posted on Nov, 13 2008 @ 05:32 PM
Well, I feel compelled to speak on behalf of my discipline, history. Most practicing historians you will come across today do not hold rigid views
about the past. This is a common misconception born from, well, a history of generations of conservative, triumphalist, "grand
narrative"-type historians, which have not been representative of the field at large since the 1960s and the "New Left" school of historical
thought.
The history that is written today, and which has been written for the past few decades is not the so-called "history of the winners." As a matter of
fact, most relevant historical efforts of the past decades have focused on those left out of the textbooks of the 1950s and earlier. Women's studies,
histories of various minority groups, histories of the lower/working classes, and war histories told from the perspective of displaced persons are
just a few of the fields which have become increasingly popular in mainstream history over the years.
There are biased historians, absolutely, and there are still a few kicking around who hold to the old Western-centric grand narrative approach of the
past. As historians, we are constantly reminded of our own biases, and most of us, (while we often hold radical political views, generally left-wing
in nature, myself included) we do try to be cautious and balanced in our accounts of various historical events. Can we ever know the full story of the
past? Of course not, and I challenge you to find a reputable historian who would argue otherwise. We know it is a messy discipline, and I think
that's what makes it more challenging. We strive towards ever more accurate and balanced descriptions of past events, but the real key point is
interpretation. By its very nature, this is subjective, and you can never stick with just one historian's account of an event, and should keep in
mind their biases. We do this through examining historiography - the history of the writing of history. It help keeps us humble and honest. We note
how our predecessors crafted their narratives, and judge this in context.
It's not perfect, and at best gives us a clearer picture of what the past may have been like than we previously held. That is why history continues -
not just because time moves on, but because there's never a final word on any historical event. There will always be another viewpoint, a challenge,
and more data to be uncovered. We work to do the best we can with the evidence we can obtain. We are not agents of the establishment trying to paint a
consciously-distorted view of past events. Perhaps prior historians were, but for any given event or series of events in human history, you will find
a book on the subject which was written in the past 30 years, after the discipline trended towards a more nuanced, responsible, balanced, and even
subversive approach to historical inquiry.
No historian worth his or her salt will claim to provide you with "the truth." They will present their interpretation of what they feel the given
past event(s) may have been like, and what that might mean for our present and future. History helps connect us to what we perceive as having come
before our own lifespans.
Just had to clarify for those not familiar with the field as it stands.