On the complex, challenging, and crucial question of how we remember our
infamous days.
Few presidential statements have been proven as accurate by the subsequent
decades as Franklin
Roosevelt’s description of December 7th, 1941 as “a date which will
live in infamy.” We have a fair
number of national memory days of one kind or another, of course, but I can’t
think of another that remembers anything that’s anywhere near as explicitly
negative and destructive as does National Pear Harbor Remembrance Day (although
of course Columbus Day would qualify from the
counter-argument side). The only potential equivalent would be September 11th,
which doesn’t currently have an official remembrance day but likely
will get there—and for that reason, along with many others, it’s worth
considering how we remember an event like Pearl Harbor, and what the stakes
are.
In the Atlantic essay that I
hyperlinked under “likely will get there,” historian
and educator Kevin Levin argues that, as the essay’s synopsis puts it, “Over
time, our memory of national catastrophes becomes less personal and more
nuanced.” But Levin’s comparison for September 11th is to our national
memories of the Civil War, and I would argue that there’s an overt and key
difference between that horrific event and either 9/11 or Pearl Harbor:
everyone involved in the Civil War was an American (whether they wanted to
admit it at the time or not), and so after the event it became and has
continued for the next 150 years to be important (for better and for worse reasons)
for us to find ways to produce more nuanced and less divisive memories of it. Obviously
there are American communities of which we could say the same when it comes to
Pearl Harbor (ie, the Japanese Internment) and 9/11
(the anti-Muslim backlash), but
the fact remains that those infamous events were caused by nations and entities
outside of America, and so it’s entirely possible for us to continue to define
them through a more explicitly divided, us vs. them frame.
Is that a bad thing? Not necessarily, or at least not absolutely—Pearl Harbor
and 9/11 were both, in their definitely distinct ways, attacks on the United
States by such external forces, and there’s no way we can or should try to
remember them outside of such a frame. While I would certainly emphasize
remembering those who were lost in the attacks, rather than focusing our
attention on the attackers, that shift wouldn’t change the fundamental frame so
much as (potentially) produce different emotional responses to it (mourning
rather than anger, for example). The White House statement hyperlinked at “National
Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day” in the intro section above illustrates this kind
of emphasis and emotion nicely, I’d say. But to come back to Levin’s argument,
I would agree with him that more nuance—more understanding of the multiple
perspectives and histories contained in an event, and the various and often
competing causes and elements that lead up to it, and the equally varied and in
many cases still unfolding results—should always be part of our goal for such
remembrance as well. That it’s far more difficult to reach for such nuance when
it comes to these external attacks (compared to the Civil War) only makes the
effort that much more valuable.
Crowd-sourced post this weekend,
Ben
PS. So last chance—what do you think? Thoughts on these issues and
questions, on any of the week’s posts, or on any related themes for that
crowd-sourced post?
12/7 Memory Day nominee: Willa Cather, for her Nebraska trilogy to be sure, but for a career’s worth of equally unique, impressive, and enduring American stories.
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