A CENTURY AGO, in 1915, D. W. Griffith famously prophesied that history books would be replaced by movies and that in a not-so-distant future time “the children in the public schools will be taught practically everything by moving pictures. Certainly they will never be obliged to read history again.” Instead of “wading laboriously through a host of books, and ending bewildered without a clear idea of what exactly did happen and confused at every point by conflicting opinions about what did happen, you will merely seat yourself at a properly adjusted window, in a scientifically prepared room, press the button, and actually see what happened.”1 His vision imagines a central role for motion pictures, which he understood in scientific terms. The technology of film, he believed, like scientific instruments, would be free of human bias and would therefore offer a perfectly transparent, objective view of the past.
In obvious ways, Griffith’s prophesy was wrong. Within a decade, motion pictures were appropriated by the burgeoning entertainment industry, not the public schools. And to this day professional academic history is alive and well. Professional historians in the academy continue to conduct research, engage in intellectual debate, and advance interpretations of the past, which often take the form of peer-reviewed journal articles and scholarly monographs. Students, from elementary school through college, continue to acquire historical knowledge by reading books. Furthermore, Griffith’s claim that “there will be no opinions expressed”2—a claim that betrayed his faith in the inherent objectivity of the filmic technology—has been roundly rejected by generations of film scholars who have illustrated the ways in which filmic narratives are always to some extent shaped by the economic logic of the industry and the ideological pressures and concerns of their moment of creation.3 That film could somehow reveal the past in a transparent, unbiased manner—as opposed to creating a representation of it—is itself pure fantasy.
Film did not hold the key to objectivity, as Griffith thought it might, nor did it become first and foremost a pedagogical tool for teaching those in the present about the past. And yet it would be a mistake to ignore the role cinema as an institution and audiovisual media more broadly have played in shaping the way people in the present visualize, come to understand, and ultimately feel invested in history. When one thinks about the past, what does one see? What images does one call up? For those in the “academy,” historical knowledge is derived from reading historical monographs and journal articles, from assessing the debates between historians over interpretations of issues in the past—say, the role of women in the new republic, the agency of slaves in the Deep South, or the racialization of immigrants at the turn of the twentieth century. And yet no matter how much academic history one has read, no matter how sophisticated one’s understanding of the complexities of the past, one’s image of it has inevitably been affected by the images and narratives that have circulated in mass culture. Even more, I want to suggest that one’s sense of the importance of the past, one’s sense that the past matters, that it has value or significance, has been fostered by these popular narratives that touch and move and provoke one, engaging one not only intellectually, but in affective ways as well. There are ways in which the cinematic experience—and other affectively engaged modes of representation of the past—can and do produce new forms of historical knowledge, as this book demonstrates.
In part, this book picks up some of the threads from my earlier publication Prosthetic Memory: The Transformation of American Remembrance in the Age of Mass Culture,4 in which I sought to describe seismic changes to both the practice of memory and its very constitution in the twentieth century. In that book, I argued that as a result of large-scale social changes associated with modernity—on the one hand massive migrations of people and on the other the burgeoning of a commodified mass culture that made possible a widespread dissemination of images and narratives about the past—it became increasingly possible for people to take on, in a personal way, memories of events through which they did not actually live. These “prosthetic memories” are personally felt public memories that result from the experience of a mediated representation of the past. The current book in its turn explores the ramifications of prosthetic memory for what constitutes history and the acquisition of historical knowledge in the contemporary, mass-mediated public sphere. In other words, it explores what an affective personal relationship to the past implies for the project of history. Although it builds on some of the theoretical insights of Prosthetic Memory, it turns its attention instead to the specific questions raised by the recent turn to affective modes of popular history.
This book thus explores popular modes of engagement with the past in contemporary mediated society and the ramifications of those modes of engagement for the projects of history and politics. It examines the relationship between structures of looking and feeling and the contemporary conditions of knowledge production and acquisition. It describes and examines what might be considered a cultural dominant—the experiential mode of engagement—recognizing its emergence as historically conditioned, a product of the current political and economic conjuncture. The omnipresence of this experiential mode bespeaks a widespread popular desire to bring things close and, in this context, to have a personal, felt connection to the past. The experiential mode is tactile and material in the bodily sense. The experiential is first and foremost an affective mode: when engaged this way, one’s body is touched, moved, provoked. Part of the work of this book is to think critically about the relationship between this mode of engagement and the acquisition of knowledge about the past, about the relationship between affect and cognition.
HISTORY AS REENACTMENT
It might seem odd to begin an exploration of new forms of historical knowledge by moving backward to the work of R. G. Collingwood (1889–1943), but his insights on historical consciousness and historical thinking were in many ways prescient. In his foundational work The Idea of History, originally published posthumously in 1943, Collingwood calls history “a special form of thought,” “a kind of research or inquiry,” the goal of which is to produce human self-knowledge. He emphasizes that the past as we encounter it in history books is one actively imagined by the historian. Although we tend to assume that the difference between the historian and the novelist is that the former hangs his imaginative creation or interpretation on “certain fixed points provided by the statements of his authorities,” ensuring that “the whole picture is constantly verified by appeal to these data,” Collingwood suggests otherwise. In historical thought, he claims, no fixed points are given: “just as there are properly speaking no authorities, so there are properly speaking no data.” Collingwood is by no means rejecting the project of history but is rather articulating a model of historical interpretation in which the historian must ultimately consider “whether the picture of the past to which the evidence leads him is a coherent and continuous picture, one which makes sense.” Despite the similarities he draws between the novelist and the historian, they differ in their goals, for the historian is making truth claims. As a result, he must follow several rules: his representation must be localized geographically and temporally, it must be internally consistent, and it must bear a specific relationship to evidence. But evidence, for Collingwood, is not some “ready-made historical knowledge.” In fact, what counts as evidence depends in part on the question being asked, and as the questions change, so too do the contours of evidence. He suggests that the project inevitably entails “using the present as evidence for its own past.” And since the present is ever changing, so too is what counts as evidence: writes Collingwood, “The evidence available for solving any given problem changes with every change of historical method and . . . the principles by which this evidence is interpreted change too.” What this means of course is that history is written and rewritten by each generation.5
For Collingwood, the work of the historian is best understood as historical reenactment: he “must re-enact the past in his own mind.”6 The example Collingwood uses to make this point is instructive, and I thus quote it at length:
Suppose for example he [the historian] is reading the Theodosian Code, and has before him a certain edict of an emperor. Merely reading the words and being able to translate them does not amount to knowing their historical significance. In order to do tha the must envisage the situation with which the emperor was trying to deal, and he must envisage it as that emperor envisaged it. Then he must see for himself, just as if the emperor’s situation were his own, how such a situation might be dealt with; he must see the possible alternatives, and the reasons for choosing one rather than another; and thus he must go through the process which the emperor went through in deciding on this particular course. Thus, he is re-enacting in his own mind the experience of the emperor; and only in so far as he does this has he any historical knowledge, as distinct from a merely philological knowledge, of the meaning of the edict.7
Collingwood is here suggesting that the historian must strive to re-create the parameters in which a thought occurred. For a thought from the past to be revived requires context: “it cannot repeat itself in vacuo, as the disembodied ghost of a past experience. However often it happens, it must always happen in some context, and the new context must be just as appropriate to it as the old. Thus, the mere fact that someone has expressed his thoughts in writing and that we possess his works does not enable us to understand his thoughts.”8 Simply understanding what the edict says cannot be considered historical knowledge; one can only gain historical understanding by contextualizing the reading in the moment in which it was first pronounced, by putting oneself in the position of the emperor. In other words, there is a strong experiential component to this endeavor. For the thoughts to emerge in the way they emerged in the past, the context must be in some ways conducive to that outcome. Historical parameters must inform the reading. In the case of reenactment, the parameters are artificial because they have been constructed for this purpose, yet they nevertheless offer a frame in which an experience occurs. Collingwood underscores the inevitable and necessary difference between these two moments of edict reading—the reenactment can never be identical to the original: “no one experience can be literally identical with another, therefore presumably the relation intended is one of resemblance only,”9 which is important for the experience to enable what he calls “historical thinking.”
Collingwood is here suggesting that there is a meta- or self-reflexive component to the production of historical knowledge. Historical knowledge requires more than immediate consciousness; there must be a self-reflexive component, a reflecting on the process of reenacting the experience. If one is not conscious that one is re-enacting an historical event, then one is not thinking historically. In other words, “Historical thinking is an activity . . . which is a function of self-consciousness, a form of thought possible only to a mind which knows itself to be thinking that way.”10
Writing before the mid–twentieth century, Collingwood could not have anticipated the widespread popularity of historical reenactment at the current conjuncture, nor was he focused on ordinary laypeople acquiring historical knowledge—he was explicitly theorizing the work of the historian. Nevertheless, his ideas about the acquisition of historical knowledge have particular resonance in a culture where the “experiential mode” is increasingly privileged as a powerful pedagogical tool. Furthermore, his insistence on mental reenactment as crucial to the project of history and the production of historical knowledge offers us a way to think critically about affective modes of historical engagement. What I suggest in the analyses in subsequent chapters is that historical knowledge in the form Collingwood describes is enabled in interesting and provocative ways by a range of popular representations of the past, situations where viewers are not merely being presented with reenactments of the past but are being forced to reflect on their own act of thinking as well. The historical representations I consider in this book provoke the kind of self-conscious historical thinking Collingwood describes and in so doing foster a kind of historical consciousness. Various stylistic and formal devices—interruptions in the visual field, alienating language and sounds, the calling of attention to mediating devices, technologies, and so on—have the effect of provoking the awareness that one is thinking.
This book considers what can be learned from popular, experiential genres of historical representation that cannot be learned from traditional monographs and scholarly articles. And it starts by acknowledging the enormous popularity of these affective experiential modes, as evidenced by the widespread popularity of reenactment, in both its performed and its filmic/televised incarnations. Memory scholar Raphael Samuel has described this preference as a “quest for immediacy, the search for a past which is palpably and visibly present.”11 As U.S. historians Roy Rosenzweig and David Thelen discovered when they conducted an elaborate, large-scale survey project to identify “how Americans understood and used the past,” the majority of Americans feel most in touch with the past when they believe they have some kind of immediate, direct access to it: when conversing with older family members who lived through a particular era or event or when visiting relics from the past at museums or historical sites. Rosenzweig and Thelen found that many Americans want to “experience history” in what they believe to be some kind of unmediated way; when faced with authentic objects from the past, individuals felt “transport[ed] . . . straight back to the times when history was being made.” These individuals were more compelled by experiential modes of history and tended to view history as an “active and collaborative venture.” School-based history, by contrast, according to those surveyed, was dry, the material predigested and disconnected in a profound way from the vital objects, documents, and events of the past.12 These Americans were more compelled by what might be described as experiential or affective modes of historical engagement. Indeed, this desire for a personal connection to the past, a kind of affective engagement,13 is fostered by many contemporary popular-history modes—film, television (in both the dramatic and reality TV formats), the experiential museum, and even certain history websites.
The fantasy that one might actually have unmediated access to the past by looking at or touching “authentic” objects recalls D. W. Griffith’s belief that the film screen might serve as window through which to view the past as it actually happened. Both speak to a widespread, earnest desire to engage in an intimate and personal way with the events, people, and situations of the past. Although Griffith imagined a visual library, as it were, a place where one could push a button and then see “a certain episode in Napoleon’s life,”14 the more contemporary fantasy voiced by Rosenzweig and Thelen’s respondents is quite literally to experience the past. Indeed, there are more and more opportunities to “witness,” interact with, and reenact the past. One can see this move in culture by the increasing presence of interactive environments, by the development of immersive exhibits in museums, and by the continued popularity of reenactments of all kinds—both “live” and on television in the form of reality history TV.
Vanessa Agnew has aptly termed this move to the experiential the “affective turn” in historical representation. Among other things, this turn reflects increased interest and investment in experiential modes of engagement with the historical past. What concerns Agnew is that those engaged by affective history—film or television viewers or participants in historical reenactments—will misread the past by projecting their own contemporary responses backward. She worries that the experiential mode fosters an easy identification with the past, one that loses a sense of the past as a “foreign country.”15 Similarly, Joan Scott worries that “when experience is taken as the origin of knowledge, the vision of the individual subject (the person who had the experience or the historian who recounts it) becomes the bedrock of evidence upon which explanation is built” and that “the project of making experience visible precludes analysis of the workings of this system and of its historicity.”16 The fear, in other words, is that treating experience as bedrock creates an illusion of unmediated transparency, obscuring the inevitably mediated nature of the present’s relationship to the past.
Furthermore, considering a role for affect in the acquisition of historical knowledge has been anathema to most academic historians, for whom the proper mode of historical engagement is analytical and distanced, cognitive rather than emotional. And yet some historians, in particular those working on histories of the Third Reich and the Holocaust, have begun to articulate a case for the importance of affect in both the production and transmission of historical knowledge. In The Years of Extermination, the second volume of his monumental account of the Holocaust, Saul Friedländer describes the importance of the affective quality of Jewish testimony:
Up to this point the individual voice has been mainly perceived as a trace, a trace left by the Jews that bears witness to and confirms and illustrates their fate. But in the following chapters the voices of diarists will have a further role as well. By its very nature, by dint of its humanness and freedom, an individual voice suddenly arising in the course of an ordinary historical narrative of events such as those presented here can tear through seamless interpretation and piece the (mostly involuntary) smugness of scholarly detachment and “objectivity.” Such a disruptive function . . . is essential to the historical representation of mass extermination and other sequences of mass suffering that “business as usual historiography” necessarily domesticates and “flattens.”17
Not only do these voices bear witness, as others have argued, but they quite literally disrupt the neat and contained parameters of historical representation in ways Friedländer believes necessary to convey a history of mass extermination and mass suffering. Dominick LaCapra has similarly suggested that “historiography involves an element of objectification, and objectification may perhaps be related to the phenomenon of numbing in trauma itself.”18 In other words, both accounts suggest that for certain kinds of history—history of mass trauma in particular—the conventions of written academic history and its investment in objectivity not only are inadequate to the task but actually work against the production of historical knowledge.
In another vein, some historians, most notably Frank Ankersmit and Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, have in different ways attempted to theorize historical experience as it occurs in an encounter with an object from the past—Ankersmit for the historian himself or herself and Gumbrecht for the layperson. Like Collingwood, Ankersmit is here suggesting that “there is also such a thing as ‘intellectual experience’ and that our minds can function as a receptacle of experience no less than our eyes, ears or fingers.” But he is careful to explain that this experience is not one of reliving the past, but one that “pulls the face of the past and the present together in a short but ecstatic kiss.” Importantly, too, Ankersmit is interested in the role historical experience plays for the historian, not for the layperson; “the past comes into being only thanks to and by historical experience. . . . Sublime historical experience is the experience of a past breaking away from the present. The past is then born from the historian’s traumatic experience of having entered a new world and from the awareness of irreparably having lost a previous world forever.”19 Gumbrecht, by contrast, is less focused on the historian’s experience, describing instead what he sees as “the presentification of past worlds” orchestrated by “techniques that produce the impression (or, rather, the illusion) that worlds of the past can become tangible again.” Importantly, though, presentification, “the desire for presence,” as he articulates it, is not about locating the “meaning” of historical objects but rather about “mak[ing] us imagine how we would have related intellectually and with our bodies, to certain objects (rather than ask what those objects ‘mean’) if we had encountered them in their own historical everyday worlds.”20 Those experiences, he suggests, have pedagogical value.
There is a profound popular desire to touch and be touched by history, and, as Ankersmit and Gumbrecht suggest, this desire need not automatically be regarded as naive. This book, which focuses on popular, audiovisual representations of the past, explores the complexity of being touched by history. It is here that I see Collingwood’s insights as particularly useful. His account of the historian’s method as a kind of mental historical reenactment that entails self-consciousness about that endeavor provides a model for an experiential or embodied engagement with the past that is something other than an actual unmediated experience of it. In other words, reenactment as a mode or, in Collingwood’s case, as a methodology does not inevitably foster the illusion that one is actually inhabiting the past. For Collingwood, historical knowledge is the result of conscious activity, “a form of thought possible only to a mind which knows itself to be thinking that way” (emphasis added here). The popular history formats that I consider here exploit the experiential component in ways that foster a cognitive or intellectual awareness that one is engaged in this kind of inquiry.
This book is meant as neither a celebration nor a critique of “affective historiography,” but it does insist that the experiential or affective mode, in conjunction with more explicitly cognitive modes, can play a role in the acquisition of historical knowledge. For Collingwood, reenactment is an act of imagination, but I suggest that by describing it as experiential, he betrays the inevitably affective quality of the experience of mental reenactment, which becomes the grounds for the self-reflective historical thinking that it induces. In the cases I describe, I attempt to theorize the range of ways affect is mobilized: at times fostering closeness with characters and scenarios depicted and at others doing the opposite. Moreover, I argue that in order for real historical knowledge to be produced, the affective engagements that draw the viewer in must be coupled with other modes that assert the alien nature of the past and the viewer’s fundamental distance from it. Considering a wide range of history texts—historical fiction films, TV historical dramas, reality history TV, virtual history exhibits—this book engages with the dynamics of the experiential to explain both what it makes possible for people and what it obscures or refuses. It suggests not only that these popular engagements pose some fundamental challenges for our sense of what constitutes history in the twenty-first century but also that academic historians need to take more seriously the kind of work popular media can do in the production of historical knowledge. This shift in approach requires in part a much more self-reflexive look at the specific limitations posed by traditional academic historiography.
FORM: THE SHAPE OF HISTORY
In considering popular genres of historical representation, I begin with the premise that form is crucial in the production of knowledge and meaning: new or nontraditional forms and formats make new kinds of knowledge possible. All written history—even that written by academic historians—is inherently narrative, carefully plotted, fundamentally an imaginative construction on the part of the historian. Historians such as Hayden White, Alun Munslow, Frank Ankersmit, Jerome de Groot, and Robert Rosenstone have been at the forefront of rethinking history’s epistemological basis, in part through a careful consideration of form. Indeed, the journal Rethinking History was itself created to address these issues: “Re-thinking history,” Alan Munslow argues in the journal’s first volume, “requires us not only to question empirical foundationalism along with the cognitive functioning of history’s literary form, but then to ask: do new models, theories, methods, constructions/deconstructions add to our historical understanding of why events or actions occurred?” From the outset, the journal was committed to asserting that form is instrumental in making history legible in the present. Of the journal’s agenda, Munslow writes, “By Re-thinking history I mean expanding the study of the nature of history in all its forms and conceptualization. Re-thinking it must mean questioning the boundaries of how we study the past.”21
An important first step is to recognize historical writing as itself a genre with certain established rules and conventions, which opens it up for potentially productive textual analysis. Munslow, for instance, has described in detail the way in which the “author-historian” constructs “story-space,” which greatly affects the truth claims the narrative is able to make. Munslow here draws on the concept of diegesis, which in film theory refers to the world created in the film. He explains the difference between “extradiegetic” and “intradiegetic” narration in terms of how visible the “author-historian” makes him- or herself within the narrative. In extradiegetic narration, the author-historian “exist[s] outside the story and telling,” which produces the illusion of objectivity, whereas in intradiegetic narration he or she is “a part of both the story and its telling,”22 thus coming clean about the narrative’s constructed nature. What I would like to emphasize is that these different forms of narration and the different form of “story-space” each produces also have ramifications for the reader’s position in relation to the unfolding narrative; in other words, the extent to which the reader is invited into that diegetic space—or held out of it—has ramifications for the reader’s sense of connection to or intimacy with the past. Furthermore, recognizing historical writing as itself a genre with certain established rules and conventions makes it possible to imagine that there might be other genres of historical representation that have different sets of rules and conventions. These other genres might offer different avenues to or forms of knowledge about the past.
The privileging of form, what one might even call aesthetics, is not necessarily reactionary—especially if one is mindful of the historical, social, political, and economic context in which particular forms emerge and come to dominance. Form is indeed material, connected to larger social processes; new emergent social formations, or what Raymond Williams called “structures of feeling,” are first palpable through cultural or artistic forms. Furthermore, the form a text takes has ramifications for its mode of address to viewers. Different formal choices can also disorient or provoke or wake up the audience, as Berthold Brecht suggested with his account of the “alienation effect” in drama.23
Formal innovations, I am thus suggesting, have both epistemological and political ramifications. In The Politics of Aesthetics, Jacques Rancière insists that the artistic or aesthetic sphere is intimately connected to politics in that it conditions or shapes the realm of what is thinkable. Within any given society at a particular historical moment, there is what he calls a “distribution of the sensible” “that determines a mode of articulation between forms of action, production, perception, and thought.” The aesthetic realm is important to Rancière because he understands it to set the terms for what can be said and understood within a particular society at a particular historical moment. Aesthetics, here, is “a delimitation of spaces and times, of the visible and the invisible, of speech and noise, that simultaneously determines the place and the stakes of politics as a form of experience.”24 It is thus first within the realm of the aesthetic, through “aesthetic practices,” that new formal arrangements in the social world more broadly can be represented and made thinkable.
Artistic practices—which of course would include filmic, televisual, and digital productions—are important to Rancière in that they represent “ways of doing and making” that intervene in the general ways of doing and making within a society, beyond the aesthetic realm: they have the potential, in other words, to intervene in and challenge or reconfigure the prevailing “distribution of the sensible.” To illustrate this point, Rancière describes what he identifies as the three main regimes of art in the Western tradition: the ethical regime of images, the representative regime of arts, and the aesthetic regime of arts.25 In the first, artistic practice is tied to the community’s ethos. The representative regime, in contrast, is not tied to moral, religious, or social criteria, but rather to specific, mainly mimetic, functions, adhering to conventions regarding acceptable subject matter. The third and by far most radical is the aesthetic regime, which occurs at the beginning of the nineteenth century and calls into question the implicit hierarchies and valuations of the representative regime in terms of genre, subject matter, and so forth. By challenging the hierarchization of the representative regime, the aesthetic regime necessarily asserts the fundamental equality of represented subjects. Rancière thus suggests that art literalizes the concept of equality in a way that makes it available for politics. But his claims have ramifications beyond politics; in a fundamental way, he is talking about how form and formal innovations can produce new thoughts.
Walter Benjamin’s classic writings on photography and film also help demonstrate how aesthetic practices can intervene in the “distribution of the sensible”—to define, in Rancière’s words, “what is visible or not in a common space, endowed with a common language.”26 Benjamin, writing in the 1930s in response to modernity and its new technologies as well as to the rise of fascism in Germany, believed that new visual technologies—and their attendant practices and conventions—produced new kinds of perception, new ways of seeing. Human perception, he suggests, is neither static nor natural but rather conditioned by history and thus changeable over time: “Just as the entire mode of existence of human collectives changes over long historical periods, so too does their mode of perception. The way in which human perception is organized—the medium in which it occurs—is conditioned not only by nature, but by history.”27
For Benjamin, then, photography fundamentally alters human perception. The camera, he writes, “furthers insight into the necessities governing our lives by its use of close-ups, by its accentuation of hidden details in familiar objects, and by its exploration of commonplace milieu through the ingenious guidance of the camera.” The camera offers unprecedented access to that which remains invisible to the naked eye. The technology itself thus enables a new kind of inquiry: “With the close-up, space expands; with slow motion, movement is extended. And just as enlargement not merely clarifies what we see indistinctly ‘in any case’ but brings to light entirely new structures of matter, slow motion not only reveals familiar aspects of movements, but discloses quite unknown aspects within them. . . . Clearly it is another nature which speaks to the camera as compared to the eye.”28 For Benjamin, this bringing into visibility is both literal and metaphoric: the close-up reveals heretofore unseen details of the world we inhabit, but photography also more broadly offers access to the “way things are,” enabling its viewers to see through the reified structures of society that amount to a prison world. The detritus of capitalism and its oppressive structures are offered up visually for all to see in a way not possible without the mediation of the photograph.29
Recognizing that the new technology initiated new modes of engagement with art, Benjamin posits the notion of “distraction” to understand how the “masses” engaged with cultural artifacts. He writes, “The greatly increased mass of participants has produced a different kind of participation.” Whereas the bourgeois mode of engagement with art was characterized by deep concentration, the masses were often criticized for their distracted mode of reception, treating the artwork as entertainment. Benjamin, however, challenges this characterization, recognizing that both modes involve a kind of absorption: whereas the contemplator is absorbed by the work of art, a member of the distracted mass “absorbs the work of art” into him or herself. Because Benjamin is acutely aware of the relationship between perception and technology, he posits film as the form of art that mobilizes the masses and can thus tackle the most difficult tasks: “Reception in distraction—the sort of reception which is increasingly noticeable in all areas of art and is a symptom of profound changes in apperception—finds in film its true training ground.”30 He was able to make this claim because the film he was interested in was Soviet, not Hollywood. The American studio system was then developing the conventions of what would be called “classical Hollywood cinema,” a style that attempted to situate the viewer in a predetermined, fixed spectatorial position, incorporating him or her into the film’s narrative. The Hollywood style sought to produce a seamless viewing experience, minimizing the shock of cuts in order to pull the viewer into the film and into identification with the characters on screen. By contrast, Dziga Vertov’s and Sergei Eisenstein’s films were created with an overtly political agenda and used a variety of techniques to shock and disorient rather than to pacify or lull the viewer. Benjamin is particularly interested in the potentially revolutionary impact of montage, the piecing together of film so as to create a jarring or shocking experience for the viewer. Furthermore, he writes, “Film, by virtue of its shock effects, is predisposed to this form of reception.”31 It is very important to understand that Benjamin is not rejecting this mode of reception. He sees distraction as a potentially useful mode of engagement, suggesting that “the relation of distraction to absorption must be reexamined.”32
Gilles Deleuze’s essay “Image of Thought” provides a way to understand the potential power of distraction. Deleuze argues that a sensuous encounter, any encounter in which one has a physical embodied response to a sensuous stimulus, can be a productive catalyst to new thought. He suggests that recognition promotes complacency: if one recognizes something in the world, there is no need to think. But a sensuous encounter, he suggests, is different: “Something in the world forces us to think. This something is an object not of recognition but of a fundamental encounter. . . . It may be grasped in a range of affective tones. . . . In whichever tone, its primary characteristic is that it can only be sensed. In this sense it is opposed to recognition.”33 Because audiovisual texts’ and virtual spaces’ modes of address are often multisensuous—tactile, aural, visceral, visual—one can be provoked in ways one does not immediately recognize, ways that need to be processed, examined, in order to be understood. The encounter that can only be sensed forces the viewer into an active interpretive mode, a distracted state, which can be a critical first step toward the production of new knowledge or critical political consciousness. In other words, these encounters are triggered sensuously but demand cognitive processing, forcing the viewer to make sense of a particular affective bodily response. Such interruptions sometimes happen on the level of the sensible, taking the form of shock, perplexing the senses, and ultimately provoking cognitive processing.
When we are moved or touched or made to feel uncomfortable, we are prodded to think and make sense of that experience. When such affective engagements occur within a historical frame, new historical insights can be produced. Indeed, this is itself a way of theorizing the work of reenactment. Rather than dismissing the affective as an easier, more crowd-pleasing alternative to the cognitive, this work explores the relays that move between the affective and the cognitive, the way that affective or bodily provocations can lead to new thoughts, ideas, or historical insights. When those affective provocations occur within a historical narrative—whether in a film or a museum exhibit or a television series—the affective experiences are shaped by that frame so that the knowledge produced is contextualized, case specific, historical.
This book examines the ramifications of the distracted mode of engagement—one that never fully slips into absorption or identification—as an embodied and powerful mode of engagement that might be conducive to the acquisition of historical knowledge. I explore a particular mode of engagement solicited by a range of contemporary mass-cultural texts that uses affect to move viewers between absorption and distraction, an oscillation that I argue is particularly conducive to the acquisition of historical knowledge and even to the fostering of historical consciousness in the mass-mediated public sphere. These powerfully affective audiovisual texts have the power to draw viewers in through the logic of absorption, making the circumstances seem personally important, but their effectiveness as catalysts to historical thinking is predicated on the logic of distraction, where the viewer is forced out of the absorption, alienated from the material represented, the experience of which demarcates a sense of distance from the situation or circumstances represented. The assertion of distance pushes the viewer back into his or her own shoes, forcing him or her to reckon with or become conscious of his or her own thinking about the audiovisual material. Contemporary modes of historical representation change the way ordinary people understand history and acquire historical knowledge in our distracted age.
THE POLITICS OF AFFECTIVE HISTORY
Throughout this introduction, I have been describing affective forms of engagement, in particular the experiential mode and sensuous encounters. The pervasiveness of the experiential mode, a mode that is fundamentally affective, has drawn the attention of scholars and theorists in a range of disciplines from philosophy, English, anthropology, and history to cognitive and behavioral sciences and psychology. For some theorists, the attention to affect is part of the larger turn to a “new materialism,” which has called for a refocusing on material processes and the bodily as a corrective to the “linguistic” or “discursive turn” of the 1970s. The privileging of a discursively constituted subject occluded the materiality of the body, often with detrimental political effects. In their introduction to New Materialisms: Ontology, Agency, and Politics, Diane Coole and Samantha Frost identify as an “urgent reason” for turning to materialism “the emergence of pressing ethical and political concerns that accompany the scientific and technological advances predicated on new scientific models of matter and, in particular, of living matter.” Furthermore, they argue that the “dominant constructivist orientation to social analysis is inadequate for thinking about matter, materiality and politics in ways that do justice to the contemporary context of biopolitics and political economy.”34 Affect theory might be considered a branch of the new materialism, but it is one that focuses extensively on the bodily. Here, too, the insistence on the materiality of the body and the realness of one’s experience no matter how mediated might be read as a reaction to post-structuralism and theorists such as Jean Baudrillard, who insist that in the contemporary, media-saturated world “the real” has been replaced by simulation. The popularity of the affective or experiential mode is a reaction and a rebuke to postmodern and post-structuralist accounts that describe the contemporary world as immaterial, the play of simulations and signs. What is needed, then, and what I hope this book in part provides, is a more sophisticated account of experience in the contemporary media landscape where one engages with or “experiences” mediated representations all the time.
Much of the current scholarship on affect—and the strain most relevant to theorizing its role in the production of knowledge—takes its lead from Baruch Spinoza. This line of thought proposes that any attempt to understand subject formation, knowledge production and acquisition, or political engagement must take into account our status as sentient, embodied beings. Proclaiming that “no one has yet determined what the body can do,”35 Spinoza likens affect to potential, suggesting that it has an intimate and even causal relationship to the body’s potential to act. Because the body is fundamentally embedded in its social world, external provocations compel it to act or think or process or question. Affect is ongoing, mobile, and therefore inherently unfinished or unfinishable. Spinoza’s conviction that affect functions like potential, the “not yet,” renders it as a catalyst to action and a crucial component of political activation, which along with ethics is central to his project. My interest in affect, like that of many other scholars, arises from the conviction that it is a catalyst to new thought or to action, pressing the individual to process a particular experience intellectually, to grapple with that which has previously been unthought. This, of course, is what Deleuze attempts to theorize as a kind of encounter that produces new thought.
Affect is by definition amorphous, which makes defining or providing an account of it quite difficult. As Melissa Gregg and Gregory Seigworth describe, there is no originary state for affect: “Affect arises in the midst of in-between-ness: in the capacities to act and be acted upon . . . in those intensities that pass body to body.”36 But those interested in affect’s relationship to politics have chosen to emphasize not so much what it is as what it does. It moves the individual in a bodily and or cognitive way and is also that experience of being moved. Because it does not reside in a body but rather passes through it, affect is profoundly social.37 Unlike the more familiar term emotion, the term affect describes something less fixed, less shaped and determined by cultural norms and valuations. It is the experience of being touched or moved before that sensation is recognized or codified into a particular emotion or feeling. Sara Ahmed registers affect’s dynamic and generative quality, saying, “We are moved by things. And in being moved we make things.”38 For Ahmed, the things “made” are crucial to subjectivity and social belonging, taking the form of new insights or a sense of political connectedness. Proximity, she argues, plays a crucial role in the production and dissemination of affect in that the closer one gets to something, the greater its capacity to move or affect one. Importantly, the affect that moves one to political engagement or political consciousness is not always positive. In this case, affect is a crucial precursor to politics. Both Lawrence Grossberg and Deborah Gould emphasize the centrality of affect to political projects.39 People are most motivated to action by those issues in which they feel a personal stake.
I share these scholars’ appreciation for the political significance of affect, and I hope to inscribe my analysis of history within this frame. The importance of affect to history has emerged at the margins of many important texts. Indeed, many historians embrace the political project of making visible the agency of everyday people. Jerome de Groot as well as Rosenzweig and Thelen have documented the widespread desire to feel a connection to the past.40 There can be a political dimension to feeling connected to history—to feeling that the past matters in an intimate individual way. This book is most directly concerned with the ways in which affective engagements within the context of a historical representation can be a strategy for activating one’s own personal stake in that knowledge, for making the past matter. A personal stake in knowledge about the past can in turn catalyze one’s desire to engage in politics, to work against injustices in the present.
In this book, I consider the various ways in which affect is mobilized, solicited, and produced within and by popular representations of the past in a range of media. In other words, I consider the effects of affective provocations within a historical frame. As I suggested previously, many academics, with the important exception of those mentioned in my discussion here, tend to be wary of the use of affect in historical representation. A commonly voiced concern about the mobilization of affect or experiential modes of address in historical films, at museums, or at historic sites is that its goal is simply to engender thrills or fears, much like a theme park or Disney World aims primarily to entertain the consumer and generate profit for the studio or institution. In this way, these texts and sites often oversimplify complicated historical events into facile stories of good versus evil, ultimately working to make the consumer feel good about the experience so that he or she will come back or do it again. In other words, the concern is that if emotions are being played upon, the resulting historical representation will necessarily be reductive and manipulative. Many popular historical reenactments, historic sites,41 and audiovisual texts produced by the Hollywood film and television industries do indeed bear out these concerns. However, it seems similarly reductive to dismiss out of hand all mass-cultural attempts at historical representation that invoke affective engagement on the part of their spectators or participants. As this book demonstrates, affect can be engendered in complicated, contradictory, and unexpected ways to produce both historical knowledge and what I describe as a historical consciousness more broadly.
There are obvious and qualitative differences between the experience of living through an event and experiencing a mediated representation of it. Nevertheless, when the individual is brought into contact with a mediated representation, the body responds. Even in the presence of a mediated representation, the body can be moved, touched, affected. The experience of the mediated representation is itself lived; it is a real experience. In my analysis of specific texts in the following chapters, I treat moments of engagement with mass-cultural representations of the past—both virtual and on screens—as moments of encounter, where one’s body is provoked and addressed. In these cases, an affective response is elicited when one is brought into proximity to a historical event. Although one is not reenacting the event per se, one is forced into an encounter with the situation and its logics. Importantly, the moments of affective engagement that I describe take place within a narrative frame or a set of narrative conditions established by the film, television show, or website. The affect, in other words, is not free floating but reverberates in a context that is shaped by parameters that the narrative sets. In other words, affect operates within constraints determined by the formal properties of a given text—from generic conventions to mise-en-scène and sound. The meanings produced by the affective engagement are shaped by the parameters—historical and formal—that shape the narrative. And yet because this engagement is played out on one’s own body, it moves and resonates in ways unique to that body and its own historical specificity. In other words, even as the historical frame orients one’s affective response, the fact that it takes place within the individual means that the experience is not the same for everyone.
As I argue more extensively in chapter 1, most critiques of history on film and of popular history more broadly focus on the problem of identification: locked into an identification with a particular character, spectators are lulled into a sense that they can easily understand what life was like for that historical protagonist. That illusion of understanding often takes the form of identifying with the other’s victimization, which, instead of provoking further inquiry into the social conditions that produced the victimization, turns one’s gaze inward on the self. In the chapters that follow, I examine strategies that produce affect, but not in the service of facile identification. I consider situations where one is forced into an affective experience—a kind of encounter with a historical predicament—but, again, not in the context of identifying with a character. Rather, in these moments one’s body is provoked or challenged into some kind of analysis; through a sensuous provocation, one is forced into self-conscious reflection on the situation represented, the experience of which is akin to Collingwood’s historical thinking.
There is, of course, a political dimension to this kind of historical thinking, as I discussed earlier. In “Theses on the Philosophy of History,” Benjamin writes, “There is no document of civilization which is not at the same time a document of barbarism,” making the task of the historical materialist “to brush history against the grain.” For Benjamin, knowledge begins with a critique of historicism’s claims for “enduring truths.” Moreover, Benjamin asserts that history as such exists only in the present, in the connecting of the present moment to a moment in the past; the historian “grasps the constellation which his own era has formed with a definite earlier one.” History, as here imagined, offers a glimmer of hope for redemption in a barbarous world. The past, says Benjamin, “can be seized only as an image which flashes up at the instant when it can be recognized,” and it is the historian’s task “to seize hold of a memory as it flashes up at a moment of danger.”42 To treat the representations of the past in the mass-cultural texts that I am analyzing in this book as memories that “flash up in a moment of danger” is to recognize the urgency of history for the present.
. . .
The first chapter, “Theorizing Affective Engagement in the Historical Film,” argues that some historical films with strong affective components engage the viewer in ways that are not captured by the standard notion of identification. I here propose the idea of “affective engagement,” which unlike identification is not premised on abandoning oneself or one’s subject position; with affective engagement, I suggest, the viewer is encouraged to feel himself or herself while encountering up close something foreign. Historical texts with an affective mode of address invite viewers not so much to put themselves in the protagonist’s place but rather to see the protagonist’s world up close; they are positioned not to be the protagonist but to listen to him or her. I explain how this is enabled on the one hand by the complicated mode of address staged by experiential museums and audiovisual texts and on the other by the expectations or “rules” or truth claims that accompany any representation of the past as history. In this chapter, I analyze the films Milk (Gus Van Sant, 2008), Hotel Rwanda (Terry George, 2004), and Good Night and Good Luck (George Clooney, 2005)—all of which make visible the mediations that are part of the story. In both cases, we as viewers are forced to be listeners, and our act of listening produces a new understanding of the historical situations represented.
The second chapter, “Waking the Past: The Historically Conscious Television Drama,” focuses on the television historical drama, arguing that it has the capacity to produce knowledge about the past that eludes more traditional, written history. By attending to the form of these shows—their serial nature, their resistance to closure, their complicated use of sound, images, and dialogue—I make claims about what role form plays in the production of historical knowledge and historical consciousness. I look at the television series Deadwood (HBO, 2004–2006), Mad Men (AMC, 2007–2015), and Rome (HBO, 2005–2007) to assess the kinds of historical knowledge that are produced and to track the relays between affective and cognitive knowledge. But I also consider the ways in which these shows rely on style to convey a sense of the past. Style, which is formal and atmospheric, can provoke a range of affective responses from nostalgia to disgust and thus can help position viewers to understand the historical period represented in unexpected ways.
Chapter 3, “Encountering Contradiction: Reality History TV,” explores the contemporary desire to experience or feel the past, as manifested by the popularity of experiential museums, reenactments, and historical television and film. This popular desire to bring things close, enabled by mass-cultural technologies of representation and the Internet, challenges the epistemological premise of history as primarily a distanced intellectual engagement with past events. The new experiential modes often have an affective dimension, offering up history as something that can be lived or at least imported into one’s life. This chapter explores the contours of affective history by considering the controversial though popular television genre of reality history TV, in which individuals from the present are cast into the past: the participants are made to abandon all aspects of the present, from clothing and personal effects to dispositions, and then placed in a setting from the past where they must live as their historical predecessors did. The chapter explores the way participants and viewers encounter the past in these shows and the range of ways affect functions for both groups. I argue here that because participants are unwilling to reenact certain unsavory aspects of the past, the shows in some ways share the logic of alternative history.
The fourth chapter, “Digital Translations of the Past: Virtual History Exhibits,” explores the political dimensions of an affective engagement with the past or, more specifically, under what circumstances history in this format has the potential to politicize viewers. This chapter considers some affective engagements with history on the Internet to assess the way in which they intend not only to teach history but to provoke a kind of progressive political consciousness. I look, for instance, at the virtual exhibit The Secret Annex Online on the Anne Frank Museum website; the Kristallnacht exhibit designed by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and hosted on the virtual world Second Life; and the Embodying Empathy project at the University of Manitoba Media Lab.
This book is by no means an exhaustive study of popular representations of the past, nor does it offer any kind of comprehensive analysis of the historical film as a genre. It is not a thorough-going study of history in popular media. Instead, my project is at once more modest and more ambitious. I am attempting to take seriously and theorize what has emerged as a new cultural dominant in popular representations of the past and, by looking closely at a handful of specific cases, to identify specific instances where these logics work to produce historical thinking and to foster historical consciousness. This book looks in earnest at what this turn to the experiential—as it is activated by film, television, and experiential history websites—means for people’s sense of the past and its relevance to the present and to politics as well as what it means for the project of history more broadly conceived.
In contrast to arguments that dismiss mediated bodily engagement with the past as purely presentist, lacking the sense of distance considered necessary to historical engagement, this book asks what such a mode of engagement with the past makes visible to viewers and what forms of knowledge or historical consciousness it makes possible. It theorizes the complicated question of whether one’s own body can be a site of knowledge about the past. Experiences, whether they are mediated or not, are felt and interpreted by the body and thus feel real. Understanding this mode of engagement is crucial to understanding how history works in the contemporary mediated public sphere. My point is neither to criticize academic history nor to suggest that it be replaced with popular history; clearly, they serve different audiences. Nevertheless, to treat all popular engagements with the past as watered-down, oversimplified melodrama misses an opportunity to think productively about how ordinary people use the past and how contemporary technologies and modes of perception have the potential to provoke historical thinking. I am suggesting that even these mass-media representations of the past have the capacity to produce historical knowledge and to foster the historian’s mindset, a kind of historical consciousness. As the chapters suggest, this kind of historical thinking can be fostered by popular mass-cultural texts that take advantage of each medium’s formal properties to orchestrate complicated modes of engagement with the past. Understanding these modes of engagement is crucial to understanding how history works in the contemporary mediated public sphere.