The Conversation
I. The Historical Enterprise
Investigating the subtleties
HB: It’s great to be chatting with you. Like many people, I’ve read several of your books, which brings me to my first point. There are those who regard history as some objective statement of universal truth, or at least as close as we can perhaps come to an objective statement of universal truth.
So it’s somewhat ironic to me that two of your recent books have been released with two completely different titles in two parts of the world where they speak the same language. I wonder if you’ve received any flack for this, or if anyone has even noticed.
Of course, I appreciate that this isn’t your responsibility, but I thought I’d ask.
MM Well, I blame the publishers. Occasionally I get angry emails from people saying, “I’ve just bought your book again, not realizing that it was the same one.” And I do not offer a refund. That is not my responsibility. It’s a transatlantic thing. American publishers like to put their own titles on them.
HB: And not only do they come up with their own titles, but they’re typically very aggressive ones—if you take their word for it, you always seem to be changing the world with what you’re doing.
MM: That’s right. Personally, I don’t like the trend. As you say, I did a book on the Paris Peace Conference, which was subtitled, Six Months That Changed The World, and then I did another book on President Nixon’s trip to China, that was subtitled, Six Days That Changed The World.
HB: Right, so how much time is left now to change the world?
MM: Well, I’m getting down to milliseconds. And there are not many instances where one can plausibly say that there were six milliseconds that changed the world, so I’m hoping that we can find some other subtitle.
But it’s all about marketing, of course.
HB: Sure. Well, careening into a more serious vein, our topic for today is all about the purpose, the goals, the future, the limitation and the possibilities of history. Now that I reflect upon it, perhaps that’s far too grandiose a title. And I know that, as a general rule, you are not somebody who looks for grandiose summations of history.
In your book, The Uses and Abuses of History, you are resolute in trying to eschew any fixed patterns in history, any preset orientations that people might like to impose on history. So, perhaps I should begin by simply asking you, as a professional historian, what the principal goals of history are for you? What do you feel you are doing, exactly, and why?
MM: I do it myself, because I’m curious about the past. I always have been. So I find it very pleasurable to have a look at history.
I am very leery about saying that history is very useful. I don’t think we do history because of its utility—it doesn’t give us a blueprint for the future, for example.
But I think history does do a couple things: it helps us to understand ourselves and know something about what produced us—the forces, the factors, the geography, whatever you want to think about—that produced us.
You can’t think about Canadian history, for instance, without understanding that we were once part of a much bigger empire that has helped to shape Canada and its institutions. You can’t think about Canadian history without the understanding that we live next door to one of the great powers of the world. Again, that’s just part of what has helped us to become what we are.
And I think history also helps us understand other people and makes us appreciate the sorts of things that have shaped them. I mean, how can you understand the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians unless you understand the histories of both peoples? Their histories are clearly very important to both of them.
So I think history does give us some understanding. It may also give us some warnings: if we do certain things we may run into trouble. I don’t think it will ever predict the future, of course.
But on the whole, I think we do it because of curiosity, really.
HB: But of course, there have been historians in the past who have been considerably bolder than what you’re enunciating now. I mean, there have been historians who have explicitly said things like, “I am writing this down as a guide to future generations. I’m doing this, not only because I think it’s important to bear witness, but so that it can be useful to people in the future.”
So there is this clear avowal by some past historians, at least, of this deliberate, rather more grandiose, shall we say, goal.
MM: Well, I certainly believe that bearing witness to the past is very important. There are stories that have been hidden in the past that we need to know about. And nations sometimes have to confront very unpleasant things about themselves, and that act of confronting one’s past is, I believe, a very important part of being a grown-up nation.
But the sort of history that says that there is a grand pattern in the world, or one which tries to weave together the story of the past to prove the rightness or wrongness of a particular position, or the rightness or wrongness of a particular nation doing something—that sort of history is, I think, very bad.
So I’d make a real distinction between, as you say, the history, that bears witness—that is, a record of what happened that you have to look at and be prepared to carefully examine the various ramifications of it from all angles—and the idea that there is some sort of grand pattern to things.
In my view, this grand pattern is either so vacuous and general that it doesn’t tell you much. I mean, Arnold Toynbee, who in some ways was a very interesting historian, wrote about civilizations growing and declining. I’m not sure that tells us very much—it just tells us that things have beginnings, middles and ends.
HB: Which most of us knew already.
MM: That’s right. I mean, that doesn’t tell us the reasons why that happened; and history is often so specific that I believe that the reasons why something happened or didn’t happen tend to depend on a particular situation.
The other sort of history I really dislike, and I’ve been reading a lot of nationalist history from the 19th century, is the history that says something like, “The British—or the English, or the Germans, or the French, or whichever nationality is being mentioned at the time—have always been a noble and wonderful people...”
HB: “And preordained to rule...”
MM: Yes, preordained perhaps, or at any rate just better or kinder or smarter or what have you than anyone else.
I mean, one of the most influential of the German academic historians, was a man called Heinrich von Treitschke, who lived in the 19th century.
He influenced a whole generation, not just the German historians but also the German statesmen and the German generals. They all thought he was wonderful: they went to his lectures in Berlin, where he would hold forth on his ideas that the Germans had always been an energetic and vigorous people and always on the forefront of civilization.
And that sort of history, I think, is very bad—because it’s wrong. There is no such thing as “a German nation” or “a Canadian nation”, or...