Wellcome Trust Videos

9 07 2009

I’m very excited about the potential of IT to improve the teaching of history. That’s why I was delighted to find that the Wellcome Trust for the History of Medicine recently sponsored a workshop that allowed academic researchers in the field of medical history to turn their research findings into professional quality online videos. The dramatic fall in the price of software for editing videos means that individual researchers can produce mini-documentaries with fairly high production values. I’m not a historian of medicine, but I think that these techniques could be translated to other fields quite easily.

Here is a link that will take you to the videos.





Wafergate

9 07 2009

Today’s Globe and Mail has a story on the controversy surrounding the decision of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, a Protestant, to take communion in a Roman Catholic church in New Brunswick. There were initial reports that Harper discarded the wafer he had received from the priest. It has now been confirmed that Harper swallowed a communion wafer. However, this is also a problem, for Catholic Church says that as a Protestant, he should not have done so.  Harper was attending the funeral of former Governor General Romeo Lebanc and decided to eat the wafer as a sign of respect.

Some may dismiss this controversy as a tempest in a tea pot. This story is interesting to me as a historian because it shows that the Catholic-Protestant split still has relevance in Canadian politics despite the fact Canada has become a profoundly secular country. While not quite as low as the ones found in continental European countries, church attendance rates in Canada are a fraction of what they were in the 1940s and much lower than in the United States. See here and here.   As Canadians have become less religious, the old division between Catholics and Protestants, Orangemen and ultramontanes, has ceased to be relevant in the way it was at, say, the time of the Manitoba Schools controversy. (The Canadian Orange Order, by the way, is still active, but just barely. See here).

Most Canadians today describe themselves as Christian but rarely attend church services, save perhaps on Christmas Eve. Some might argue that the real division today is between the minority of Canadians who are actively religious (many of whom are non-Christian immigrants) and the majority who are not. However, for reasons that are debated by political scientists, Roman Catholics still vote Liberal in disproportionate numbers. They still don’t trust the Conservatives.





The Great Canadian Historical Ignorance Debate

6 07 2009

Here are yet more newspaper stories prompted by the Dominion Institute’s poll on historical ignorance in Canada. See here, here, and here.





Jacques Lacoursière

6 07 2009

Today’s Montreal Gazette has a story about Jacques Lacoursière. Lacoursière is to Quebec what Pierre Berton is to English-speaking Canada.





FT Article on Slavery and the City of London

30 06 2009

The front page of this weekend’s edition of the Financial Times carried a story about historical research that has uncovered new evidence regarding the details City of London’s involvement in slavery. [Note: story includes video of interview with noted historian Catherine Hall] The most interesting fact revealed in the article is that Nathan Mayer Rothschild accepted slaves as collateral for a loan. The House of Rothschild had previously been famous for arranging the loan that allowed the British government to borrow the money needed to compensate slaveholders when slavery was abolished in the British Empire in the 1830s.

I’m glad that the FT ran this story, because it gives readers a sense of the historical importance of corporate archives (although in this case the key documents were uncovered at the National Archives in Kew). However, I’m not certain why information about the Rothschilds’ indirect involvement in slavery is terribly newsworthy.  After all, the House of Rothschild were the bankers of the Empire of Brazil at a time when that country had slavery. Like many other firms in Britain, America, and elsewhere, many City firms were indirect beneficiaries of slavery. We knew this already.





More Dominion Institute Nonsense

29 06 2009

You know that Dominion Day Canada Day is rapidly approaching because the Dominion Institute has released the results of a survey demonstrating that the average Canadian knows very little about Canadian history. See Canadian Press story here.  More press coverage, see here, here, and here. Publishing the results of this survey is an annual ritual for the Institute.

As I have said before, the annual surveys of the Dominion Institute are deeply flawed and display a terrible parochial mindset on the part of their creators. First, the DI survey only test knowledge of Canadian history, the apparent assumption being that it doesn’t matter whether our citizens know about Auschwitz or Pericles, as long as they know about Riel and Diefenbaker.
Moreover, the DI makes no effort to compare the results of its surveys with similar historical knowledge surveys in other countries. (In contrast, science and math surveys of high school students are almost always subject to cross national comparisons and the creation of league tables).

The DI has never presented a shred of evidence to support its claim that Canadians know less about Canadian history than Americans know about US history.  The Globe article on the DI survey paraphrases the argument of Marc Chalifoux, executive director of the Dominion Institute, thus:
“Americans are full of national pride, while Canadians don’t toot their historical horn to the same extent.”

Chalifoux’s notion that there is inverse relationship between national pride and historical ignorance is a very dubious one at best.  In fact, it is risible. A _rigorous_ historical education is actually a fairly effective antidote to nationalism. (When I say rigorous historical education, I’m talking about the type of education that is based on secondary sources that have gone through peer-review). Nationalists, especially ethnic nationalists, trade on the public’s limited knowledge of history.  Some of the most appallingly nationalist dictatorships in history have emerged in societies with very low levels of general and historical knowledge (think Burma).  I think we would all agree that there is more nationalism in the Balkans than in north-western Europe, but it is north-western Europe that you find more educated people. (Being able to recite an epic poem about the Battle of Kosovo doesn’t make you educated in the same way that, say completing a British A-level in history). Modern Germans are very anti-nationalism and almost proud of being unpatriotic. The average German today is probably knows much more history than the average German in say, 1932, because they have spent much longer in school, has more leisure time to read history, and can buy more historical books with an hour’s wages.

Moreover, I’m not certain what the hell “toot their historical horn” means.  The Globe appears to be suggesting that a form of historical education that stresses the nation’s positive accomplishments would be a good thing because it would promote patriotism and loyalty to Canada.  I’m not convinced that such a historical curriculum would achieve these desiderata. Americans are very proud of their country’s recent accomplishments (such as inventing the Internet) but are very aware of all of the bad things that have taken place in American history. For instance, we heard a lot about slavery during the televised coverage of Obama’s inauguration.  Knowing that Thomas Jefferson slept with his slaves doesn’t keep Americans from being patriotic and loyal to the United States circa 2009: people are intelligent enough to know that a nation should be judged by what it is doing today, not by what its members did a long time ago.





New EH.net Book Review: Karmel on Haulman, Virginia and the Panic of 1819

29 06 2009

Here is a review of another interesting book to put on my pile of things to read!

Clyde A. Haulman, Virginia and the Panic of 1819: The First Great Depression and the Commonwealth. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2008. xi + 197 pp. $99 (hardcover), ISBN: 978-1-85196-939-5.

Reviewed for EH.NET by James Karmel, Department of History, Harford Community College.





Larry Glassford on the Dominion Institute

25 06 2009

Larry Glassford, a historian at the University of Windsor, has published some thoughts on the Dominion Institute’s historical knowledge. His opinions, which appeared in a recent issue of the Windsor Start, are pretty similar to my own.





Dominion Institute Poll

23 06 2009

A number of newspapers have recently published stories bemoaning Canadians’ ignorance of Canadian history. See here, here, and here. I expect that as Canada Day (1 July) approaches, we will see even more stories of this sort. This is because the Dominion Institute releases a survey every year on 1 July that deplores the public’s ignorance of Canadian history.

I must say that the Dominion Institute’s news releases are always well timed in terms of the annual news cycle. Generally speaking, not a lot happens in Canada in late June, so unless there is a crisis abroad, there is bound to be plenty of space in the newspapers for long articles denouncing historical ignorance.

As I have said before, the real problem is not that Canadians don’t know about their country’s history, it’s that they simply do not know that much about history in general. Being an educated person means knowing about world history as well as the history of one’s own country and locality. One of the many problems with the Dominion Institute surveys is that they only test knowledge of Canadian history. The apparent reasoning is that as long as Canadians know who Louis Riel was, it doesn’t matter if they know about the Holocaust,  the Tokugawa Shogunate, the Industrial Revolution, or all of the other things that happened outside of Canada’s current borders.

The thinking that informs the Dominion Institute’s poll is deeply flawed, since you can’t really understand Canadian history without knowing about the histories of other countries. National histories are interconnected. This is true of every country that isn’t a hermit kingdom and it is especially true of Canada, a country that was born globalized. 98% of Canadians are descended from immigrants. From the time of the cod fishery, Canada’s economy has revolved around the export of raw materials to other nations. Canada was part of two great European empires, the French and then the British, and it is now part of the quasi-Empire of the United States.  Simply put, you can’t understand Canada’s past without situating it  in a global context.

I would also like to point out that  gross historical ignorance is not a problem confined to Canada. Polls similar to the Dominion Institute’s in other industrialized countries have produced similar results. For the US, see here. For the UK, see here.

Instead of devoting resources to running the same poll each year, the Dominion Institute could investigate a more interesting question, namely, which Western country has the most historically informed population?  I wouldn’t be surprised if it is the Iceland, since its education system is rather good, per capita book ownership is high, and Icelanders can comprehend the form of Icelandic used in documents written a thousand years ago.  Many Icelanders today read the Norse sagas for fun– and in the original. In contrast, many English-speakers find it hard to under Shakespeare’s language.

Let’s conduct a study comparing the levels of historical literacy in various countries. This would allow us to see what the most historically literate countries have in common. I would hazard a guess that historical literacy in a population correlates with high participation rates for tertiary education. Various international comparative studies of scientific literacy have been done. (See data for 15 year olds from Nationmaster).  I wonder how strongly historical literacy correlates with scientific literacy.  I suspect that the relationship is weak, since Japan scores well for scientific literacy, yet many Japanese people are ignorant of Japan’s WWII-era atrocities in mainland Asia.





Nova Scotia’s First Social Democrat Government

22 06 2009

Nova Scotia’s new NDP government has taken office, having  won a majority of seats in the general election on 19 June.