Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
The Historical Present : Uses and Abuses of the Past - Jr. Edwin M. Yoder

The Historical Present

Uses and Abuses of the Past

By: Jr. Edwin M. Yoder

Paperback | 1 August 1997

At a Glance

Paperback


$50.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $12.69 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 7 business days

A Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist's view of how the study of history is our key to understanding the present

Although the American republic is a child of history, Americans are prone to historical forgetfulness. They tend to think of themselves as future-oriented. Even when history unites with American popular culture, it is often in the form of "docudrama," conspiracy theories, or other varieties of pseudohistory.

Ed Yoder's exploration of the centrality of history in our lives blends an experienced journalist's zest for current trends with a lifelong interest in American and European history. In this book of linked essays, he writes about topics as diverse as the 1995 controversy over the Enola Gay exhibit at the Air and Space Museum in Washington, Barbara Tuchman's success as a popular historian, the historical reputations of Lincoln and Jefferson, the fluctuations of presidential rankings, the revival of nationalist wars and rivalries in Eastern Europe, the politically charged dispute over the significance of Columbus's voyages on their 500th anniversary, the light thrown by William Faulkner's novels on the dilemma of black families, and the argument over "original intent" in constitutional interpretation.

Yoder shows, with an abundance of specific examples, how essential collective memory is to social understanding and self-knowledge. He argues that history, far from being a dry accumulation of fact, is a fascinating inquiry into "transformations," how, for example, a thinly settled strip of Atlantic seaboard colonies became a nation, at first gradually and then in the revolutionary spasm of the summer of 1776.

Yoder also explores the puzzling American resistance to the study of the past, suggesting that Americans avoid history in part because they have luckily escaped the tragic calamities of older cultures. The myths of American innocence and exemption, he argues, have fostered an illusion that history as the teacher of vital lessons can be ignored, although it is actually the very matrix of the way we understand ourselves in the present.

Edwin M. Yoder, Jr. was for fifteen years a columnist for The Washington Post Writers Group and is a professor of journalism and humanities at Washington and Lee University. In 1979 he was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing.

More in History of the Americas

The Shortest History of the United States of America - Don Watson
107 Days - Kamala Harris

Hardcover

RRP $49.99

$28.75

42%
OFF
The Witches : Salem, 1692 - Stacy Schiff

RRP $26.99

$22.99

15%
OFF
The Maginot Line : A New History of the Fall of France - Kevin Passmore
Dragon on Centre Street : New York vs. Donald J. Trump - Jonah Bromwich
Alexander Hamilton - Ron Chernow

RRP $36.99

$22.75

38%
OFF
The Rest is History Returns : An A-Z of Historical Curiosities - Dominic Sandbrook
Generation Kill - Evan Wright

$29.99

The Devil In The White City - Erik Larson

RRP $26.99

$22.99

15%
OFF
A League of His Own : A.G. Spalding and the Business of Baseball - Mark A. Stein