Why History Matters
Life and Thought
-
- $25.99
-
- $25.99
Publisher Description
"All human beings are practicing historians," writes Gerda Lerner. "We live our lives; we tell our stories. It is as natural as breathing." It is as important as breathing, too. History shapes our self-definition and our relationship to community; it locates us in time and place and helps to give meaning to our lives. History can be the vital thread that holds a nation together, as demonstrated most strikingly in the case of Jewish history. Conversely, for women, who have lived in a world in which they apparently had no history, its absence can be devastating. In Why History Matters, Lerner brings together her thinking and research of the last sixteen years, combining personal reminiscences with innovative theory that illuminate the importance of history and the vital role women have played in it.
Why History Matters contains some of the most significant thinking and writing on history that Lerner has done in her entire career--a summation of her life and work. The chapters are divided into three sections, each widely different from the others, each revelatory of Lerner as a woman and a feminist. We read first of Lerner's coming to consciousness as a Jewish woman. There are moving accounts of her early life as a refugee in America, her return to Austria fifty years after fleeing the Nazis (to discover a nation remarkable both for the absence of Jews and for the anti-Semitism just below the surface), her slow assimilation into American life, and her decision to be a historian. If the first section is personal, the second focuses on more professional concerns. Included here is a fascinating essay on nonviolent resistance, tracing the idea from the Quakers (such as Mary Dyer), to abolitionists such as Theodore Dwight Weld (the "most mobbed man" in America), to Thoreau's essay Civil Disobedience, then across the sea to Tolstoy and Gandhi, before finally returning to America during the civil rights movement of the 1950s. There are insightful essays on "American Values" and on the tremendous advances women have made in the twentieth century, as well as Lerner's presidential address to the Organization of American Historians, which outlines the contributions of women to the field of history and the growing importance of women as a subject of history. The highlight of the final section of the book is Lerner's bold and innovative look at the issues of class and race as they relate to women, an essay that distills her thinking on these difficult subjects and offers a coherent conceptual framework that will prove of lasting interest to historians and intellectuals.
A major figure in women's studies and long-term activist for women's issues, a founding member of NOW and a past president of the Organization of American Historians, Gerda Lerner is a pioneer in the field of Women's History and one of its leading practitioners. Why History Matters is the summation of the work and thinking of this distinguished historian.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Now 76, Lerner is one of the founders of the academic discipline of women's history, an emerita professor at the University of Wisconsin at Madison; and author of such key books as The Majority Finds Its Past, The Creation of Patriarchy and The Creation of Feminist Consciousness. In the dozen essays included here (half previously unpublished), Lerner masters her subjects, basing any generalizations on an impressive array of statistics or on personal experience. A frequent theme is Lerner's experience of being driven out of prewar Vienna as a Jew; a visit to Munich in recent years left her feeling "nauseated and defiled" after a chat with a typical Bavarian barfly who still believed in most of Hitler's tenets. The title of Lerner's book has a parallel to George Santayana's famous saying that those who forget history are condemned to repeat it: Lerner finds that "Civil wars and racist persecutions thrive on selective memory and collective forgetting." Hence her horror at seeing a swastika smeared on her university office door. Lerner's words are alive and timely, especially when she points out that the supposed advances made by women in the 20th century have been "grossly uneven" and even have a "nasty edge," concluding that most women across the world live under conditions "as bad or worse" than in 1900-a contention she backs up with impressive documentation on life expectancy, infant mortality, career achievement and more. Now more than ever, readers of history need such lucid critical minds as Lerner's, and this collection is therefore especially welcome.