Mis-Using the Terms, "Counterfactual History" and "Alternate History": “Cold Case Hammarskjold" and "The 1619 Project"
Despite the recent arrival
of counterfactual history into the western cultural mainstream, confusion still surrounds the topic.
Recent media articles reveal
that, while writers are increasingly using terms like “counterfactual history”
and “alternate history,” they often fail to understand exactly what they are.
Some writers use the terms
positively:
In her review
of the new documentary film, “Cold Case Hammarskjold,” Ann Hornaday,
describes it as “a
cut-and-dried murder mystery that becomes a gnarly thicket of hegemonic
ruthlessness, racism, shadowy cabals and a proudly unreliable narrator, this
trippy junket to the dark side is ideally suited to our conspiracy-minded age.
Believe it or not — but see it, if only to experience the most proficient
exercise in alternate history this side of “Serial.”
Hornaday’s review is flawed in two ways.
First the documentary (which looks fascinating) does not alter
the course of history. It merely
purports to uncover the shadowy forces behind the occurrence of real historical
events unknown to the general public (and still to be exposed). As a result, the film is better
described as a “secret history.”
Second, the comparison to the hit podcast (and newly released
streaming series), Serial, is misguided,
as it, too, does not alter the course of, but merely speculates about other
possible real causes behind real historical events.
By contrast, other writers have invoked counterfactual history in pejorative fashion:
In response to the New York Times recent “1619 Project,”
certain conservative critics complained that the account of American history
was tantamount to “counterfactual”.
Here the term counterfactual functions as a synonym for “distorted,”
“tendentious,” or “illegitimate.”
In a story
published on the evangelical Christian news site, One News Now, Dr. Richard Land of the
Southern Evangelical Seminary noted that he “isn't buying the Times’ attempt at revisionist history,” declaring “’I certainly say yes, that
the history of slavery still impacts the U.S. But the idea that we were founded
in 1619 is counterfactual to history.’”
Craig Pirrong, who blogs as
the “Streetwise Professor,” wrote in a response
to the 1619 projecct that “the nation has struggled with
the legacy of slavery, and race relations are strained at best. But it is for
precisely that reason that inflammatory…counterfactual campaigns like the 1619
Project are wrong, divisive, and destructive.”
I’m less interested in explaining, and mostly
interested in flagging, these misuses of the concepts of counterfactual and
alternate history. They reveal that no matter how much progress the twin fields
have made in garnering popular attention, they remain surrounded by
misconceptions.
Perhaps the appearance of new alternate history
dramas in the coming months (The Hunt,
The Plot Against America, and the final season of The Man in the High Castle) will help solidify what “counterfactual”
really means in a historical context.
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