I found Townsend's presentation of History as a historical
enterprise consisting of multiple "professions" particularly
interesting. I had always thought of history
professionals as a blend of academics, archivists, educators and local/state
historical societies, and also assumed that these groups worked
collaboratively. This book greatly
increased my understanding of the changes from 1880-1940, to include
leadership, doctrine, public interest, war, and technology and how they
impacted the stratification of the history discipline. Townsend concludes that this total breakup of
the enterprise is irreversible, but given today’s challenges there is a need
for increased integration across history professionals. I don’t know if this is possible. Looking at the divide between academics and
teachers, you can see the expectations levied upon them only widen the divide –
academics, to do research and publish; teachers, to demonstrate pedagogical competencies
as well as a broader social history knowledge.
While each may be history professionals, there is too much
specialization required to encourage integration.
From a historiography perspective, I liked Townsend’s use of
the evolution of the American Historical Association (AHA) as reflective of the
larger evolution of history in the United States. The AHA established methods we take for
granted today – use of primary sources, scientific research, quality standards
and peer reviews – which suggests not all historical documents meet current
standards. The internal infighting over strategic
direction of AHA, tension between academics and public history teachers, and
struggles over how best to apply resources was likely playing out between
history professionals across the country.
Having this context will help me better assess historical materials.
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