Brian Lamb's America

BROOKS, DAVID

Brian Lamb's America How C-SPAN stepped into the breach and became our national historian. BY DAVID .BROOKS The quintessential C-SPAN moment came during a Booknotes program in 1991, while host...

...What they share is a love of history...
...It's no accident that on a recent C-SPAN program both Jefferson biographer Joseph Ellis and Lincoln biographer David Herbert Donald confessed they were frustrated novelists...
...Not silent enough...
...And they are centered around facts...
...Hirsch and other cheerleaders for fact-based "cultural literacy," school curricula no longer focus on the simple whats, wheres, and whens of history...
...Lamb is that rarest of creatures, a genuine populist...
...I thought the word we—buggery is what used to be called a—the—an unnatural act of the Oscar Wilde type is how it was actually phrased in the euphemism of the British papers...
...It is slow in a world growing more hyper...
...And yet the more necessary does it become to relieve my heart with some message of love, even if it be only written...
...With the more recent presidents, there is footage from important moments of their presidencies...
...The political theorist William Dunning said that one of the happiest days of his life was the day he discovered, by comparing handwriting samples, that Andrew Johnson's first message to Congress was actually written by George Bancroft...
...every chapter Jefferson is described entering the scene on horseback...
...They reflect the many different currents in America...
...That which compels the historian to 'scorn delights and live laborious days' is the ardor of his own curiosity to know what really happened long ago in that land of mystery which we call the past...
...Some are eminent, like David McCullough, Robert Remini, or Joseph Ellis, but most are not...
...They make the shows spontaneous, he says...
...The success of C-SPAN's history series reminds us that when one institution in American life stagnates and ceases to fulfill its function—in this case academic history—then a new institution will inevitably arise to fill the need...
...A historian named Clara Rising, who also appeared on the program, had come to the conclusion that Taylor was poisoned with arsenic...
...Talking to Brian Lamb about The American Presidents, you are struck by how much he loves the callers...
...Especially on the weekends, the people who fill its screens seem quaintly and bravely out of step: the historian who has devoted her career to researching Pickett's Charge, the auctioneer who specializes in rare 18th-century books, the biographer who has spent years describing John Adams...
...You get the impression that if Brian Lamb were called in to interview Jesus the first questions out of his mouth would be: "It's said you fed the multitudes with loaves and fish...
...It is the sight of all the historians...
...It's hard for impatient people in an impatient age to understand the pleasures that some people feel poring studiously over old documents...
...But you've got to cast your lot somewhere...
...His predecessor, James Polk, gave up the presidency on a Saturday, but Taylor refused to take an oath on a Sunday, so there was a day in 1849 when America had no president...
...Far from being a child of poverty, as much of the literature about Taylor suggests, he was actually descended from Mayflower stock and had the same great-grandfather as James Madison...
...The guide through the life of Taylor was an elderly historian named Elbert Smith, who like many of the historians on the programs seems to exist in a world apart from the theoretical fashions of the day...
...And when you cast your eye out to the broader culture, you see even more that curiosity about simple facts has been submerged amidst the more sophisticated interest in theory and perceptions...
...The program gave us a little more than we need to know on the Wilmot Proviso, but it was fascinating when the coroner of Jefferson County, Kentucky, was brought on to describe the exhumation of Taylor's body...
...Taylor's daughter married Jefferson Davis...
...The program on Zachary Taylor, for example, provided the usual nuggets...
...Many of the best teachers on the series are not even academics...
...The list goes on, a stifling progression of abstruse tedium...
...Taylor fought in the frustrating wars against the Seminoles in Georgia and Alabama...
...Even in a publicly funded showcase institution like the Smithsonian Museum of American History, the displays are concerned less with illuminating historical events or history-making individuals than with lionizing aggrieved groups...
...The guests might be longwinded or erudite or both, but usually what sets them off is some six-word question about a specific fact...
...It is word-oriented in an era that is visually sophisticated...
...The descriptions of the presidents on the programs are haphazard, and the information conveyed is out of chronological order—it all depends on the questions from the C-SPAN host or the callers...
...C-SPAN sends two camera crews out to the president's home or some significant site associated with his life...
...The great postmodern hero Michel Foucault mocked what you might call the ethos of the C-SPAN historian: "To all those who still wish to talk about man, about his reign or his liberation, to all those who still ask themselves questions about what man is in his essence, to all those who wish to take him as their starting-point in their attempts to reach the truth...
...One of the best efforts to put this peculiar passion into words comes from the great British historian G.M...
...The network dedicates a few hours of programming each week to describing the life and times of one of our nation's 41 chief executives, starting with George Washington last March and ending with Bill Clinton on Christmas Eve...
...They are from obscure colleges, or they eke out a living by writing...
...There is a park ranger or local historian to give a tour of the site, usually with a few of those homey anecdotes that are the weakness of historic-home tour guides...
...The presidents who owned slaves or who tolerated slavery are castigated, and the historians often struggle to suggest that viewers shouldn't rush to impose modern standards on earlier times—with little success...
...The callers are often self-taught history buffs—someone will call in with a freakishly expert understanding of, say, the election of 1852—or else people with a personal connection to the president in question...
...But the poetry of history does not consist of imagination roaming at large, but of imagination pursuing the fact and fastening upon it...
...to all these warped and twisted forms of reflection we can only answer with a philosophical laugh—which means, to a certain extent, a silent one...
...The questions are flat, short, and direct...
...C-SPAN has managed to find such people all over the country, and many more call in with questions...
...Culture, Power and Place: The New Landscape of East Asian Regionalism...
...It is factual in a world grown theoretical, slow in an age growing more hyper...
...BY DAVID .BROOKS The quintessential C-SPAN moment came during a Booknotes program in 1991, while host Brian Lamb was interviewing Martin Gilbert, the author of a biography of Winston Churchill...
...The Sensibility of Comfort...
...Franklin Roosevelt's first inaugural address was broadcast during the week dedicated to his presidency...
...Please go to ride with us this evening, precious little girl, so that I can whisper something in your ear— something of my happiness and love...
...And it's important to remember that the academics took this turn intentionally...
...Nobody is going to get rich or famous writing a book about, say, Grover Cleveland, or even Andrew Johnson...
...There is a short documentary that describes the basic course of each president's life...
...University historians are even less interested in that stuff—obsessed as they are with social forces and group consciousness...
...But in many ways the best part of the series is not the specific treatment of the presidents...
...GILBERT: Oh dear...
...GILBERT: You don't know what buggery is...
...Ellis went on to note that none of the reviewers of his Jefferson biography, American Sphinx, noted the literary device of which he was most proud...
...They are the local directors of the historic sites or the buffs who became interested in, say, Warren Harding because they happened to live near his home and adopted him out of local pride...
...Again, the approach is breathtakingly simple...
...What kind of fish was that...
...A few of the topics might sound interesting—"The Sensibility of Comfort" strikes my fancy—until you remember that most academic historians face professional pressures to write as turgidly as possible, and to excise or exile to the footnotes any of the interesting anecdotes they would use as dinner table conversation...
...The callers are often self-absorbed, cranky, or pedantic...
...C-SPAN may be a harbinger of the sort of new educational structures that arise when the universities retreat into themselves and play an ever-diminishing role in national life...
...Though Taylor and Davis disC-SPAN has become an intellectual counterculture...
...With its open phone lines, it is genuinely populist in a culture that preaches populism more than it practices it...
...This year C-SPAN is running a series called The American Presidents...
...At one point he told the Seminoles that if they surrendered and left disputed territories, they could keep the black slaves who had escaped white slavemasters and fled to their camp...
...Here's a passage from an unlikely love letter written by normally stiff Woodrow Wilson to Edith Bolling Galt a few months before they were married: My precious Darling, The more we are together the more I love you, the more I need to have you always with me, and the more inadequate written words become to speak my heart to you—the more impatient I grow of the pen, the more eager to whisper the love that floods my heart into my Darling's lips as I hold her close in my arms...
...Domesticity and Difference: Male Breadwinners, Working Women and Colonial Citizenship in the 1945 Nigerian General Strike...
...And that is just the tip of the postmodern iceberg...
...The programs on the obscure presidents tend to be better than the programs on the famous ones, simply because there is so much new to be learned about the Benjamin Harrisons of the world...
...Indeed, when you step back far enough you begin to appreciate that C-SPAN is so far out of tune with the times that it has become an intellectual counterculture...
...For example, callers have continually forced the historians to deal with racial matters, so that race has become the major sub-theme of the series...
...Taylor believed the president had the right to veto only bills he thought were unconstitutional, so great was the presumption of legislative branch superiority in his day...
...How many people does it take to make up a multitude...
...The Washington segment was filmed at Mount Vernon...
...But when you zap up and down the TV dial, you notice that few of the other talk shows do it...
...Dunning wrote to his wife, "I don't believe you can form any idea of the pleasure it gives me to have discovered this little historical fact...
...Gilbert was talking about the interplay between private scandal and public life when the following exchange took place: GILBERT: When Churchill was 20 and a young soldier, he was accused of buggery, and, you know, that's, you know, a terrible accusation...
...Over the twenty years that C-SPAN has been in existence, its founder Brian Lamb and his colleagues have pioneered a distinct interviewing style...
...The broadcast network interviewers ask mostly about emotions and feelings...
...David Brooks is a senior editor of THE WEEKLY STANDARD...
...That is often followed by an interview with a descendant of the president in question (George Cleveland played his grandfather Grover...
...Nonetheless, there are still people out there who are willing to dedicate their professional lives to understanding some long ago man or period...
...And if the academic establishment, with all its theoretical gasbaggery, is not going to teach history, then the people who will carry on telling the stories of the past will be untrained history buffs and popular historians, detached from the academy and armed merely with the normal human curiosity to know and understand what went on before us...
...Many people will think he goes a little overboard in this direction...
...Trevelyan wrote: The appeal of history to us all is in the last analysis poetic...
...Well, I—I'm sorry...
...He wanted to convey a certain image of his subject, so in It's hard for impatient people in an impatient age to understand the pleasures that some feel poring studiously over old documents...
...It seems like such an easy thing to ask direct questions about simple facts...
...They disrupt the story the historians are trying to tell, and make the programs more boring and annoying than they need to be...
...They take control of the programs in ways that no one can foresee...
...The contrast between the C-SPAN historians and the academic establishment historians is breathtaking...
...It's—you don't know what buggery is...
...The producers have done an outstanding job of choosing historians who seem genuinely curious about the past, rather than merely activists or agitators in historian's clothing...
...Well, he ended up prime minister for just quite a long time...
...agreed furiously about secession, the two men remained close friends even after her death...
...A William Henry Harrison segment was filmed at the battlefield at Tippecanoe in Indiana, where Harrison fought the Indians in 1811...
...The Web site for the series (americanpresidents.org) conveys the flavor of the programs, including private letters from each of the presidents...
...On many of the cable talk shows, the host is the star so the questions are really rococo essays that render the answers superfluous...
...Either you find such bits of data interesting or you do not...
...Despite the efforts of E.D...
...Finally a few historians are brought in to answer questions from the C-SPAN host and the C-SPAN callers...
...LAMB: Why was he accused of buggery and what is it...
...Trevelyan (like the Dunning anecdote, it's found in a Gertrude Himmelfarb essay in a new book called Recon-structingHistory...
...By contrast, turn to the Web site of the American Historical Review (indiana.edu/~ahr) and look at the list of articles the prestigious academic review is publishing or about to publish: "Feminism, Social Science and the Meaning of Modernity...
...C-SPAN is factual in a world grown theoretical...
...His body was dug up and his fingernails and bones examined, but no sign of arsenic poisoning was found...
...LAMB: Define it, please...
...And occupying its unique niche—C-SPAN is funded by the cable industry to cover Congress and public events—it has managed to perform feats of civic education that are unmatched by better-funded institutions, such as the History Channel, PBS, the Smithsonian, or the multi-billion-dollar foundations...
...In Edmund Morris's notorious biography Dutch, the facts of what Ronald Reagan did and knew are upstaged by the drama of the author's own quest to "understand" and "capture" his subject...

Vol. 5 • November 1999 • No. 8


 
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