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On prefaces in history books

The most irritating part of a history book, I find, is its preface, in which the historian tries to justify his enlarging of the literature. Not that it isn’t fitting that he should give a justification – or, at least, an apology. On “big” topics, the literature is vast enough already; on “little” ones, it’s questionable why there should even be a literature (I mean, one financed by something other than the market. The authors whose books are bought for pleasure tend not to apologize in the way that I am about to describe). Again, typically, a justification or apology is in order. What’s irritating is how formulaic it usually is. “This book fills an important gap left by predecessors X, Y, and Z.” Then follow perfunctory, yet overblown, praises for X, Y, and Z, coupled with decrials of the inadequacy of X, Y, and Z. The most skillful writers make these decrials seem not terribly shrill. Yet this does not redeem the practice. If only one or two authors had ever followed this pattern, it might not have become so awful, but the fact that it is done consistently casts doubt on all who do it. It’s like crying wolf. So many plainly unnecessary decrials exist that I’ve stopped taking each new one seriously, no matter how urgently some gap might need to be filled, no matter if a wolf is present or not. The worst decrials are slander and false advertising; the best decrials are indistinguishable from the untrue ones.

Such are the feelings stirred up in me by pp. xv–xxxiv of Richard J. Evans’s The Coming of the Third Reich, the first installment in his gigantic trilogy about the Nazis. (Yes, I know that William Shirer’s lively classic has its shortcomings. That’s why I’m reading your book, Prof. Evans – that reason, and your book’s bright orange Penguin spine, and your reputation as an authority on why the discipline of history is worthwhile.)

Here, then, are two other prefaces that memorably fit the fatal pattern – in my opinion, more ingeniously than Evans’s does.
I do not apologize for producing a life of a king – and a life cast in traditional form – at a time when academic historians are rightly much concerned with exploiting the techniques of socio-economic analysis and the like. [That’s precious: And the like.] Biographies of monarchs still have their place, as well as their limitations. Nor do I apologize for producing a biography of seemingly so well-known a figure as Henry VIII. It is now sixty-five years since A.F. Pollard’s celebrated life of the king appeared; and none of the surprisingly few subsequent biographies has gone significantly beyond the limits of that pioneer work. In the meantime, a great deal has been written about the reign, not least by Pollard himself, which throws new light on the king.
[J.J. Scarisbrick, Henry VIII]
This book began as my attempt to update The Indiana Way, a book I published in 1986. But simply updating that book proved unwise. Only remnants of it appear here. This is a new book, with a new title, because Indiana has changed. So has the knowledge of our past. New scholarship in the last three decades has given us a better understanding.
[James H. Madison, Hoosiers: A New History of Indiana]
It is clever to seemingly give an apology without in fact apologizing; it is perhaps cleverer to seemingly withhold an apology while apologizing, as Scarisbrick does. And Madison apologizes only for bettering himself.

Three important victories

These last few nights have been good ones for Ecuadorian soccer.

On Thursday night, in Riobamba, our sub-20 team defeated Paraguay to advance to the second round of the South American championship, of which we are the hosts.

Our second goal was a golazo. Our first was narrowly offside, but no less valuable – without it, our qualification would have depended upon the infamous Drawing of Lots.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

In Guayaquil last night, Barcelona staged the Noche Amarilla, the season-starting gala. They played against Juan Aurich of Peru.

Last year, Barcelona’s “guest” player at this gala was the aged Ronaldinho of Brazil. This year it was the aged Uruguayan, Diego Forlán, the best player of the 2010 World Cup. Forlán put on a show, contributing to all three of Barcelona’s goals.

All night, the spectators were fervid. They ignited flares and fireworks. They unfurled a banner with this homage to Barcelona:

HAS NACIDO HUMILDE Y
ERES MÁS GRANDE QUE EL SOL


Meanwhile, a smaller but no less dense crowd was gathered in Sangolquí. Last year’s Libertadores runners-up, Independiente del Valle, were playing in the pre-group stage of that tourney against a Peruvian team, Municipal. When I turned to the YouTube broadcast, IDV were losing. “So much for Independiente this year,” I thought. Then, valiantly, IDV scored in injury time. The Ecuadorians jumped up and down. The Peruvians, disqualified, slumped on the field.

In limbo

I stayed at home every morning of this week. At bedtime each night, there was no dreading the next day (good). I met my daily writing quota in one attempt of four (not good). (Not terrible, either. My plan is to consistently meet the quota by the end of January.)

Ziva and Jasper are glad to have me more at home. They also are rather wearying in their demands.

Though my priority is to finish the dissertation, I’ve been looking for other jobs. I found a posting for an attractive job at a Purdue campus in the tiny town of Westville, Indiana, between LaPorte and Valparaiso. Karin & I looked at Westville on Google Maps as much as we could. Then, last weekend, we visited in person. It’s a nice-looking little town – as much of it, that is, as we could see (we were there in the dead of night). To the north of the town is the university (mostly parking lots); to the south, a prison. The town also has a Dairy Queen, a Subway, and a McDonald’s. I’m still unsure whether to apply for this job.

We stayed up late that night. Since then, I’ve had a cold. What little relief I’ve enjoyed is due to Mucinex. … Yesterday, Karin & I ate supper with a family from our church, but, due to my cold, I wasn’t my usual bouncy, bubbly self. I soldiered through it, though. The husband works as a graphic designer. I talked to him about fonts for several hours.

Quitting, pt. 2

Quite a few of the teachers were screening the presidential inauguration in their classrooms. I stopped and watched it for a few seconds. It seemed a big deal.

“Today is your last day on the job,” said one of the teachers. “Yours – and Obama’s.” We stood a little while, shaking our heads, tisking.

My last shift wasn’t more strenuous than usual, but it wasn’t easy, either. One teacher asked me to digitally scan more than 100 pages of a hefty volume. Other teachers dropped off a great jumble of course texts – Scarlet Letters, Of Mice and Mens, To Kill a Mockingbirds – for me to sort and put away. Others made last-minute photocopying requests. Others, I had to train in the ordering of supplies.

Two teachers, old men, were quite sad to see me leave. I offered to join them one day for a meal at their favorite nearby restaurant, the Oaken Bucket.

Then, very weary, I turned in my keys and left the high school. I stopped at the public library to visit Mary, who was working at the circulation desk. She was about to go to lunch.

I told her about my last shift at the high school.

“In honor of your quitting your job,” she said, “would you like me to buy you lunch?”

“Yes.”

“Where?”

“The Oaken Bucket,” I said. “No. Just kidding. Subway.”

After lunch, I went home, collapsed into an armchair, and snuggled with the kitties. From the indoors, I enjoyed the mist – my favorite weather.

Quitting

Yesterday was the last of a four-day weekend.

Tues–Fri, I’m putting in shifts at the high school and at IUSB. And then, no more shifts at the high school. I submitted my resignation last week.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

This is the third permanent job I’ve quit.

The first was at McDonald’s in the summer of 2000.

The other was at Bed Bath & Beyond, in Seattle, in 2004.

The annoying thing is that my employers always wish to know why I’m quitting. I’m always forced to re-live the anguish of my decision.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

In 2000, the reason I gave was that I was beginning my collegiate studies. It wasn’t the true reason. I took another job a couple of months later.

The McDonald’s people were wise to this, but they let it pass. They didn’t particularly care.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

In 2004, my stated reason – a true one – was that I intended to go to Ecuador to live (which I did, for about six months).

The BBB people cared about this because they needed to make sure that I wasn’t quitting because of some problem with the company. They really, really attend to detail over at BBB. (This explains why I never flourished there: the details that I had to attend to were, e.g., how this saucepan differed from that saucepan.)

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

To the high school officials, I’ve explained that I need to finish writing my dissertation (also true).

Incidentally, I’m sorrier to leave. The details that I must attend to in this job are ones that I do have an eye for.

On the other hand, at the school, there’s a lot of griping about who should have gotten this or that position. Everybody seems to have an opinion about what everyone else ought to do and how much everyone else ought to be paid. Since these opinions are constantly proclaimed near the photocopier, where I spend a great deal of time, the job is intensely wearying to me.

And that, also, is the truth.

Parfit, R.I.P.

The big name Derek Parfit died on January 2.

His New York Times obituary – not particularly interesting – is here.

His 2011 New Yorker profile – by Larissa MacFarquhar, whose other journalism I have praised – is here.

This profile is well worth reading. It’s outstanding. I used to have a PDF of it, which, now, I cannot find … which vexes me.

Year-change

“Right now, the birds are the least of our problems.”

This quotation is, in a nutshell, the political message of Alfred Hitchcock’s Foreign Correspondent (1940), the World War II thriller that Karin & I watched on New Year’s Eve. (Of course, Hitchcock would go on to release a movie with precisely the opposite message, in 1963.) Together with Joel McCrea (Sullivan’s Travels), the cast includes Laraine Day, who looks a little like Kristen Bell of Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and George Sanders, who looks very, very much like Jason Segel of Forgetting Sarah Marshall. Apart from this, there is nothing in common between those movies.

Today Karin didn’t have to go to work. Her friend Nora came over and we watched Wolf Children, a lovely cartoon movie from Japan about people who are able to turn themselves into wolves. Then Karin and Nora watched an episode of Sherlock, and I excused myself to read. The story that I chose featured a man able to turn into a wolf. It was not a very satisfactory story, but it evoked a few striking images; and so, tonight, I began to write a screenplay of it. (Lately, Karin & I have grown tired of being poor, and so we have been talking about writing something that will make a splash, and, with the proceeds, starting our own publishing company. Karin will be in charge of the finances, and I will do the typesetting. It’s pretty half-baked, really.)

Friends of ours moved away, bequeathing us two large bookcases. Now the apartment is much tidier and my books are more accessible. Jasper also benefits.