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Kirk Little's avatar

Older professional historians have been aware of the decline of their field since at least the 1990s. The decline of narrative history and the rise of micro history, post modern history, history as cultural criticism, etc has led to an identity crisis of sorts for what it means to be an historian. Gordon Wood, now retired from Brown wrote in 2008 “Present-day graduate students of history are well aware that ‘race, class and gender’ is the mantra they must repeat as they proceed through their studies...yet so suffocating has been the stress on ‘race, class, gender’ issues that sometimes beginning graduate students hesitate to write about anything else.” Tony Judt (1945-2010) was even more scathing in his views on his peers refusal to call out nonsense when they saw it. The fear of being considered old fashioned or unwilling to accept new ideas is pervasive, even when those ideas (see post modern structuralist thought) are destructive to the very work they are engaged in. Wood’s collected book reviews are a helpful antidote. The Purpose of the Past: Reflections on the Uses of History. Also Judt’s When the Facts Change: Essays 1995-2010.

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Jimmy Nicholls's avatar

While lamenting this regrettable trend, we should not lose sight of the fact this stuff is exceedingly funny. Measuring skulls to prove racism – poetry.

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