A Liberal Dose,
August 31, 2023
“What Is History and
Why Does It Matter?”
Troy D. Smith
I’m going to share with you part of what I tell students on
the first day of my basic U.S. history class -which is a “gen ed” course, one
of those that everyone has to take (usually in their freshman and sophomore
year). I don’t say this to upper division classes that are full of history
majors or minors. Here goes:
I realize most of you are here because you have to be. Some of you may be
interested in history, but most of you, probably, are not. Maybe that’s because
of previous history teachers, who gave you a long list of dates to memorize. It
may surprise you to know that I don’t care if you remember exact dates (as long
as you’re in the right decade)… dates, you can look up online. I want you to understand. To get the big picture. To
know, not just what happened and roughly when, but why, and what the consequences were. That’s much harder to find
online -you may go through many pages of a google search before you find
someone who actually knows what they’re talking about.
I realize that almost none of you are history majors -but I’m
going to make a bold assertion. I believe that -no matter what your major, or
what your future career winds up being -you’re going to look back on this as
one of the most important classes you took in college. And I’ll tell you why.
No matter who you are -no matter where you fall on the
political spectrum -at some point (if it hasn’t happened already) you’re going
to look around you and say, “This stinks. I wish I could do something to change
it.” And you can. History -especially
American history -has almost never consisted of one very talented, very
important individual deciding to change something and then making it so.
American history has worked from the ground up. It has been groups of people
-groups of informed, dedicated people -working together toward a common goal
and achieving it. Sometimes it took decades, or even longer. Think about it:
abolition, women’s rights, desegregation, the labor movement, LGBTQ rights…
heck, even the Revolution that formed this country. It was never just one
person. You can play a role, and an
important one.
But first…
You have to understand where we are and how we got here.
That is the first step. You can’t change anything until you know what needs
changing and why. You can’t build a bridge to the future unless you have one
side firmly planted in the past.
Now I’m going to tell you what the study of history actually
is. It is not just looking at the past. Archaeology, anthropology, economics… a lot of fields deal with the past.
History is, specifically, looking at the documents of the past. Those can be
newspapers, diaries, letters, government reports, speeches, cartoons… the list
goes on. I know a guy whose dissertation looked at all the ship’s manifests
coming in and out of Charleston harbor in the 1700s -seeing what was bought and
sold told him about the economy and the culture. Another person did a study of
joke books -seeing what was considered funny and how that changed over time can
tell us about the beliefs and mores of the people. Some of my work involves
looking at old comic books or movies.
The important thing is… seeing what people thought at the time. Not what other people have told you about what people thought or
did. Go to the primary sources. Go to the documents. You will often find that
what you thought you knew is not the
complete picture, or sometimes not even an accurate picture.
It is not wrong to see for yourself. It is not wrong to
question. It is not wrong to want to make things better.
And this is where we start.
--Troy D.
Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at
Tennessee Tech. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.
Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE
You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE
A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE
Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com
The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE
No comments:
Post a Comment