HOME / history lesson: The history behind current events.

George Bush, HegelianThe president's quest for a sense of "history."

David Greenberg was online on Aug. 9 to chat with readers about the article. Read the transcript.

For a guy with a reputation as an intellectual slacker, George W. Bush has always professed a surprisingly strong interest in history—however politicized some of his takes on the past may be. Bush has likened the "war on terrorism" to the Cold War, compared the occupation of Iraq to that of Germany, endorsed the "stab in the back" theory of America's defeat in Vietnam, and fancied himself Harry Truman redivivus, standing firm in pursuit of noble goals while getting trashed as the worst president ever.

For all this attention to the past, Bush's study of history has recently taken a turn toward the philosophical, at least by his own standards. Instead of just grabbing for analogies to serve as talking points, Bush appears to have become a pensive, almost romantic thinker ruminating about the ultimate design of history. According to a series of recent articles, he has been summoning scholars to the White House, perusing chronicles of past wars, and mulling over his place in the grand scheme. "What lessons does history have for a president facing the turmoil I'm facing?" Bush asks the historians at his intimate sessions, according to the Washington Post's Peter Baker. "How will history judge what we've done?"

In some ways, there's less here than meets the eye. Throughout his term, Bush has made clear that he likes to read history, as do many politicians. Other presidents, too, have shuttled in scholars in order to skim off their insights about a crisis—Jimmy Carter turned to Christopher Lasch, author of The Culture of Narcissism, to make sense of his era's malaise, and the elder George Bush hosted Theodore Roosevelt biographer David McCullough to glean the secrets of TR's success. As for wondering how posterity will regard his actions—what leader hasn't? When we're feeling charitable, we refer to this kind of consideration of long-term consequences as "vision."

What's new and strange about Bush's latest turn to history is that it doesn't seem to stem from a desire to serve his policy-making—not even as PR. Historians' insights, after all, can have little practical utility now. A historian can't predict with more authority than any other informed observer whether jihadist radicalism will wax or wane, or whether a liberal democracy will eventually take root in Iraq. And while there's no harm in asking a scholar like Alistair Horne, author of A Savage War of Peace: Algeria 1954-72, to parse the parallels between the Iraq war and France's effort to suppress terrorism in Algeria, such parallels rarely yield neat prescriptions. Besides, the historians who furnish advice in these contexts usually filter it through their own prejudices. Writing in the Telegraph, for example, Horne blamed Bush's Iraq misadventure on his decision "to heed too often the voices of the Zionist lobby."

But setting aside whether historians make for good policy advisers, it's doubtful that Bush will factor their analyses into his thinking. I'd like to applaud Bush's metaphysical forays as evidence of a searching mind. But do we really think his ongoing seminar will lead him to think in new ways about his challenges? Has the man who sneered at "revisionist history" regarding the Iraq invasion suddenly developed a humility about learning from the past?

As the late David Halberstam wrote in an impassioned piece posthumously published in Vanity Fair, the president's easy talk of history strikes many people as disingenuous because he has always seemed to choose his course of action first and to seek intellectual justification later. Moreover, Halberstam correctly noted, "Those who know history best tend to be tempered by it. They rarely refer to it so sweepingly and with such confidence." Bush, invariably described in these recent journalistic pieces as lonely, contemplative, and fatalistic, seems to be practically reveling in the image of himself as a solitary figure of destiny.

Weighing in recently on Bush's historical turn of mind, David Brooks (subscription required) of the New York Times recalled the old (and now rather tired) debate about whether "great men" (according to Thomas Carlyle) or "great forces" (according to Tolstoy) shape history. Bush, Brooks wrote, sees history as "the club of those in power" who, by their actions, "have the power to transform people." The contrary view holds, in Brooks' summary, that "the everyday experiences of millions of people … organically and chaotically shape the destiny of nations—from the bottom up." Without taking sides, Brooks extrapolates, "If Bush's theory of history is correct, the right security plan can lead to safety, the right political compromises to stability. But if Tolstoy is right, then the future of Iraq is beyond the reach of global summits, political benchmarks and the understanding of any chief executive."

Print This ArticlePRINTEmail to a FriendE-MAILShare This ArticleRECOMMEND...Get Slate RSS FeedsRSS
David Greenberg, a professor of history and media studies at Rutgers and author of three books of political history, has written the "History Lesson" column since 1998.
Illustration by Mark Alan Stamaty.
COMMENTS

Remarks from the Fray:

One of Hegel's most influential disciples was, of course, Marx, who saw an inevitable march of history towards socialism. Replace 'socialism' with 'democracy' and you have the neocons' agenda in a nutshell. Add the fact that the neocon movement was pretty much started by former Trotskyists at the University of Chicago and then you have a pretty complete picture. Of course I doubt that Bush has much of a personal intellectual connection to this movement; more than likely he's just parroting what he's picked up from Wolfowitz, et la.

Interestingly, I think Marx would support Bush and the neocons more so than he would isolationists. Remember, he saw capitalism as an evil but necessary intermediate stage in the transition to communism. In modern terms, this means that a global revolution can only occur when globalization has industrialized the entire world and turned the entire population into equally exploited laborers. By this logic, then, modern-day liberals who try to improve a single nation's infrastructure while preventing outsourcing and exploitative 'free trade' are actually hindering communism rather than helping it, as they're often accused of doing. In other words, things have to get really bad for everyone before they can get good for anyone.

That's just one twisted theory, anyway. I just wonder whether the neocons are perhaps really closet socialists playing an epic game of chess with the world, or if they really think that belligerent corporatocracy is a sustainable form of world governance...

--achilleselbow

(To reply, click here.)

Is it surprising that, George Bush, a devout Christian, has a teleological view of history? Not at all. Is it surprising that, as an American neoconservative, he believes in the spread of American-style liberal democracy? Of course not. Do these beliefs thereby make him a Hegelian? Only by a quantum imaginative leap. Trying to find remote intellectual precedents for the Bush Presidency (remember when he was a Straussian--but was too stupid to realize it?) is a fruitless and self-indulgent exercise.

--Ryan Ruby

(To reply, click here.)

(8/6)

What did you think of this article?
Join The Fray: Our Reader Discussion Forum
POST A MESSAGE | READ MESSAGES
TODAY'S PICTURES
TODAY'S CARTOONS
TODAY'S DOONESBURY
TODAY'S VIDEO
The Berlin Wall.4/091109_TP.jpg
Cartoonists' take on guns and shootings.2/091109_TC.jpg
Ins and outs.73/091109_TD.jpg