Reappraisals : Reflections on the Forgotten Twentieth Century (08 Edition)
by Tony Judt
The Reminder-General
A review by Stefan Collini
"The past has nothing of interest to teach us." That, fears Tony
Judt, is the presiding assumption of the early twenty-first century. The
speed of social and economic change, the exhaustion of the twentieth
century's dominant ideologies and a desire to put the horrors of that
century's carnage behind us all conspire, he believes, to encourage a
culture of forgetting. And this belief frames and justifies his sense of
his own role; he appoints himself the Reminder-General in contemporary
society (or at least in the United States), a particular version of the
historian as public intellectual.
In his introduction, Judt claims that two main themes run through the
book: first, "the role of ideas and the responsibility of
intellectuals"; and second, "the place of recent history in an age of
forgetting." I'm not sure that these are, in practice, the salient
themes, but the announcement does fairly represent the insistent,
exigent tone of what is to follow -- "the role," "the responsibility,"
"the place." It might be more accurate to say that the dominant concerns
of the volume are, first, the primacy of the political when evaluating
ideas; second, the defining significance of attitudes toward the
Holocaust and communism; third, the value of transatlantic comparisons
and contrasts when thinking about the state; and fourth, the distinctive
contribution of Jews to understanding modern history.
Some of the best essays in this collection display the same power to
identify and analyze the interplay of political power, cultural identity
and socioeconomic change that characterized the strongest sections of
Postwar. Learned and illuminating essays on Belgium and Romania
are good examples of Judt's capacity to grasp, frame and narrate. And,
as we might expect from someone who began his career as a specialist in
French history, there are some good explorations of the distinctiveness
of France and its peculiar forms of "backwardness" -- France was, "of all
the countries of Western Europe, the one which had changed least until
very recently." His strengths as a political analyst and polemicist are
also on display in several fine essays, including those on American
foreign policy and the role of the state in the global economy.
(Speaking as an outsider to the debates to which he has contributed, I
find his essays here on Israel sympathetic and perceptive, though I well
realize that some readers will not share that judgment.) In all these
pieces, Judt gives a master class in the role of the historian as public
intellectual, informing and educating his readers, getting behind the
headlines and stereotypes to pinpoint the real forces working to
determine policies and shape societies.
But there are deeper continuities with his previous work. Postwar
ends with an epilogue titled "From the House of the Dead: An Essay on
Modern European Memory." In it, Judt's concerns about public forgetting
take a highly specific form. What needs to be properly remembered, he
insists, is the Holocaust. "Holocaust recognition is our contemporary
European entry ticket," and not just to the European Union. "The
recovered memory of Europe's dead Jews has become the very definition
and guarantee of the continent's restored humanity." This is a highly
eccentric construal of European identity, one that is perhaps rather
belied by the more complex history of social, economic and political
change recounted in the book's previous 800 pages. But in Judt's eyes,
this topic, above all, confirms the public role of the historian. He
quotes Columbia University historian Yosef Yerushalmi on how mere
"memory" is inadequate to the task of maintaining a proper grasp on the
enormity of the Holocaust: "Only the historian, with the austere passion
for fact, proof, evidence, which are central to his vocation, can
effectively stand guard." And Judt concludes, "If Europe's past is to
continue to furnish Europe's present with admonitory meaning and moral
purpose -- then it will have to be taught afresh with each passing
generation."
One response to this passionate credo is to feel not just that it may
exaggerate the present place of the Holocaust in European societies but
that it risks turning history into too narrowly didactic an exercise, as
though the main purpose of an interest in the past were to provide us
with "admonitory meaning and moral purpose." This may be a danger in the
role of "historian as public intellectual" more generally. The pressure
of public debate demands clear messages, "lessons" from the past,
whereas that "austere passion for fact" will usually tend toward the
recognition of complexity and often the absence of anything that might
qualify as a "lesson." The temper of historical analysis necessarily
leans toward the skeptical; its effects tend to be corrosive of all
pieties, and those may on occasion include the admirable civic values
Judt and other public moralists would have it validate.
Judt's ready embrace of that public role means that there is no shortage
in these essays of lessons for the present, often trenchantly stated. A
particularly powerful example is provided by the theme of the function
of the state in twenty-first-century societies: "The state, as the
history of the last century copiously illustrates, does some things
rather well and other things quite badly. There are some things the
private sector, or the market, can do better and many things they cannot
do at all." This line of reasoning leads him to conclude in the final
essay, "The Social Question Redivivus," that "only a state can provide
the services and conditions through which its citizens may aspire to
lead a good or fulfilling life." He then spells out what a
social-democratic ideal revised in the light of a realistic appraisal of
the weaknesses and strengths of global capitalism could look like:
For some years to come, the chief burden on the government of any
well-run national community will be ensuring that those of its members
who are the victims of economic transformations over which the
government itself can exercise only limited control nevertheless live
decent lives, even (especially) if such a life no longer contains the
expectation of steady, remunerative, and productive employment; that the
rest of the community is led to an appreciation of its duty to share
that burden; and that the economic growth required to sustain this
responsibility is not inhibited by the ends to which it is applied. This
is a job for the state; and that is hard to accept because the
desirability of placing the maximum possible restrictions upon the
interventionary capacities of the state has become the cant of our time.
This is, clearly, a minimalist prescription. In most European countries
it would be widely assumed, including by many regarded as being on the
right, that the state ought to be playing a broader and more
constructive role than this, helping to shape the framework within which
social and economic activity is carried on, not confining itself to
providing a safety net for the losers in the great scramble. Judt goes
on to argue that the "task of the Left in Europe" is to "reconstruct a
case for the activist state." But in an American context, simply to
spell out this minimalist case in such measured terms as the inescapable
conclusion to be drawn from an intelligent analysis of recent history
may be to perform an important service as a public intellectual.
The topic on which Judt's reading of the lessons of history has
generated the most controversy in recent years is, of course, Israel.
That topic occupies a relatively minor place in this collection, but the
same outspokenness and trenchancy are in evidence when he does touch
upon it. For example, in the course of an admirable essay written in
2004 as an introduction to a posthumous collection of Edward Said's
writings on the Middle East [which appeared in the July 19, 2004, issue
of The Nation], he declares, "After thirty-seven years of
military occupation, Israel has gained nothing in security; it has lost
everything in domestic civility and international respectability; and it
has forfeited the moral high ground forever." Even those who broadly
share this view may wince at the sweepingness of "nothing," "everything"
and "forever," but we should recognize that in the contemporary United
States it takes courage to express this view in such downright terms.
Judt has already been vilified for his position on Israel; indeed, he
has been subjected to a quite shameful level of denunciation, something
that makes his steadiness under fire in these essays all the more
admirable.
In some of the other pieces he writes more in the vein of the
prosecuting attorney, relentlessly forensic. Here, his touchstone tests
of giving rightful pre-eminence to the Holocaust in modern European
history and of being properly vehement in one's condemnation of
communism start to grate in the way over-ground axes always do. (It may
be relevant here to note that Judt, who was born and spent the first
thirty-five years of his life in Britain, describes his provenance in
these terms: "Coming from that branch of East European Jewry that had
embraced social democracy and the Bund [the Jewish Labor organization of
early-twentieth-century Russia and Poland], my own family was viscerally
anti-Communist.") Several of the essays in this style are about
individual intellectuals, and although Judt has written extensively
about French intellectuals in the past, I have to say that the topic
does not seem to me to play to his strengths. This is partly because he
focuses so narrowly on the political bearing of their ideas, a
focus that in practice often tends to reduce to whether they were
(culpably) sympathetic or (properly) hostile to communism. As political
critiques, they are always forceful and usually intelligent, but as
intellectual portraits they sometimes feel rather thin and
monochromatic.
Consider his discussion of the figure often now acclaimed as "the
world's most famous historian," Eric Hobsbawm. Though at points Judt
praises Hobsbawm's gifts, he generalizes a damning indictment from the
fact that Hobsbawm, mainly out of loyalty to his old comrades and their
shared ideals, never resigned his membership of the Communist Party of
Great Britain. This allows Judt to conclude that Hobsbawm "has somehow
slept through the terror and shame of the age." Even the briefest glance
at The Age of Extremes, Hobsbawm's celebrated history of the
"short twentieth century," let alone his many other writings on modern
history, is sufficient to demonstrate the absurdity of this judgment
(condemnation of the "brutal and dictatorial" Soviet system and the
"murderous absurdity" of Stalin's policies pepper Hobsbawm's pages). But
its substantive and stylistic exaggeration is not an isolated instance.
Moving to his peroration, Judt thunders, "The values and institutions
that have mattered to the Left -- from equality before the law to the
provision of public services as a matter of right...owed nothing to
Communism. Seventy years of 'real existing Socialism' contributed
nothing to the sum of human welfare. Nothing." The table-thumping
repetition here seems eerily reminiscent of the commissar at the party
meeting, yet to whom are these rhetorical excesses addressed in Judt's
case? Perhaps to those left-deviationists who, reprehensibly, don't
think that a vehement display of anticommunism is the overriding
indication of historical intelligence?
This note becomes disturbingly insistent in Judt's remarks, in the
course of a very positive assessment of Polish philosopher Leszek
Kolakowski, about another British historian, E.P. Thompson. In 1973
Thompson addressed an "Open Letter" to Kolakowski, expressing dismay at
the latter's repudiation, since his arrival in the West, of the kind of
independent Marxist thinking he had bravely upheld as a dissident voice
within Poland in the 1950s and '60s. The "Open Letter," writes Judt,
slipping into adjectival overdrive,
was Thompson at his priggish, Little-Englander worst...patronizing, and
sanctimonious. In a pompous, demagogic tone, with more than half an eye
to his worshipful progressive audience, Thompson shook his rhetorical
finger at the exiled Kolakowski....How dare you, Thompson suggested
from the safety of his leafy perch in middle England, betray us by
letting your inconvenient experiences in Communist Poland obstruct the
view of our common Marxist ideal?
From the outset, Judt's labored sarcasms start to backfire: even someone
who had not previously heard of, let alone read, Thompson's letter,
begins to sense from the overkill of "worshipful," "leafy" and
"inconvenient" that Thompson is facing a firing squad rather than a
critical appraisal. Judt goes on to pronounce that Kolakowski's reply
"may be the most perfectly executed intellectual demolition in the
history of political argument: No one who reads it will ever take E.P.
Thompson seriously again." The history of political argument is a long
one, which can boast some celebrated intellectual demolitions: why would
anyone claim they were all outranked by Kolakowski's response, a
document that, to be sure, makes some telling local points but that on
the whole talks past Thompson as well as down to him, in a heavy-handed
display of misplaced condescension? And "no one" who reads it will
"ever" take Thompson "seriously" again? This is stump oratory, not one
distinguished historian's appraisal of the achievements of a surely no
less distinguished colleague.
Even in cases where Judt's criticisms seem broadly right, there is often
a betraying exaggeration in his swelling address to the jury. For
example, in writing about the French Marxist philosopher Louis
Althusser, who enjoyed great esteem among many on the theoretically
inclined left in the 1960s and '70s, he jabs his finger in the juror's
chest: "What does it say about modern academic life that such a figure
can have trapped teachers and students for so long in the cage of his
insane fictions, and traps them still?" I find Althusser's theories no
more compelling than Judt does, but "trapped," "cage," "insane"? And can
the current interest on the part of a tiny minority of university
teachers in what is by any measure a complex and highly abstract body of
thinking really be read as damningly symptomatic of something as
extensive as "modern academic life"?
Critics usually write more winningly about authors they admire than
about those they abhor, but even with these figures Judt can sometimes
intrude with a political judgment too soon and too insistently. The lead
essay in the collection is titled "Arthur Koestler, the Exemplary
Intellectual." This was originally published as a review of a biography
of Koestler, and Judt scores several good points against the parochial
and anachronistic judgments made by the biographer about, for example,
Koestler's voracious sexuality and his ambivalent attitude toward
Zionism. But as the essay goes on, one increasingly wonders how anyone
could now think of Koestler as "the exemplary intellectual." Judt fairly
acknowledges that many of Koestler's books "were panned by specialists
for their idiosyncratic speculation, their searching for coherence and
meaning in every little coincidence and detail, their abuse of analogy,
and the overconfident intrusion of their author into matters of which he
was comparatively ignorant."
On what grounds, then, could we regard such a figure as an "exemplary"
intellectual? Principally, it seems, on the strength of his having
written Darkness at Noon, which is "widely credited with having
made a singular and unequalled contribution to exploding the Soviet
myth." Even Judt recognizes some of the weaknesses of that book, and he
acknowledges that it "seems curiously dated today." But the failings of
this and Koestler's other writings on the same theme are, somehow, part
of what makes him "the exemplary intellectual." "His obsession with the
fight against Communism (like all his other obsessions) brooked no
compromise and seemed to lack all proportion....This made Koestler an
uncomfortable presence, someone who brought disruption and conflict in
his train. But that is what intellectuals are for." Is that really true?
Like most one-liners about what intellectuals are "for," it has a
certain snappy charm, but if we are being serious rather than merely
provocative or epigrammatic, do we really want intellectuals, any more
than any other category of our fellow citizens, to "lack all proportion"
and bring "disruption and conflict in [their] train"?
Judt's (qualified) endorsement of Hannah Arendt displays some of the
same preoccupations. He again notes that other critics have found her to
be "inaccurate in argument and to make a parade of learned allusion
without any detailed enquiry into texts." But he endorses her
nonetheless because, in his view, "she got the big things right," namely
her insistence that genocide was the "basis" of Nazism and that "the
Stalinist era was not a perversion of the logic of Historical Progress
but its very acme." And in his discussion of Arendt, the themes of not
forgetting and of being Jewish come together in a revealing way.
Although she was a wholly assimilated product of the German culture of
Bildung and Wissenschaft, Judt takes the fact of her
having been born in Königsberg to indicate her kinship with the
members of the "lost cosmopolitan communities" of Europe, intellectuals
who hailed from "vulnerable cities [that were] at once central and
peripheral -- Vilna, Trieste, Danzig, Alexandria, Algiers, even Dublin."
And so, he argues, Arendt, like other cosmopolitan "survivors," felt a
special obligation to combat the tendency to forgetting. "In Arendt's
case the responsibility, as she felt it, was made heavier by a
conscientious, and perhaps distinctively Jewish, refusal to condemn
modernity completely or to pass a curse upon the Enlightenment and all
its works." I am not quite sure I understand what he is saying in this
sentence, but on the face of things it is hard to see anything
"distinctively Jewish" about "refusing to condemn modernity completely
or to pass a curse upon the Enlightenment and all its works."
We may get some clarification of Judt's thinking here from the
conclusion of his essay on the Central European polyglot writer
Manès Sperber, whom he describes as by origin "a shtetl Jew from
Galicia":
The extermination of the past -- by design, by neglect, by good
intention -- is what characterizes the history of our time. That is why
the ahistorical memory of a marginal community that found itself in the
whirlwind may yet be the best guide to our era. You don't have to be
Jewish to understand the history of Europe in the twentieth century, but
it helps.
That closing mot is lightly turned, but it may speak volumes not
just about Judt's preoccupation with Jewishness but about his particular
construal of the advantages of "marginality." The implication is that
homelessness, exile and displacement sensitize one's social and cultural
antennae; perhaps the best cultural analysts (and maybe the best
historians?) are those who have moved on from their country of origin or
who belong to a group who never felt at home there in the first place.
It's a fashionable assumption, but there's no good reason to think it's
true. Displacement and grievance narrow as well as enlarge horizons, and
even being a European Jew in New York may bring with it parochialisms of
its own.
Judt's essays become more important and more troubling for being brought
together in one volume. The publication of Reappraisals certainly
confirms, were any confirmation still needed, his standing as a
significant figure in the public intellectual life of the contemporary
United States. I salute the range, the command and the courage displayed
in his writing. But spending a prolonged spell in his literary company
also leaves me feeling a bit uncomfortable. I feel that I would be
forced into banging the table in my turn if I wanted to enter the
conversations whose terms he partly sets. We need historians to play the
role that Judt so ably does, but perhaps we need them also to be a bit
less at ease with that role. The best works of history rarely yield
unambiguous support to any political cause or affiliation, and we look
to the vocabulary, register and cadence of good historical writing to
communicate that chastened sense of complexity that otherwise can
struggle to get itself heard in public debate. That's not everything, of
course. But it's not "nothing," either.
Stefan Collini's Common Reading: Critics, Historians, Publics has just been published by Oxford. He is professor of intellectual history and English literature at Cambridge University.
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