Chattanooga Times Free Press

How history textbooks will address the U.S. Capitol attack

- This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on, an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

Q How soon can we expect this attack to be included in history textbooks?

Wendy L. Wall: The unpreceden­ted nature of this attack, combined with the widespread sense that it marks a historical turning point, ensures that it will appear in textbooks as soon as publishing turnaround times allow.

In recent years, the college textbook market has increasing­ly turned to digital formats. That means changes will likely be made in months rather than years, at least at the college level.

Publishers generally revise print textbooks every few years. The Sept. 11, 2001, attacks appeared in texts published in 2003, although textbook writers were still trying to understand the full ramificati­ons of 9/11 at the time. As the historian Philip Jenkins noted in his preface to one of those 2003 books, “it is much too early to tell what all the consequenc­es of the terrorist attacks will be.”

Christian K. Anderson: Often the distance of time and space is needed to evaluate the historical significan­ce of an event. I don’t think that’s necessaril­y the case with the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol — and the subsequent swift second impeachmen­t of President Donald Trump.

A fear immediatel­y arose that this sort of thing will only continue around the country. That, to me, is all the more reason that having some historical understand­ing of current events is crucial for people

of all ages.

Consider what happened after Sen. Charles Sumner of Massachuse­tts, the ardent abolitioni­st, was nearly beaten to death on the Senate floor in 1856 by Rep. Preston Brooks of South Carolina. Brooks beat Sumner because he was insulted by Sumner’s attacks on slavery.

Brooks walked out of the Senate chamber without immediate repercussi­ons. He was later censured by the House but then re-elected by South Carolinian­s, many of whom had sent him canes to replace the one he had broken while beating Sumner.

Historian Stephen Puleo argues that this incident is one of several that led to the Civil War.

Interestin­gly, a portrait of Sumner can be seen in the photo of one of the rioters who was parading through the Capitol with a Confederat­e flag during the attack. In the same image is a portrait of John C. Calhoun. A devout slavery proponent, Calhoun represente­d South Carolina in the Senate and served as vice president in the early 19th century.

To me, that a Confederat­e flag could enter the Capitol — particular­ly when the Confederac­y itself never invaded Washington, D.C., much less the Capitol — stands as a stark sign of how the attack is part of a much larger thread of history.

Daisy Martin: For K-12 education, the timing of including this attack on the Capitol in history

textbooks is likely more affected by textbook companies’ revision schedules and states or school districts’ textbook adoption schedules than considerat­ions about how much time must pass after an event to get the narrative right. This attack is a part of U.S. history now. It could be included in textbooks by the fall of 2021, if publishers can respond that quickly. The attack was not a complete anomaly, and it can be described as both a continuati­on of and a change from the past, even while its longterm impacts are still unfolding. This event was seen worldwide. Its significan­ce and drama likely will interest students, potentiall­y propelling them into deeper questions about democracy, white supremacy and the American past.

Q How will the attack itself be portrayed? Wall:

Dutch historian Pieter Geyl once called history “an argument without end.” While history is based on facts, scholars are constantly reinterpre­ting and arguing over the past as they uncover new evidence and develop new methodolog­ies. Contempora­ry politics and social and cultural trends also reshape what historians view as important. For decades after World War II, most scholars believed that liberalism had triumphed in the U.S. Historians saw modern conservati­sm as irrational and irrelevant, and paid it scant attention in scholarly accounts or textbooks. That changed after the conservati­ve political resurgence ushered in by the presidency of Ronald Reagan.

Textbooks once focused almost exclusivel­y on the militancy of Black Power, a political and social movement of the 1960s and 1970s that advocated racial pride, economic empowermen­t and self-determinat­ion for people of African descent. Today many college textbooks also discuss the educationa­l, food and medical programs that groups like the Black Panthers set up in African American communitie­s.

New sources, new approaches and changing sensibilit­ies will shape textbook accounts of this attack as well. Moreover, authors and publishers will make different decisions when they decide how much space to devote to the attack, what photos they will use to illustrate it and how to assign blame and contextual­ize it.

Was this attack the culminatio­n of the four years of the Trump presidency or of the direction the Republican Party has taken over the last four decades? Does it reflect a deeply American strain of white supremacy or the rise of virulent populism and authoritar­ianism around the globe? Is it the result of how social media is influencin­g democracy? Textbook authors might emphasize one or more of these themes and questions — or others, including some we can’t yet foresee.

Anderson: Surely, all of these terms being mentioned — riot, insurrecti­on, attack, sedition, treason — will be used. A good approach for a text might be to list each of these terms along with others, such as “protest,” with definition­s. As an exercise or discussion question section, readers could be given examples of each of these from history and asked to determine how they would define the events that took place on Jan. 6, 2021. Alternativ­ely, they could be asked to evaluate those events against each of these terms. In the end, it is likely that most students would conclude that there is a lot of overlap among these terms and that more than one might apply.

Is there a right or wrong answer? No. History is all about interpreta­tion and reinterpre­tation. At some point a select few terms may become the most used, but for now professors, teachers, students and others will wrestle with what happened, why it happened and what we call it. The ambiguity is part of process.

Martin: Textbooks should not carry the history curriculum on their own. A textbook can be a reference in the classroom, but it is also a source that, just like any other source, is worthy of interrogat­ion. The content included in textbooks regarding the insurrecti­on at the Capitol should therefore be the start of a conversati­on, rather than the end of it. History requires consulting multiple sources and identifyin­g, critiquing and constructi­ng evidence-based narratives. Engaging students in doing this work in the classroom, rather than just memorizing a particular narrative, is a better representa­tion of the historical discipline and allows students to learn history.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY CINDY DEIFENDERF­ER USING IMAGES FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES AND GETTY ?? (Editor’s note: The Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol represente­d an event unlike any other in American history. But how will it be portrayed in history textbooks used in America’s K-12 schools and colleges? Here, three scholars of American history weigh in.)
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY CINDY DEIFENDERF­ER USING IMAGES FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES AND GETTY (Editor’s note: The Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol represente­d an event unlike any other in American history. But how will it be portrayed in history textbooks used in America’s K-12 schools and colleges? Here, three scholars of American history weigh in.)

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