Teaching in the Time of Trump

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Van Gosse teaches modern U.S., African American, and Cold War history at Franklin & Marshall College. He is finishing a book on the origins of black politics, 1790-1860.

Van Gosse teaches modern U.S., African American, and Cold War history at Franklin & Marshall College. He is finishing a book on the origins of black politics, 1790-1860.

Note: This post is the first in a series on teaching American history during this election season.

Like many historians of the U.S., I suspect, I anticipate this fall’s teaching with excitement and trepidation. This presidential contest is unprecedented—in my lifetime, anyway—in its virulence and surfacing of the most unsettling currents of our history.

Rather than pusillanimous allusions, let’s be clear. Certainly this race is unlike any other because a woman is contending for the world’s most powerful office for the first time. That Hillary Clinton is reviled by much of the electorate complicates the narrative, but the central problem for us as teachers is her opponent. Donald Trump not only takes positions unimaginable a year ago (threatening a trade war with China, hailing Putin, speculating about using nuclear weapons), he deliberately violates every norm of civil discourse. There’s no dog whistle—he’s clear about what he is for and whom he is against. Indeed, that is key to his appeal, a deserved reputation for extremely plain speech. In the words of his supporters, quoted over and over, “he says what many of us are thinking, but couldn’t say out loud.”

“What many of us are thinking” is the issue. Like journalists, pundits, and party leaders of all stripes, most historians have assumed that the most self-evidently shameful parts of our history were just that—“history” in the vernacular sense, meaning “in the past.” Consider a few examples. Well into the last century, leading Southern Democrats, governors and senators, publicly endorsed lynching as a “higher law” solution to the problem of black men’s appetite for white women. At mid-point in that century, around when our students’ grandparents were born, a liberal President ordered the grossly unconstitutional deportation to concentration camps of up to 120,000 peaceful Japanese inhabitants, the large majority of them citizens, on the basis of their ethnicity.

In both cases, we teach from a distance, in a cautionary way, with an implicit assurance that these abominations could not, should not, and will not happen again. Similarly, we teach outright nativism—whether the Know-Nothings of the 1850s or the immigration acts of the 1920s barring Italians, Eastern Europeans, nearly all Jews, Asians, and Africans from entering the country—as something we have overcome. Not anymore! Mr. Trump does not regard such policies as consigned to the dustbin of history. If the word has any meaning, he is proudly a nativist. He hasn’t (yet) endorsed lynching or mob violence, but he has encouraged extralegal assaults on people exercising free speech, and has been slow to reject support from white supremacists like David Duke. His proposals to bar immigration on the basis of religion, and apply special standards of policing and surveillance to citizens, who practice a particular religion, are eerily reminiscent of measures targeting Asians from the 1880s to the 1940s.

These challenges to teachers of U.S. history are specific to this fall, but have been accumulating over our students’ lives in terms of racialized polarization, lurid conspiracy theories, and anti-government posturing. They have no memory of the ordinary bipartisanship that characterized American politics until recently, with Congressional Quarterly using two categories for roll-calls, denominating members as “Northern” or “Southern” Democrats, or that even in the 1990s anyone lobbying on human and civil rights issues could rely on a core of liberal Republicans in both houses. The only presidencies they know have been intensely polarizing, beginning with George W. Bush, and escalating since 2008. When a cautious centrist like Barack Obama (center-right by global standards) is routinely caricatured as a radical “socialist,” either because of venal opportunism or a profoundly anti-intellectual and anti-historical ideological framework, something has gone awry that will not soon be fixed.

Fortunately I’m not teaching contemporary politics but a survey beginning in the 1860s. Of course, I could stop the survey at some temporal point like 2000, relying on Hegel’s familiar truism about “the owl of Minerva only flying at dusk.” But the quadrennial presidential competition is extraordinarily valuable in illuminating long-term trends and themes, making the past present, as it is supposed to be. To pretend that this starkly unusual race, addressing the largest questions of who is or is not an American, is irrelevant seems irresponsible. But how to raise these issues without alienating my students who are either Trump voters, or the children and friends of his backers? I know from occasional but painful experience that any suggestion of “we all agree” or “we all know” in the classroom setting is an unwarranted assertion of authority, deeply resented by those made to feel their views are illicit or contemptible.

Donald Trump’s candidacy has forced me to confront the implicit Whiggishness of my own teaching. The “can’t happen here” has happened. Habits of mind and speech which I thought we had surmounted (or successfully repressed) have returned in full force. There is no upward ascent “from Seneca Falls to Selma to Stonewall,” in President Obama’s evocative phrase at his second inaugural. Certainly, the unending series of police or vigilante killings of unarmed black people since Trayvon Martin’s murder in 2012 has contributed to this finally realistic assessment of our American present. There is no longer any reason to think that anything is off the table, including open discussions of internment or denaturalization based on ethnicity, public violence against targeted “enemies,” whether we call it lynching or not, or state repression along the lines of the McCarthyite committees and blacklists. Trump’s advent puts all those options back on the table, and they are unlikely to go away, even if he does.

So what to do? My recourse is to move far away from the traditional linear schema of the U.S. survey. No matter how original in other respects, all textbooks follow a nearly-identical sequence of chapters (Gilded Age to Progressive Era, New Deal to Cold War).  If the relation of present to past in serious historical study involves tracking deeper continuities and disjunctures, what does and does not change over time, then I will choose a few of those key themes and work them hard. These will include the undiminished saliency of African Americans in our polity, their fundamentally caste status from the era of Jim Crow to “the new Jim Crow,” and leading my students to a deeper understanding of nativism—that until recently it expressed the hostility of native-born white Protestants to all other Europeans (including, the Catholic, Slavic, or Jewish ancestors of my white students, who typically constitute a majority in this class). How our students vote and what they think politically is not our business, but what they know is our responsibility, and the fall of 2016 is a good time to reinforce that obligation.

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2 Comments

  1. Good discussion. As I said on twitter (https://twitter.com/jondresner/status/775713626862649344): I don’t think I ever really thought we were done, historically, with bad ideas and attitudes, though. I’ve been teaching, for example, Nazi and Fascist thought using their own self-definitions to show connections to contemporary politics. I don’t make any explicit presentist connections, usually, but I will say “these ideas still have influence in subtle/substantial ways” and will say “these ideas weren’t isolated to these places/times, but had broad roots and wide acceptance, and underlay current thinking.”