From History to Theory
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Kerwin Lee Klein
Kerwin Lee Klein is Assistant Professor of History at University of California, Berkeley.
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From History to Theory - Kerwin Lee Klein
From History
to Theory
K E R W I N L E E K L E I N
U N I V E R S I T Y O F C A L I F O R N I A P R E S S
Berkeley Los Angeles London
University of California Press, one of the most distinguished university presses in the United States, enriches lives around the world by advancing scholarship in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Its activities are supported by the UC Press Foundation and by philanthropic contributions from individuals and institutions. For more information, visit www.ucpress.edu.
University of California Press
Berkeley and Los Angeles, California
University of California Press, Ltd.
London, England
© 2011 by The Regents of the University of California
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Klein, Kerwin Lee, 1961-
From history to theory / Kerwin Lee Klein.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-520-26881-4 (cloth : alk. paper)
1. United States—History—Philosophy. 2. Historiography—United States—Methodology. 3. Historiography—United States—History. 4. Linguistic change—United States—History. 5. History—Terminology. 6. Religion—Terminology. 7. Discourse analysis. 8. Social change—United States—History. I. Title.
E175.7.K54 2011
901—dc22
2010033220
Manufactured in the United States of America
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
This book is printed on Cascades Enviro 100, a 100% post consumer waste, recycled, de-inked fiber. FSC recycled certified and processed chlorine free. It is acid free, Ecologo certified, and manufactured by BioGas energy.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Rise and Fall of Historiography
2. From Philosophy to Theory
3. Going Native: History, Language, and Culture
4. Postmodernism and the People without History
5. On the Emergence of Memory in Historical Discourse
6. Remembrance and the Christian Right
Afterword: History and Theory in Our Time
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments
This small book has left me with much debt. I should begin with the many students, at UCLA and Berkeley, in my seminars and lectures on history and theory, especially Kevin Adams, E. J. Kim, Heather McCarty, Giuliana Perrone, Kim Vu-Dinh, and Stephanie Young. Many friends and colleagues have read and commented on all or portions of the manuscript: Thomas Brady, Claudio Fogu, David Hollinger, Martin Jay, Michael Kammen, Dominick LaCapra, and Sabine Schindler. Stan Holwitz has been an inspiration. Niels Hooper is the best editor on skis. Beth Berry provided hours of entertainment and insight during our team teaching. Tom Laqueur pressed me to turn my skepticism of memory discourse into an article, and the Representations editorial collective provided a congenial environment. Looking back, I realize that two colleagues, now gone, were an important influence at critical moments: we all miss Bernard Williams and Mike Rogin.
I presented portions of this work at the Annual Senior Fellows Conference, the School of Criticism and Theory; the Department of History, Tulane University; the Center for Humanities and the Arts, Colorado University, Boulder; the Center for Cultural Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz; the Doreen B. Townshend Center for the Humanities, University of California, Berkeley; and the Merits of Memory Symposium, Martin Luther Universität, Wittenberg. Thanks to all for invitations and support.
Earlier versions of some chapters, or portions of chapters, appeared in Representations; History and Theory; and Hans-Jürgen Grabbe and Sabine Schindler, eds., The Merits of Memory: Concepts, Contexts, Debates (Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag, 2007). A Faculty Research Grant from the University of California, Berkeley, helped me with research and writing.
Introduction
It's easier for a fat man to get through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to get into Heaven.
I cannot recall when I first learned this particular version of Matthew 19:24, but I can say that it was in southern Illinois. My family lived in the foothills above the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers, a tiny slice of the mid-South then peopled mostly by farmers and coal miners. Storytelling, jokes, and preaching were highly valued forms of art, and I watched masters of the craft almost every day. The Scots-Irish migrants of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries who had marched from the Appalachians to the Ozarks had left their mark. This was (and remains) Bible Belt country, with dry counties and Dr. Pepper devotees, where Southern Baptists and Methodists assemble regularly at places like Bear Point Church (where my grandmother spent her Sunday mornings). The culture was strong enough that even those folks who lived in the small towns—many of them, like my father's side of the family, central, southern, or eastern European and Greek Orthodox—learned the speech patterns of rural Protestantism: King James with a twang.
Southern Illinois was also (and remains) a poor country, and as in most parts of rural America in the twentieth century, the road to upward mobility led out of town, typically via sports or the military. That was how my parents made their way, with my father picking up a baseball scholarship at Southern Illinois University and my mother working in a sewing factory (today we would say sweatshop) until he landed a job teaching history and coaching football in a farm-town high school. Later, when I was a teenager, my mother finished her college degree and my father completed a PhD in education, specializing in symbolic logic and language acquisition. So I learned at a young age to appreciate the aesthetics of the spoken word, and I gradually worked through an evolving family library that ran from scholarly works on the Civil War to cheap paperback editions of Wittgenstein. I also picked up a class identification that alternated between working class and rural petit bourgeois, despite the attempts of my parents to become respectably middle class and speak standard English.
My voyage in academia was something less than direct. I spent years working in construction, sports, and music, and my early college experience came at a small junior college in Southern California. For six years I worked full time and took courses on the side, primarily in biology, and to the extent that I imagined myself in a professional career, it was always one in the life sciences. Later, when I went to the University of California, Riverside, I studied both history and anthropology before finally settling on history. As late as my first year of graduate school, at the University of Arizona, I spent at least as much time with the poets and essayists in the MFA program as I did with my colleagues in history. When I moved to UCLA to do my PhD, I kept up with poetry and oral literature by studying ethnolinguistics. So I became a historian fairly late, and I spent a number of years being partly socialized into different academic traditions. As a result, although I happily identify as a historian rather than an anthropologist or literary critic or wildlife biologist, I am often reminded of the differences between the disciplines, and between academia and other corners of American life, in ways that shape my research in the theory and practice of history. I offer this bit of biography—an admittedly unlikely mixture of haying and coon-hunting, mobile homes and black lung, Cadillac preachers and propositional calculus—not to claim some spurious connection with the wretched of the earth, but to help to situate my aims and interests. The combination of rural childhood and eclectic disciplinary study may go some way toward introducing this book, a series of essays on the poetics, rhetoric, and logic of academic discourse on history in the twentieth century.
The chapter and verse with which I began does serve a larger point. Matthew's aphorism actually speaks of the difficulty of squeezing a camel, rather than a fat man, through the eye of a needle. Southern Illinois had a Lake of Egypt and a Cairo (pronounced KAY-row), but camels were hard to come by, and at some now forgotten point, someone translated the passage into a more recognizable metaphor. One task of intellectual history is to take metaphors made strange by distance in time or space and render them in vocabularies that have meaning for us. Another is to take the metaphors with which we feel most at home and trace out the ways in which they stand on generations of older, stranger meanings.
The epigraph for this introduction should remind us not simply of the enduring power of a particular religious tradition in American discourse but also of the subtle inflections involved in translating—even within a language—across differences of time, place, and position. As I have learned time and again, the English of rural southern Illinois is not quite the same as the English of most faculty clubs, and when moving through an intellectual landscape that takes in a variety of distinct languages, we need to pay close attention to word choice. Students of intellectual history have become familiar with the various ways linguistic and cultural settings shape the reception of particular intellectual traditions. It is something of a cliché to observe that the American psychiatrists who imported Freudian psychoanalysis produced a discourse less literary than that of the original Viennese German. Historians of the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein and Karl Popper have frequently concluded that the Oxbridge admirers of both men transformed the idealist resonance of the original works by transposing them into a very British empiricist tradition. And still other writers have argued that the dominance of New Criticism in American departments of English reduced French deconstruction to another methodological formalism.¹
The essays here chase the history of various words and phrases key to scholarly historical discourse in the twentieth century. My focus is upon English, especially English usage in North America, although the stories also weave in and out of Great Britain, France, and Germany. We need such a project largely because so much recent English-language writing on history and theory
has been abstracted from modern French and German intellectual history with an occasional glance at England. That continental focus has served us reasonably well, since so many of the canonical events of global modern life swirl around the rise of fascism, communism, and imperialism. But our tendency to generalize from the intellectual history of modern western Europe has also limited our conversations, perhaps most obviously in dealing with Latin America, Asia, and Africa. Departmental battles between the the West
and the Rest
over appointments and curricula have become part of the seasonal round for most academic historians. A growing genre of literature influenced by postcolonial studies measures the relevance of Europe's historical keywords—modernity, nationhood, subject, and so on—for scholarship in other parts of the globe. And Europe takes in a good deal more cultural and geographic space than is fairly represented in most history departments in the United States, where the modern
field is typically represented by appointments in French and German history.
The tendency to generalize from French and German intellectual history can also occlude the American settings in which so many of us produce and consume scholarship. I do not mean that William James is more important than Friedrich Nietzsche, or that we should write more books about Zora Neale Hurston than Martin Heidegger, but for students of history and theory the United States is the elephant in the corner. The sheer mass of the North American market means that even when we
write about Franz Fanon or Hannah Arendt, we are likely to do so in English. As a result, even cloistered debates over fascism and historiography can sound remarkably Midwestern. We need not fret that we are debasing European or Asian or African ideas by translating them into American idioms. But we do need to attend carefully to that aspect of our craft, and I am speaking not only of our casual generalization from European examples but also of our tendency to imagine English-language terms primarily as they are used in the academy. We need to remember that we share many of our preferred words with much larger publics, where they can resonate in very different ways.
From History to Theory is an episodic history of history and theory in the twentieth century. The narrative that follows is not a tightly wound monographic account, but the chapters are more closely knit than is common for collections of occasional essays, and I believe that an essay form suits the subject. Since we have no institutional discipline called history and theory
or even philosophy of history,
theoretical and empirical work on historical scholarship has been scattered across the campus and beyond. Lacking a central professional structure, history and theory has nothing like an institutional history of the sort that Peter Novick created for his account of the American Historical Association, That Noble Dream. Intellectual histories of the philosophy of history tend toward rational reconstructions of particular debates or the work of specific individuals. We still lack major biographies of many of the best-known figures, such as R. G. Collingwood, and although something like surveys of the field have appeared over the past few decades, and especially works attempting to explain postmodernism
or post-structuralism
to historians, we are far from the sort of textbook discourse that has become conventional for the related disciplines of history and philosophy. What follows, then, is a series of interwoven accounts of particular episodes in modern philosophy of history, mostly in the United States and largely concerned with academic rather than popular discourse. The central subjects of these essays, however, are words rather than institutions or individuals.
The key terms and phrases all relate to the critical but absent word history. Some of the keywords of From History to Theory are terms that function as contraries or antonyms of history; others are complements; still others have at least occasionally served as synonyms or similes. My intent is not to create a metahistorical lexicon, but rather to trace genealogies of especially important discursive moments. Some words and phrases may appear obvious choices (historiography or memory), while others are perhaps more obscure. A few likely candidates do not appear at all. History itself appears only through refraction, partly by design and partly because I spent much of my earlier book, Frontiers of Historical Imagination, on a history of academic usage in the United States. A few other terms—historicism, modernism, postmodernity—have been treated by other authors whose work I found sufficiently engaging that I decided not to rework that ground.² And one word, culture, has been so important as both contrary and complement to history that it has received a variety of book-length treatments, in addition to countless articles.³ Like history, culture appears here primarily through refraction, but it remains a crucial player in the story that follows.
Simply the mention of keywords or concepts or counterconcepts suggests methodological or even political investments. Since recent intellectual history has been particularly engaged with debates over method and meaning, I should briefly situate this project. I like the term keyword, but the essays here do not share much methodological ground with Raymond Williams's famous book Keywords, a classic that I first encountered as an undergraduate fresh from reading Williams's Culture and Society. (I was so impressed with the Britishness of that study that I am always surprised to see it used as if it were a reliable guide to American English, let alone American history.) Williams probably did more than any other recent author to popularize the term keyword, but his book, as its subtitle indicates, attempts to provide a vocabulary of culture and society,
a program much broader than I could hope to undertake in these pages. Moreover, as Quentin Skinner pointed out in a trenchant critique, Williams's tight focus upon single words, rather than clusters of words or word strings or vocabularies, appeared to retreat from the most recent developments in linguistic analysis.⁴
Although each chapter in From History to Theory turns upon particular terms or phrases, they all grow out of a story in which linguists came to argue that no word could ever be studied in isolation—that to understand the meaning of a term, one must understand the language. Each discrete word thus leads to longer word strings. Keywords tend to carry lots of other words with them—antonyms, synonyms, complements, and related adjectival and adverbial phrases. Sometimes older meanings get conserved in strange places, only to resurface later. Some keywords function primarily as metaphors that open out into bigger shared stories. Others circulate within carefully crafted, enduring arguments. My approach here has been pragmatic rather than systematic. A few of these essays stay close to a single term; others branch well out into related words and phrases. A few venture into fairly traditional rational reconstructions of past arguments. Others instead track linguistic changes on a larger scale by examining changes in shared vocabularies. Most have been written in a narrative voice, rather than the present tense common in self-consciously philosophical or theoretical discourse. And the collection as a whole is deliberately selective. As a student of language, I am a chronic collector of lexical artifacts, from ethnographic word lists to the Dictionary of the History of Ideas, but that is not the primary tradition for this book.⁵
Another term, genealogy, became a new academic keyword during the period studied here, and it is sometimes used to refer to a hip new practice distinct from other sorts of intellectual history. The revival of interest in Friedrich Nietzsche's 1887 work, Zur Genealogie der Moral, helped to make the word available, but it was popularized via some of the later writing of the French philosopher Michel Foucault that so thoroughly shaped history and theory in the seventies and eighties.⁶ Foucault's use of genealogy as an alternative to history suggested that one could practice genealogical criticism as a reproof to the metaphysical presumptions of historicism. Prior to Foucault, genealogy had typically referred to the tracing of family trees, one of the most conservative forms of historical research imaginable. I appreciate the fact that a term that conjures images of retirees swarming the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints—which, for reasons of Mormon theology, maintains one of the best archives for researching family histories—could become a keyword for hipster theorists decked out in black leather. I am less convinced that genealogy really refers to a distinct method. Nietzsche specialists still go to war over how to characterize even the formal elements of his original.⁷ But I do like the word as an occasional synonym for some kinds of history, and one of our current uses—a history of discourse that eschews the search for some ultimate causal origin of historical phenomena—works well enough for my purposes.⁸ Although some of the words I explore in this volume do indeed carry with them older meanings that can resurface at surprising times, I am not deeply interested in etymology or some Heideggerian notion that the primordial essence of a powerful term will shine through its modern surface.
At least some of these chapters fall more nearly into the genre of conceptual history
frequently associated with the multivolume Begriffsgeschichte project in Germany. That series is best known in the United States through the work of one of its most skilled contributors, Reinhart Koselleck. Koselleck's virtuoso essays explore the imprint of modernity upon Europe through linguistic shifts visible in high culture.⁹ Although I have been much impressed by Begriffsgeschichte, I am less committed to certain of its philosophical ambitions.
Begriff has a deep and divided history in German philosophy, and idealists once spent generations arguing over the use and comparative importance of Begriff, Idee, and related terms of art. Late in the nineteenth century, in the course of his attempts to make logical analysis more rigorous, Gottlob Frege pointed out that Begriff had come to be understood in various ways, ranging from psychological to logical senses to strange admixtures of the two. We have since come to imagine Frege's reformation of logical analysis, and his desire to create a purely logical
usage for Begriff, as one of the canonical events in the creation of what we usually call analytic or linguistic philosophy. But Frege's critique did not spell the end of innovations for the word, including many that Frege would never have endorsed. Half a century later, Martin Heidegger's appropriation of Begriff for an ambitious hermeneutical program gave the word still another thick layer of gloss. In his 1941 seminar Grundbegriffe, or Basic Concepts, Heidegger came as close as ever he did to offering a historiographic account of the sorts of writing he did on language and philosophy. For Heidegger, Grundbegriffe always hinted at a sense of Being that had become unspeakable because it had grown so remote. The rise of a calculating modern world had hidden everything essential, and the task of the philosopher was to follow the path of remembrance
through the thickets of metaphors past in an attempt to uncover the original ground of Being. Heidegger's students, from Hans-Georg Gadamer to Reinhart Koselleck, tended to follow somewhat more prosaic trails. But Begriffsgeschichte has often traded on those older associations, especially those derived from Heideggerian rather than Fregean approaches to language.¹⁰
In the areas of English-language philosophy that took up concept as a keyword, Frege was the more important influence. In 1979 Quentin Skinner, channeling Frege, described the failure to distinguish between words
and concepts
as one of the chief demerits of Raymond Williams's Keywords. If we wish to understand past authors, Skinner groused, what we need to know is not what words they use but rather what concepts they possess.
There is something to Skinner's plaint, and at least a few colleagues have objected that my concentration upon words and discourses misses the point. No one cares about words,
as some have put it. "What people care about are ideas." There is something to this, too, and I cannot let it pass without comment. At this point in the history of philosophy, we are not going to make a strong claim about the priority of concepts or ideas over words and sentences without muscling up some appropriately beefy justification. Skinner described his own practice as derived from the Fregean analytic tradition. But that tradition had by midcentury grown less confident about the purity of concepts.
In Philosophical Investigations (1953), referring to Frege's insistence that concepts
have hard and fast boundaries, Wittgenstein objected that his own concept of language games
was blurry, but that this did not make it useless or meaningless.¹¹
A more aggressive variety of analytic philosophy went a good deal further in asking such difficult questions as What is an idea?
and Where are ideas to be found?
Although we like to think that what we believe in are not sentences but something else, something more immediate and important, it is difficult to say exactly what that something else
is. That the conventional sense of ideas as mental pictures survived the rise of forensic medicine is itself remarkable, and the mental-pictures account could appear quaint in the face of logical analysis and empirical psychology. By midcentury, ideas and concepts had begun to migrate out of some regions of analytic philosophy. In their place came words, sentences, and other bits of vernacular elevated to terms of art. Well before American academics had begun to think about reading Jacques Derrida in translation, some philosophers had translated the analysis of ideas into something like the analysis of words and sentences. By 1970 at least one textbook had drawn the obvious moral, that "whenever we are