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03 - AYENN POUKI.mp3
SILENCING THE PAST
POWER and the PRODUCTION of
HISTORY
Michel-Rolph Trouillot
“Human beings participate in history both as actors and narrators.
The inherent ambivalence of the word ‘history’ in many modern languages, suggests this dual
participation.
In vernacular use, history means both the facts of the matter and the narrative of those facts, both
‘what happened’ and ‘that which is said to have happened.’” p 2
How is History Silenced?
• there is a silencing in the making of sources - not everything gets remembered or recorded
• there is a silencing in the creation of archives - judgments made, and some evidence is lost or omitted
• narrators silence parts of their stories – personal memory
• not all historical evidence is included in the general version of “accepted past”
Acknowledging History
The West fails to recognize certain historical events
The Alamo
The events of the Battle of the Alamo are still debated
• Freedom-loving Americans v. American expansionists
• The “Second Battle of the Alamo” – the fight to acknowledge participants of all ethnicities
DENIAL
Holocaust deniers insist that one of the most horrific events
in history never happened
• "When I get to Australia in January.... they are going to wheel out all the so-called eyewitnesses…they can be very convincing. We're going to meet because she has that tattoo. I am going to say, 'You have that tattoo, we all have the utmost sympathy for you.
• But how much money have you made on it! In the last 45 years! Can I estimate! Quarter of a million! Half million! Certainly not less. That's how much you've made from the German taxpayers and the American taxpayers.' Ladies and gentlemen, you're paying $3 billion a year to the State of Israel. Compensation to people like Mrs. Altman.
She'll say, 'Why not, I suffered.' I'll say you didn't. You survived. By definition you didn't suffer. Not half as much as those who died....They suffered. You didn't. You're the one making the money.”
David Irving, Speech in Portland, OR. September 18, 1996.
The Haitian Revolution
Why has it been silenced?
Background• The Spanish in Hispaniola learned the
island was not at the source of gold - Hispaniola was converted into a farming region to provide food for the Spanish in other areas of the Caribbean and Central America
• African slaves were imported as early as 1508 and were soon the primary labor source
• French began to have an interest in the island by the early 17th century
• The French colony of Saint Domingue occupied the western 1/3 of the island of Hispaniola
• The eastern 2/3, Santo Domingo, belonged to the Spanish Empire
• By 1791 there were approximately 500,000 slaves and about 50,000 free people in San Domingue
– a 10:1 ratio
• 30,000 of those free people were people of color, both black and mulatto
The Spirit of Revolution
The American Revolution
The French Revolution
Robespierre
The Haitian Revolution
Dessaline Toussaint Boukman
The Leaders
1791-1804
• August 1791 – slaves in the north staged a revolt
• Over the course of the next thirteen years this uprising spread into a revolution that ended slavery and the French colonial government
• January 1804 – The nation of Haiti declared its independence
• The Ruins of Sans-Souci
Why is the Haitian Revolution so obscure compared to the American and
French Revolutions?
• The importance of an event or figure does not always receive the amount of attention deserved when written about.
“As sources fill the historical landscape with their facts, they reduce the room available for other facts.”(49)
SLAVERY
• “Colonization provided the most potent impetus for the transformation of European ethnocentrism into scientific racism.” (77)
• “…the practice of slavery in the Americas secured the black’s position at the bottom of the human world.” (77)
The whites of Europe and the Americas found it inconceivable that slaves could form and carry
out a revolution, even in the midst of such an event
EQUALITY• To acknowledge a trend of slave
resistance is to acknowledge slaves as humanity, and thus accept them as capable of thinking of themselves as human beings deserving of better treatment
• “To acknowledge resistance as a mass phenomenon is to acknowledge the possibility that something is wrong with the system.” (84)
• References made by the Bill of Rights and the Declaration of the Rights of Man that “men are created equal” pertained to a small number of white, landowning males
• “In 1791, there was no public debate on the record, in France, in England, or in the United States on the right of black slaves to achieve self-determination, and the right to do so by way of armed resistance.” (88)
• White can revolt in armed resistance, blacks cannot
Haiti on the Map
• “The Haitian Revolution expressed itself through its deeds, and it is through political practice that it challenged Western philosophy and colonialism” (89)
• When news of the uprising reached France in August of 1791, most refused to believe that the reports were true
• The possibility that slaves could have conceived of and organized an uprising on their own was unthinkable and unacceptable
• Outside influences must have been responsible for instigating such events (silencing history?)
• The suspect: royalists, British, mulattos, Republicans
AN UNCHANGING WORLD
• Views of the minority by the majority in Europe and the Americas did not improve with time
• Imperialists carved up Africa and Asia
• A successful revolution in Haiti was as unthinkable in 1903 as it had been in 1803
Paradise??Sometimes
SILENCING HISTORY
• History is silenced by countering it with generalities of an opposing view
• In regards to Haiti > military efficiency of the slaves, French susceptibility to yellow fever, and other outside influences factored heavily into Haitian success
• Was it “luck”?
• “The less colonialism and racism seem important in world history, the less important also the Haitian Revolution.” (98)
• The lack of historical writings to mention the Haitian Revolution contributes to the silencing of history
• Celebrations of the French Revolution and of slave emancipation by the French failed to stir interest in the Haitian Revolution
• Looking back on the events of history, overlapping events become linear, context fades away, what happened morphs into what is said to have happened
• “Discovery” of new lands by Europeans replaces “invasion” of inhabited lands
The Explorers
THE WORLD’S COLUMBIAN EXPOSISTION OF CHICAGO - 1893
• Columbus became a hero in the USA
• America told the world Columbus’s story
• Some historical significance downplayed, others completely silenced
Chicago’s World Fair
DISNEYLAND• “The value of historical product cannot be
debated without taking into account both the context of its production and the context of its consumption.” (146)
• Tourist attractions representing atrocities like slavery or the Holocaust
• “The crux of the matter is the here and now, the relationship between the events described and their public representations in a specific historic context.” (147)
• There is little concern over the public learning the wrong facts, the concern is focussed on public reaction rather than what they learn.
• No one wants the “wrong” reaction…
SILENCE
“We now know that narratives are made of silences, not all of which are deliberate or even perceptible as such within the time of their production. We also know that the present is no clearer than the past.” (152)
Other Works on Revoltions
1. Washington's Crossing by David
Hackett Fischer2. Citizens: A Chronicle of the French
Revolution by Simon Schama3. The Russian Revolution by Sheila
Fitzpatrick4. The Haitian Revolution 1789-1804 by
Thomas O. Ott