Eviatar Zerubavel (° 1948) offers a structuralist view of the way in which we view the past. This means that he does not focus on the content of remembered past, but on the "underlying formal features of those recollections”. In this little book he combines the postmodernist narrative approach of the American literature specialist Hayden White with the study of collective and individual memories as launched by the French historian Pierre Nora.
The author is a sociologist (Rutgers University, New Jersey), so it’s rather logic that his starting point (and conclusion) is that our approach of the past is socially conditioned: we make instrumental use of the narrative structures that are available in our community. “One of the most remarkable features of human memory is our ability to mentally transform essentially unstructured series or events into seemingly coherent historical narratives. (…) And although actual reality may never be ‘unfolded’ in such a neat formulaic manner, those scriptlike plotlines are nevertheless the form in which we often remember it, as we habitually reduce highly complex event sequences to inevitably simplistic, one-dimensional visions of the past".
Zerubavel elaborates in detail on the narrative forms that we use, classifying them according to linear approach (progress, decline, rise and fall) and multilinear approach (branched like a tree, circular, with mountains and valleys and finally flowing or chopping). Especially these ‘mountains and valleys’ are a remarkable point: we often discern historical periods when apparently nothing (relevant) happened, and peak periods; just think of the Middle Ages, or America of the early 18th century. Every one of us, instinctively uses these kinds of methods of mapping history.
Zerubavel sees two underlying structural approaches: seeing continuity in history or discontinuity. The first translates, for example, into the great importance attached to dynasties and family trees, and into the list of festive and commemorative days and monuments that suggest a continuous link with the past. He rightly points to the wonderful fact that we succeed in drawing a line in history: “Continuous identities are thus products of the mental integration or otherwise disconnected points in time into a seemingly single historical whole. More specifically, it is our memory that makes such mental integration possible, allowing us to establish the distinctly mnemonic illusion of continuity." The original thing is how he distinguishes between 'lumpers' and 'splitters': people who mainly combine phenomena, others who try to distinguish as much as possible, to split them up.
The second, discontinuous way to determine the past is the tendency to distinguish separate time blocks, the famous periodization. This implicitly betrays an opinion about the time period involved and is arbitrary in the sense that it creates an artificial distinction between the moment before and the moment after. "In order to help maintain the illusion of wide historical gaps actually separating different periods from one another, we thus mnemonically inflate the distance between everything that happened prior to the particular ‘watersheds’marking their boundaries and everything that has happened since."
With all these approaches there is a recurring phenomenon: the ways in which we look at the past turn out to be socially conditioned. That does not mean that Zerubavel is deterministic, but he tries to make it clear to us that our vision of history does not just comes out of the blue. Instead, it is strongly colored by the community in which we live, and usually in a way that we do not consciously realize: "Any system of periodization is thus inevitably social, since our ability to envision the historical watersheds separating one conventional ‘period’ from another is basically a product or being socialized into specific traditions or carving the past".
Precisely because our historical approach is so socially determined, it is best, says Zerubavel, that we use several approaches. He therefore argues for a multi-perspective view: “As I have demonstrated throughout this book, there are not only many different patterns or organizing the fits in our heads but also various different methods for arranging each of those specific patterns. Only a pronouncedly multi-perspective look at several such ’maps’ together can provide us with a complete picture of the inevitably multi-layered, multi-faceted social topography of the past.” For a moment I had the impression that the author was in danger of falling into the trap of relativism, but his formulation makes it clear that he is certainly not a supporter of this.
All in all, this very condense booklet offers a particularly relevant view of how different communities look at the past, using different techniques and grids to explain that past. Recommended reading! (rating 3.5 stars, rounded up)