Sunday, April 12, 2020

History never repeats, sort of


One of my favourite genres of thread on History Twitter is the one where someone, usually a historian, helpfully unpacks why the issue du jour isn’t like something that already happened. It starts something like


Trump’s administration isn’t like Germany in the 1930s, and 
here’s a thread why (1/39)


If you make it to the end, and few of us do, you’ll see comments starting ‘Yeah, but…’ or ‘Yes, and…’ , and the darkly muttered, ‘I think you’ve overlooked the significance of….’

In recent weeks Trump and the Nazis have thankfully been replaced by another, more pressing problem:


COVID-19 isn’t like the Spanish flu, and here’s a thread why 
(1/78)


This one comes with a variant:


COVID-19 isn’t like HIV-AIDS, etc


Whatever the subject, people seem to get really shitty that historians do this—just read the comments. But guys: the historians are right. On the surface there are lots of similarities, lots of points of coincidence. But just because the trends are similar, the situations aren’t the same. That’s the nature of historical events.


One way of understanding it is to look at how Michel Foucault understood the nature of historical inquiry.


Foucault thought of himself as a practising historian (yeah, I know),[1] and he developed what he called the archaeology of history, in order to investigate historical discourses without resort to metanarrative.


Backing up a bit. Most basic intros to Foucault read something like ‘Foucault blah blah discourse.’ The discourse is central to Foucault’s approach to just about everything. Basically, the discourse is a model of how patterns of relations of power and knowledge form people’s behaviour. Technically, the discourse is a collection of statements that have the effect of actions, resulting in the ordering of objects.[2] In practical terms, a discourse is a system by where knowledge is used to maintain power— where techniques and practices are used to control and dominate people within local contexts.[3]


Each discourse is a unique object, having its own meaning in its own time and place. The historian can’t track a linear progression of meanings assigned to a discourse, because there is no progression beyond the local context.[4] The discourse can’t be used as a key to all of history, like a metanarrative can; it emerges from the local context, so it has no meaning outside that context.


See where we’re heading?


The purpose of archaeology (the historian’s job) is to identify and describe the discourses. In order to establish the parameters of a discourse the historian must establish where there are breaks between discourses: the interruptions, displacements and transformations—the discontinuities. These help the historian establish periodisation, possible levels of analysis, and the appropriate methods for their examination.[5]
 

Finding and exposing the discontinuities is a fundamental element of historical analysis.[6] So these party-poopers telling us that Trump is not Hitler and that COVID-19 isn’t HIV aren’t being trolls. They’re just doing their job.


Pace Santayana, we’re not condemned to repeat the past, we’re condemned to do it again but a bit differently.



[1] Michel Foucault, “On the Ways of Writing History”, Aesthetics, method and epistemology: essential works of Foucault 1954-1984, (New York: New Press, 1998), Vol 2, pp. 279-80.
[2] Michel Foucault, The Archaeology of Knowledge, (New York: Pantheon Books, 1972), p. 49.
[3] David Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity, (Oxford: Blackwell, 1989), p. 45.
[4] Foucault, The Archaeology of Knowledge, p. 139.
[5] Op. cit., pp. 8-9.
[6] Op. cit., p. 8.