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U.S. History 1877-Present 1: Historiography 127 Views
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Description:
Historians don't always get things right. Did you know that Pocahontas never actually had conversations with talking trees? Yeah, we were shocked too.
Transcript
- 00:00
let's talk about historyography what's that well
- 00:06
generally it's a piece of writing about history. yeah but we'll be using a more
- 00:10
specific definition. ready for it a historiography is a history of a [woman grins next to books]
- 00:15
history. all minds are blown. yeah. all right well the thing is
- 00:19
that historians aren't all-knowing gods, who can look into the past and know
Full Transcript
- 00:22
exactly what happened. they have to study and sift through a lot of historical
- 00:26
sources to figure out their version of what went down, but that's just it. no
- 00:30
matter how good a historian is, whatever they write is only one version of what
- 00:34
happened . and let's face it this well some people who have called themselves
- 00:38
historians really didn't deserve the job. well here are three tips to spotting a
- 00:42
bad historians. their work uses in apples and oranges approach. this bogus
- 00:47
methodology compares things in different time periods that seem kind of similar
- 00:51
but really aren't. presentism is also a no-no for any historian worth his or her
- 00:56
salt, or no sodium salt substitute. got to watch the blood pressure .anyway. [presentism explained]
- 01:01
presentism is when a historian gets all judgey and doesn't take into account
- 01:06
that people back in the day couldn't travel into the future and see the
- 01:09
outcomes of the things they did. lastly there's the idea that history repeats
- 01:14
itself. well it doesn't. there are trends that repeat themselves but they always
- 01:18
come back a little bit to remixed. so let's move on to some specific snafus in the
- 01:23
way American history was recorded over the years. problem one :omitting folks.
- 01:27
American history has had a problem with leaving certain groups and people out of
- 01:31
the story completely. African American women religious minorities immigrants
- 01:36
and Native Americans have gotten erased for the most part. if Back to the Future
- 01:40
taught us anything it's that being erased is scary .all right problem 2 [man sees through hand]
- 01:44
perpetuating stereotypes. well if minorities have been included there's been a
- 01:49
problem with turning them into stereotypes. like the idea that Native
- 01:52
Americans lived in chaotic savagery or that colonial women spent all their time
- 01:56
cooking and knitting ,which is about a true is saying modern women spend all
- 02:00
their time cooking and knitting, which is to say it's not true. problem 3 sidebar
- 02:05
history. even if everybody is included in the history and we've managed to avoid
- 02:10
stereotypes it's also pretty common for women
- 02:12
and minorities to get slid it over to the side bars of textbooks. everything in
- 02:17
the actual book is like white guys did this and white guys did that and then
- 02:20
white guys you know bam. there's a little pop out section called African American
- 02:25
inventors and by the time we're done reading it the only african-american
- 02:28
inventor we know is Eli Whitney. then it's right back to white guys did this
- 02:32
and white guys did that .problem four nationalism. look don't get me wrong [book picturing white man in the middle of the page]
- 02:37
nationalism is awesome. we might even get a little teary-eyed when we watch
- 02:41
patriotic coke commercials between the swim meets at the Olympics. but it's also
- 02:45
led to history writing that forgets the rest of the world exists. despite all
- 02:50
these problems historians have made huge progress in recent years in getting
- 02:54
American history ography on the right track. progress in history ography is
- 02:58
like social progress in all history. sometimes to go two steps forward it
- 03:02
takes two steps back. kind of sounds like that's when we try to dance but just a
- 03:06
lot of awkward shuffling. you know. not pretty. [man dances across the screen]
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