The Teaching of History: Dramas 'BOW LOW TO CICERO! ' Ily PALMER THROOP HISTORY as currently ,con- Bceived by many is the last refuge of stupidity. One does not need mathematics, biology, chemn- istry, or even weak aesthetic sen- sibilities to learn that a medieval king died of acute indigestion. Having learned it, one is in pos- session of a historical fact--and quite ready to forget it. At least our great-grandfathers dignified this procedure with the belief that we had a faculty of memory which could be trained with miscellaneous historical lum- ber relating to dates, battles, and deaths of prominent persons. Oc- casionally the lumber was berib- boned with feminine garters so that an anguished and fact-be- devilled freshman could write: "Louis XV had one queen and fif- teen mattresses." sAlas, the faculty of memory has declined and fallen along with the Roman Empire. No longer can a stern professor exhort a suffering student to memorize battle dates in order to remember telephone numbers, unless he chooses to tor- ture him with mnemonic devices that have the blessings of contem- porary psychologists, and which had best be left to the same psy- chologists. HISTORY in our Michigan High schools Is frequently assigned to the athletic coaches, presum- ably upon the hypothesis that there is some casual relationship between muscularity and the dis- mal past. To this low state has fallen the study exalted by Cicero as the master discipline for inculcating the civic virtues from which the grandeur of Rome derived. And let us not smile too condescend- PROFESSOR PALMER THROOP Yet the communists appear -to feel the necessity of aiding the historically ineluctable in un- Marxian ways. Their policies, not- ably in their agricultural crisis, do not Impose strategies derived from the Commandments that bring the Earthly Paradise. PAST experience, then, examined purposively to delineate, at least, the possibilities and proba- bilities .of relationships between economic, social, political, mili- fto, econtributesanto h succes of human enterprise that must be guided by aplicy This, it seems, must remain true until that great gittin'-up morn- ing when the neurologists tell the social psychologists what they may predict. Until this glorious and dtatevent an ability toeau needs must remain an irksome necessity, lacking, unfortunately,' the exhilirating precision of the mthe beudle ncomplexities ofbhu- man conflict. THE CHEMIST may protest, "And what, pray, is the speci- tic gravity of Napoleon? Please, please, put Waterloo in a test- tuand make It go all over again." Can, indeed, the ability to scrutinize the past be systema- tized, can it really be trained to distinguish significantly between possibilities and degrees of prob- ability? Necessity forces the attempt, even though the historian may not aspire to the white-coated canon- ization of the chemist in the ciga- rette adds. Europe, Asia, South America, Africa, the whole reel- ing globe, must be watched and evaluated to determine necessary courses of action flowing from the past, sometimes, as in legal and religious problems, from the re- mote past. Such historical analysis requires aid from many another discipline; it always has. But now the tradi- tional philology, palaeography, and diplomacy are not enough. A wide variety of social sciences, mathematics, logics, and, indeed, any field of knowledge may be called upon to contribute to the tormenting problems stemming PALMER THROOP is a professor of history who tests his proposed teaching method in se ve r al un de rg r adu a te courses each year. from a tormented past. The varies ties of history proliferate with the varieties of problems. WHAT CAN these specialists In European, African, Asian, and American affairs, called upon by both government and business, give to the undergraduate student? Can the undergraduiate acquire enough critical ability to be of use in his personal,- business, and civic affairs? And to what degree do they con- tribute to good citizenship? How low we must bow to Cicero de- pends upon the student's ability to transfer any skill he may have acquired in discriminating the complex interplay of many varia- bles. Whatever survives the fires of the final blue book seems to de- pend in part upon how clearly the student sees the possibility and the need of the transfer of the skill he has demonstrated for his professor in historical analysis. He will cheerfully, even enthusi- astically reorganize past experi-- ence, thereby making it his own, if he has a purpose in doing so.* TT IS NOT easy to give him his purpose. He comes all crusted over with the stupidities of history as a memory marathon. History is not a way of thinking, of analyz- ing, of relating, for him; it is one dratted fact after another dratted fact taken upon authority of The Book. Something happened to some- body or other somewhere or other at some time or other and this Odd Ball is going to pester him for this inconsequential informa- tion about the thoroughly dead. This is a stalwart attitude which may withstand all assault. Yet may begin by shaking the under- graduate's faith in the authority of The Book and even old Odd Ball himself. The process of the demolition of the crust may be expedited by a study of a historical controversy. TOSEE the learned pull one an- other's long grey beards is a source of gleeful surprise which may deepen to a purposeful inter- est if the controversy can be dem- onstrated to have some bearing upon the future or upon some ability needed in the future. It is doubly helpful because the - selection and evaluation of the evidence upon which the points of controversy play are made evident. Continued on Page Fifteen Its effectiveness as propaganda does not in these days need to be belabored. The inevitability of the communistic victory is cogently demonstrated from Historical Laws, with terrifying missiles as the catalytic agent. It does appear that some slight grasp of the historical process might be of value in this over- arching conflict, in which history belongs as much to the arsenal as nuclear physics. ingly upon poor old time-battered AND CAN history justify democ- Cicero, whose opinion cannot be racy? Even a cursory survey sustained by Kierkegaard, beha- of old propaganda reveals a re- viorism, or current genetics. crigbtl ewe eptsn The Communists have revived crigbtlbewndspim history as a master discipline not decorated with many gaudy meta- only for inculcating whatever may physical hues and shifting con- be necessary for the state, above cepts of liberty, with admirable all blind and trusting loyalty, but eloquence on both sides. have raised it to the soaring dig- Is history then just an eternal nity of a Scientific LAW. store house of propaganda, a lie agreed upon for some political ex- TO IMPEDE the Law of History pedience? Or can its skillful use as interpreted by the current emancipate from old error to pre- Bureaucratic Canon is to get shot. vent the repetition of torture, an The grandiosity of this resurrec- undisputed regularity of the past? tion is due to Marxian metaphys- Can it guide the possibilities of ics wonderfully rejuvenated by choice that make for the freedom large injections of nuclear phys- that is a basis of human dignity?9 ics and Lysenkian biology. Does it deserve its place in the freeing disciplines, the ancient lib- eral arts? O NE THING Is certain, The past is constantly scrutinized for clues to the .future. Whether for government policy, business policy, or the prediction of the probabili- ties of success of a young man or woman, the past is used for a foundation for opinion. How well it is used depends upon an ability to select the significant aspects that help establish a trend or a continuity. This ability de- rives from many disciplines and may be used in many disciplines, to say nothing of the pressing af- fairs of government and business. Yet its training is proper to history, committed to tracing change in time, If continuities are determined by an eternal Marxian law, historical training consists of interpreting this majestic force according to the latest decree of Those Who Know. IT WOULD BE heartening if the communists really did rely upon their pseudo-scientific, determinis- tic ideology for the making of their plans; the margin of error would be a comforting factor. Cite New Problems tamning their leaders and then suggests that the way to remedy the situation is to keep the White House empty for another four years. We know that this is not the answer, and Sahl never really presumes to have an answer. But he formulates specific. questions which we can add to the growing list. MLEHRER, whose popularity hsdiminished somewhat lately because he sem to whave runobuty the originator of the satirical- intellectual dramatic form. He sings vicious songs in a warmi folksy style devastating some of the most cherished myths of American culture. . Echoing the traditional Ameri- can love for the wieen spae raw, he sings yearningly of the wild west "where the scenery's attractive and the air is radio- active." We understand what he Iensthe guise of a homesick southerner languishing in the cold northern clime, he sings plain- tively of his old home, crying, "I wanna talk with Southern gentle- men and put my white sheet on again. I ain't seen one good lynch- ing in years." He formulates the questions for us, and leaves them to be an- uwered-. BUT THE LYRICS don't have to be set to music to convey their meaning. The demand for poetry readings now is greater than it has been in the last few decades, and poetry is as much a part of the questioning process as comedy or theater. Audiences listen in murkey cof- fee houses to the lamenit of the Beats that life under the threat of the hydrogen bomb has be- come unbearable. The Beats offer a solution-a tragic-hedonistic ap- proach-we need not accept their answer, but we too are faced with the problem. e. e. cummings capsules the very core of our dilemma when he tells us: pity this busy monster, manun- kind, not Progress is a comfortable dis- ease: your victim death and life safely beyond plays with the bigness of his little- ness --electrons deify one razorblade into a mountainrange: lenses ex- tend linwish through curving where- return on it unself. A world of made Is not a world of born-pity poor flesh and trees, poor stars and stones, but never this fine specimen of hypermagical ultraomnipotence. We doctors know a hopeless case if-listen: there's a hell of a good universe next door; let's OF COURSE we can't go-yet. So his answer is no more ac- ceptable than is the Beat's. But the question strikes home, and we ourselves, if only we had known humrste singer an h oet, ant entertainment or even wan- dering philosophy. His task is to be a social critic and disciple of the Socratic method. And he is well on the way to perfecting his skill, for what- ever good- it may do us. ~JUDITH OPPENHEIM is, a night editor on The Daily, a sophomore in the literary college, and a prospective English major.' MOVIES are better than ever; movies are worse than ever. Movies are superficial and flat; movies are philosophical and deep. The film industry's main concern is money; the film industry's main concern is art. Film writers are hacks; film writers are accom- plished artists. - All of these things have been said. Each in a limited sense is true. Each reflects one aspect of the evolution occuring in movie- going tastes. Movies have lost their place as the number one means of escap- ism. Television has usurped its position as chief purveyor of banality. People need no longer leave their living rooms to view Andy Hardy films or any one of the long and indistinguishable chain of sweetness and light melo- dramas that were for so long the standard fare of popular taste. NOT ONLY do the three major networks show these constant-. ly, but the f~ypical television show is little more than a shortened remake of Little Annie Rooney tear jerkers or John Ford west- erns. Television has censored itself into idiocy. It exists in the out- dated repressions and prudishness of Puritan tradition. Nothing shown can be allowed to offend anybody, anywhere, anytime. With the exception of an occasionally incisive drama or revealing docu- mentary, utter blandness is the rule. In short, television offers a maximum quantity of mediocre entertainment with a minimum of effort for the viewer. Why should these addicts of the con- ventional venture from their homes? M VIE producers were at first shocked by their new compet- itor. As attendance dropped and theatres went bankrupt, the movie industry decided that its only hope was t0 make films with which television could not com- pete. Little by little, they began code.iSpecam to prmnnc on the screen as Hollywood finally admitted its existence by means oth ther tan nasty interference This foray into tabooed ground has met definite resistance; the Puritan spirit still has great fol- lowing. People in America cannot ~to a sex movie for the sake of seeing a sex movie; they feel guilt about it. Hollywood has cleverly coun- tered these inhibitions. Recent movies, like "The Apartment," combine sociological elements with the sex. People talk glibly about its social implications, regardless of their motives in attending. They go to be intrigued by sin but they give it an educational motivation. I T IS NOT only in the "forbid- den" area of sex that Holly- wood Is beginning to explore; American film producers add a host of pseudo - psychological touches to their products. It is no longer enough to pro- duce a movie in which the villain rants and raves at grandmother while holding her overdue mort- gage in his hand; he must be driven to such actions by an un- resolved Oedipus complex at the very least. The new cowboy must love some female as much as his T 1typically, tese movies are re- actions to television. They provide certain elements that the net- works purposely delete. New sub- jects are not the only means H LY ODis also trying to overwhelm by sheer size. Films running three hours or longer, with ridiculously over- priced seats and undistinguished vulgarizations as p 10o t s have reached immense popularity., Rumor has it that in one of them, depicting a battle between the Athenians and Spartans, there were more extras on the set' than there were soldiers in the en- tire Spartan and Athenian armies Biblical subjects, like "The Ten Commandments," have little re.- semblance to the Bible, Travel- ogues, like "Around the World in Eighty Days" or the cinerama ase- ries say nothing. They pass through beautiful country on the barest thread of a plot and project all this onto a huge screen, using some special process. The most memorable out- come of the interminable epic is usually the box office receipts. THE whole American approach to films still leaves many un- fulfilled needs. Its superficial at- tractions aim to entertain those who are unable to entertain them- selves and at the same time are faced with increasing free time. But there are people looking for something more than an escape, who, in the past ten years, with growing spare time, have come to demand cinema as an art form., Dissatisfied with domestic pro- ductions, it is this group which has been backing the growing in- flux of imported films. They have found a fresh and creative ap- proach to the movies. THIS QUALITY has manifested Itsel in diverse forms; it rang- es from the philosophic work of Bergman to the magnificently contrived comedies of Alec Gun- ness. Some of them have eyen been complete tripe like the Brig- itte Bardot .movies. 'But however good or bad they may be, they fill a gap left by American films; at Movies must compete wi to teleVISi4 worst, they outdo domestic pro- ducers in immorality; at best, they provide intellectual stimulation on an extremely high plane. The worst among these have fallen by the wayside. People may enjoy and still want to see Bardot romping around in a towel; but this is in direct conflict with the image of foreign films as art. At first, the American audien- ces tried to justify their interest in Brigitte's anatomy by equating all foreign films with art. After a while it became apparent that there were at least two levels of foreign films, and Brigitte, towel and all, has fallen from the exten- sive popular favor she once en- joyed. REPLAING BARDOT, films like "idStrawberries" and "The Virgin Spring" are attracting crowds With unusual subject mat- ter, superb direction and excel- lent performers, they fulfill the potential of cinema as an art form to a greater degree than any American ever has. Good foreign films form ar tistic wholes. Unlike most American movies, they do not attempt to combine naive so- ciology with escapist flights. T HEIR audiences are not con- fined to one group either. If only the intellectuals went, there would be little growth in their popularity. But the dozen art the- atres of 1950 have increased in number to over 500. Obviously, the pseudo-intellec- tuals are augmenting the attend- ance of the informed. By educa- tion and social position, these people feel they know what is good but art has no real meaning for Berg Wave press the their Time Wi Ann film tenti ture but They aesth them port TH from prodi a wa rathc poter um. whol cers; busin and toda3 almo they terta tain the I room catio THE MOVIES: Imported and lb As Local Producers Compete wit Foreign Films Gain A rt Market Dy DAVID MARCUS N . ... ., e, > *t I ', -Fo erts eEegni iga aiae oetaMnc Thepoplarty f hstoy s acouse f sudyha flctuteaove th cntuies ou uwbasc nteestlui neer wd I rnai a n The movie box office-Wild Stawerries or Midnight Lace THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINESUNDAY, MAY 21, 1961