Things Noted Here and There
So, you thought that Henry Ford said:"History is bunk." Right? Well, Sharon Howard shows that even Henry Ford knew that it's more complicated and more interesting than that.
In"Native Ingenuity," Boston Globe, 4 September, Charles C. Mann, the author of 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus, challenges our perception that European settlers prevailed over native Americans because of their technological superiority. [ ... ]
For a good round-up of the best reflections on Katrina and the catastrophe on the Gulf coast, see: Scott McLemee,"After the Deluge," Inside Higher Ed, 6 September.
One of the historians best prepared to comment on New Orleans and the Katrina disaster is Ari Kelman of the University of California, Davis. He is the author of A River and Its City: The Nature of Landscape in New Orleans. Here are two of his current essays:
"City of Nature: New Orleans' Blessing, New Orleans' Curse," Slate, 31 August; and
"New Orleans: Not Going Anywhere," TPMCafe, 2 September. Thanks to Caleb McDaniel for the tip.
Nicholas Lemann, dean of the School of Journalism at Columbia, is an exceptionally good journalist. His"In the Ruins," New Yorker, 12 September, is pessimistically thoughtful about New Orleans' recovery, but one sentence is spectacularly objectionable:"Every convention can always be held somewhere else." The hell it can. Look, I've been to SHA conventions in New Orleans and in Houston. It's not the same thing. An SHA convention in Houston might as well be in Boisie, Idaho, Dayton, Ohio, or Atlanta, Georgia, for that matter. There's no replacing the Big Easy.
Finally, an investigative journalist reports that Chief Justice William Rehnquist actually died six days ago. FEMA just didn't get to him until Sunday.