Title: Colonial America: A problem of Historiography
1Colonial America A problem of Historiography
2What is Historiography?
- The study of historical methods used in the
writing of history - A study of how writing on historical topics has
changed over time, e.g. slavery, role of women,
the American Revolution, etc.
3Major Questionsto consider
- Where when should we begin the study of
colonial American history? 1492? 1607? - What do we include? Who matters in history? Who
should be the focus? - When do we end the history of colonial America?
1776 or beyond? - What should be the narrative structure of
colonial America? (History as story/fiction?)
4The Old School
- Dominated American historical writing until the
1960s - The story of America is a story of progress
constant improvement (Whig interpretation of
history) - Euro-centric emphasis (British)
- Homogeneity of professional historians
- Praising American institutions
5Old School (cont.)
- Considered Native Americans to be a single,
non-diverse people, obstacles to progress,
primitive, stagnant, non-changing. - Africans were considered only as slaves. Slavery
as a monolithic institution. - The study of women was ignored.
- Dead-white men.
6New School
- Origins in the progressive school of American
historians (1890s-1950s) - Progressive Historians believed the promise of
America had been broken the American dream
shattered by industrialization, racism,
class-struggle. - Marxist-interpretation of history
- Conflict rather than continuity
- Historical Relativism
- Presentism the progressive era
7Consensus Historians, 1950s
- Reaction to progressive historians
- A new consensus
- Defense of the West and impact of Cold War
Ideology - History as complex and anti-heroic
8The New Left, 1960s-?
- Colonial American history as the complex
interactions of three worlds red, white, and
black. - Focus on women gender
- History from the bottom-up
- Social history
- Influence of social ethnic movements
9Examining Colonial American Historiography
- The existence of an area of free land, its
continuous recession, and the advancement of
American settlement westward, explain American
development.These areas influenced our economic
and political history the evolution of each into
a higher stage has worked political
transformations. But what constitutional
historian has made any adequate attempt to
interpret political facts in light of these
social areas and changes? - Frederick Jackson Turner, The Significance of
the Frontier in American History, (1892).
10Charles A. Beard, An Economic Interpretation of
the Constitution
- The formation of the Constitution were taken by
a small and active group of men immediately
interested through their personal possessions in
the outcome of their laborers. No popular vote
was taken directly or indirectly on the
proposition to call the Convention which drafted
the Constitution. The Members of the Convention
derived economic advantages from the
establishment of a new system. The Constitution
was essentially an economic document based upon
the concept that the fundamental private rights
of property are anterior to government and
morally beyond the reach of popular majorities
(1912).
11Vernon L. Parringtom, The Colonial Mind, 1620-1800
- Large Property Interests, like all 18th century
realists, exhibited a frank property-consciousness
that determined all their moves. They were aided
by two outstanding characteristics of the 18th
century mind an aristocratic psychology deeply
ingrained through the long unchallenged rule of
the gentry and the universal belief in the
stake-in-society theory of government, evidenced
by the general disfranchisement of non-property
holders (1927).
12Thomas Bailey, The American Pageant
- The American Revolution, in a broad sense, was
not the same thing as the American War of
Independence. The War itself lasted only eight
years. But the revolution lasted over a century
and a half, and began when the first permanent
settlers landed on the shores of America.
American was a revolutionary force from the day
of its discovery (1966).
13Samuel Elliot Morison, The Oxford History of the
American People
- There was no American nationalism or separatist
feeling in the colonies prior to 1775. Americans
were proud to be part of the British imperial
system. Thus, there was nothing foreordained
about the American Revolution (1965).
14S.E. Morison on slavery slaves
- Sambo, whose wrong-doings moved the
abolitionists to wrath and tears, suffered less
than any other class in the South affected by its
peculiar institution. The majority of slaves
were apparently happy. There was much to be said
of slavery as a transitional status between
barbarism and civilization. The Negro learned his
masters language and to some degree accepted his
moral and religious standards. In return, he
contributed much besides his labor, music and
humor for example, to American civilization
(1935).
15More Morison on black studies
- It is the fashion for Negro intellectuals to
describe their forebears as the most oppressed
and exploited labor force in modern history, held
down by fear and force, constantly striving from
escape from slavery. The colored intellectual of
the 1960s knows less about the plantation Negro
of the 1840s than did many white masters of that
era (1965).
16James Brooks, Captives Cousins
- In the Southwest Borderlands, indigenous and
colonial practices joined to form a slave
system in which victims symbolized social
wealth, performed services for their masters, and
produced material goods under the threat of
violence. Unlike chattel slavery elsewhere in
North America, borderland slavery found affinity
with kin-based systems motivated less by a demand
for units of labor than their desire for
prestigious social units (1996).
17Woody Holton, Forced Founders Indians, Debtors,
Slaves the Making of the American Revolution
- From 1763-1776, Indians, merchants, slaves, and
debtors helped propel free Virginians into the
Independence movement. In responding to
opportunities and pressures, slaves and farmers
challenged the authority of the provincial
gentry. The challenges indirectly helped induce
gentlemen to turn the protests of 1774 into the
Independence movement of 1776 (1999).
18Joseph Ellis, Founding Brothers The
Revolutionary Generation
- The central events and achievements of the
revolutionary era and the early republic were
political. These events and achievements are
historically significant because they shaped the
subsequent history of the United States,
including our own time. The central players in
the drama were not marginal or peripheral
figures, whose lives are more typical, but rather
political leaders at the center of the national
story who wielded power. Whats more, the shape
and character of the political institutions were
determined by a relatively small number of
leaders (2000).