Out of all of Trouillot’s examples of ways in which silences
entered into historical production, I found the most interesting to be the way
in which the West had to adapt their conceptions of the Haitian Revolution as
it was occurring, unable to anticipate it, due to the “ready-made categories”
(73) that comprised their worldview. Coming
into the book, I had a vague sense of the epistemological issues Trouillot was
addressing, but this example really struck me.
I always thought of the “cover-ups” of history as having been
conscientiously swept under the rug by people like Ardouin who do not want to
deal with “inconveniences” (69) in their narrative. However, to think that those who have the most
power in the production of sources, archives, and narratives could have certain
“blind-spots” in their worldview makes the depths of the silences that
Trouillot addresses seem truly bottomless. I would, however, contest his suggestion that
“the history of America is being written in the same world where few little
boys want to be Indians” (22). Perhaps I
did not understand his point clearly, but I believe that many young boys
nowadays grow up wanting to be Indians. Trouillot addresses the fact “history is also
produced outside of academia” (21) as Townsend does, but takes it even further
beyond the creation of history in schools and archives. He addresses that even tourist sites,
Hollywood, and Disney play a part in the creation of history. And yes, while
Disney’s idea to install a park in northern Virginia with a slavery attraction
is absurd, I wonder if there has been a shift in the viewpoints of young
children towards Native Americans from the time when they were watching John
Wayne movies to when they began watching Disney movies.
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