiple  meanings, and in this course we consider two in particular: how to 
write 
the  history of emotion(s), and how the historian's emotions affect the 
writing of  history. Do historians benefit more from proximity to, or distance 
from, their  historical subjects? Should historians of emotion suppress, or 
cultivate,  their feelings of empathy? Does emotive writing inevitably fail 
the test of  scholarly rigour and balance? We will explore some possible 
analytic frames  for the history of emotion and debates over the subjectivity 
of 
history, and  consider their application to case studies drawn from 
Australian history.   
____________________________________
  

Ferguson  reports the "not wholly surprising" fact that "Emotions in 
History" boasts a  total enrollment of one student. Yale competes with its own 
offerings such as  "Witchcraft and Society in Colonial America" and "History of 
the  Supernatural." 
Ferguson  delicately asserts that he does "not wish to dismiss any of these 
subjects as  being of no interest or value. They just seem to address less 
important  questions than how the United States became an independent 
republic with a  constitution based on the idea of limited government." 
Not  only does this new type of history take on minor concerns but it deals 
with them  in miniature ways that amount to what a student dubs "heirloom 
antiquarianism"  and Ferguson calls _Microcosmographia  Academica_ 
(http://meforum.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=
b7aa7eddb0f2bb74bfa4f6cb5&id=4b29343d45&e=d0674a6693)  – focusing on topics 
like "the habits of New York  
restaurant-goers in the 1870s or the makeup of various Caribbean ethnic groups  
in areas of Brooklyn that made up the West Indian Day Parade in the 1960s" 
(real  examples). 
Finally,  there's the politicizing, moralizing, and anachronistic 
insistence on judging  "the past by the moral standards of the present—and 
indeed to 
efface its traces,  in a kind of modern-day iconoclasm, when these are 
deemed offensive." 
In  all, as historians "neglect the defining events of modern world history 
in favor  of topics that are either arcane or agitprop, sometimes both," 
students flee and  the "United States of Amnesia" looms. 
Bravo  to Niall Ferguson for pointing out the hollowing out of a once-great 
field of  study. (April 4, 2017)

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