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- A review and summary of the first three chapters of Howard Zinn's A
- People's History...
- The Zen of Zinn: A look at the first 3 chapters of A People's History of
- the US
-
- Dr. Howard ZinnÆs A PeopleÆs History of the United States might be
- better titled A ProletarianÆs History of the United States. In the first
- three chapters Zinn looks at not only the history of the conquerors,
- rulers, and leaders; but also the history of the enslaved, the
- oppressed, and the led. Like any American History book covering the time
- period of 1492 until the early 1760Æs, A PeopleÆs History tells the
- story of the ôdiscoveryö of America, early colonization by European
- powers, the governing of these colonies, and the rising discontent of
- the colonists towards their leaders. Zinn, however, stresses the role of
- a number of groups and ideas that most books neglect or skim over: the
- plight of the Native Americans that had their numbers reduced by up to
- 90% by European invasion, the equality of these peoples in many regards
- to their European counterparts, the importation of slaves into America
- and their unspeakable travel conditions and treatment, the callous
- buildup of the agricultural economy around these slaves, the
- discontented colonists whose plight was ignored by the ruling
- bourgeoisie, and most importantly, the rising class and racial struggles
- in America that Zinn correctly credits as being the root of many of the
- problems that we as a nation have today. It is refreshing to see a book
- that spends space based proportionately around the people that lived
- this history. When Columbus arrived on the Island of Haiti, there were
- 39 men on board his ships compared to the 250,000 Indians on Haiti. If
- the white race accounts for less than two hundredths of one percent of
- the islandÆs population, it is only fair that the natives get more than
- the two or three sentences that they get in most history books. Zinn
- cites population figures, first person accounts, and his own
- interpretation of their effects to create an accurate and fair depiction
- of the first two and a half centuries of European life on the continent
- of North America.
- The core part of any history book is obviously history. In the first
- three chapters of the book, Zinn presents the major historical facts of
- the first 250 years of American history starting from when Christopher
- ColumbusÆs Ni±a, Pinta, and Santa Maria landed in the Bahamas on October
- 12, 1492. It was there that Europeans and Native Americans first came
- into contact; the Arawak natives came out to greet the whites, and the
- whites were only interested in finding the gold. From the Bahamas,
- Columbus sailed to Cuba and Hispa±ola, the present-day home of Haiti and
- the Dominican Republic. One-hundred fifteen years later and 1,500 miles
- to the north, the colony of Jamestown was founded by a group of English
- settlers led by John Smith; shortly after that the Massachusetts Bay
- Colony was founded by a group of Puritans known to us today as the
- Pilgrims. Because of uneasy and hostile relations with the nearby Pequot
- Indians, the Pequot War soon started between the colonists and the
- natives. Needless to say, the colonists won, but it was at the expense
- of several dozen of their own and thousands of Pequots. But despite
- Indian conflict, exposure, starvation, famine, disease, and other
- hardships, the English kept coming to America. In 1619 they were settled
- enough that they started bringing African slaves into the middle
- colonies. Before resorting to Africans, the colonists had tried to
- subdue the Indians, but that idea failed before it was created. Zinn
- writes:
- ôThey couldnÆt force the Indians to work for them, as Columbus had
- done. They were outnumbered, and while, with superior firearms, they
- could massacre the Indians, they would face massacre in return. They
- could not capture them and keep them enslaved; the Indians were tough,
- resourceful, defiant, and at home in these woods, as the transplanted
- Englishmen were not.
- ôWhite servants had not yet been brought over in sufficient
- quantity.... As for free white settlers, many of them were skilled
- craftsmen, or even men of leisure back in England, who were so little
- inclined to work the land that John Smith... had to declare a kind of
- martial law, organize them into work gangs, and force them into the
- fields for survival.....
- ôBlack slaves were the answer. And it was natural to consider imported
- blacks as slaves, even if the institution of slavers would not be
- regularized and legalized for several decadesö (25).
- Black slavery became an American institution that the southern and
- middle colonies began to depend on for their economic success. The first
- stirrings of resentment began to come not from the slaves but from the
- proletariat in the form of the frontier whites. Nathaniel Bacon led a
- revolution against Virginia governor William Berkeley and his
- conciliatory Indian policies. Bacon and others who lived on the western
- frontier wanted more protection from the government against Indian
- attacks. Berkeley and his cronies were so concerned with their own
- financial and political gain that they ignored BaconÆs Rebellion and
- continued their policies. In the end, Bacon died a natural death (he
- caught a nasty virus) and his friends were hanged, but for the first
- time ever, the government was forced to listen to the grievances of the
- underclass that had been for the most part largely ignorable up to that
- point. Meanwhile, class distinctions became sharper and the poor grew in
- number. Citizens were put into work houses for debt and occasionally
- rioted against the wealthy. More and more though, the anger turned from
- being just a class war to being a war of nationalities. Impressment and
- other British policies distracted the colonists from being mad at the
- bourgeoisie to being mad at their mother country. At the end of chapter
- three, tension is mounting, pitting the Americans against the English
- and the workers against the rich. The atmosphere was ripe for
- revolution.
- The reason that this book might be better titled A ProletarianÆs
- History of the United States is that ZinnÆs main focus on the book
- besides the actual history is the effect of the history on the common
- people and the workers, or proletarians as Marx and Engels referred to
- them. While most history books focus on the dominating Europeans, Zinn
- focuses on the dominated Native Americans, who Zinn holds to be at least
- as advanced as their European masters. He writes that
- ôColumbus and his successors were not coming into an empty wilderness,
- but into a world which in some places was as densely populated as Europe
- itself, where the culture was complex, where human relations were more
- egalitarian than in Europe, and where the relations among men, women,
- children, and nature were more beautifully worked out than perhaps any
- place in the world.
- ôThey were a people without a written language, but with their own
- laws, their poetry, their history kept in memory and passed on, in an
- oral vocabulary more complex than EuropeÆs, accompanied by song, dance,
- and ceremonial drama. They paid careful attention to the development of
- personality, intensity of will, independence and flexibility, passion
- and potency, to their partnership with one another and with natureö
- (21-22).
-
- In the middle of the first chapter, Zinn uses the historical treatment
- of Columbus to explain his own view on teaching history.
- ôThus began the history, five hundred years ago, of the European
- invasion of Indian settlements in America. That beginning, when you read
- [BartolomΘ de] Las Casas... is conquest, slavery, death. When we read
- history books given to the children in the United States, it all starts
- with heroic adventure -- there is no bloodshed -- and Columbus Day is a
- celebrationö (7).
-
- He goes on to vituperate historian Samuel Eliot Morison for his brief
- and buried mention of ColumbusÆs genocide of the natives. This is one of
- the most heinous crimes a historian can commit, Zinn says, because
- ôOutright lying or quiet omission takes the risk of discovery which,
- when made, might arouse the reader to rebel against the writer. To state
- the facts, however, and then bury them in a mass of other information is
- to say to the reader: yes, mass murder took place, but itÆs not that
- important... it should effect very little what we do in the worldö (8).
- Zinn says that ôselection, simplification, [and] emphasisö (8) are
- necessary to the historian, but he chooses to take a different stance in
- his writings.
- ô...I prefer to tell the story of the discovery of America from the
- viewpoint of the Arawaks, of the Constitution from the standpoint of the
- slaves, of Andrew Jackson as seen by the Cherokees, of the Civil War as
- seen by the New York Irish... of the First World War as seen by
- socialists, the Second World War as seen by pacifists, the New Deal as
- seen by the blacks in Harlem, the postwar American empire as seen by
- peons in Latin America. And so on, to the limited extent that any one
- person, however he or she strains, can ôseeö history from the standpoint
- of othersö (10).
-
- Zinn continues his identification with the oppressed as he discusses
- black-white relations. He says that blacks and whites are not naturally
- prejudiced against each other as some would have us believe; he points
- to the fact that laws actually had to be passed to keep blacks and
- whites from fraternizing. Servants and slaves of different races saw
- each other as oppressed workers first and as members of a specific race
- second. On the topic of slavery, Zinn berates the American system,
- calling it ôlifelong, morally crippling, destructive of family ties,
- without hope of any futureö (27). Some argue that African tribes had
- slavery of their own so it was a part of their culture to begin with,
- but Zinn says that ôthe æslavesÆ of Africa were more like the serfs of
- Europe -- in other words, like most of the population of Europeö (27).
- Zinn commiserates with the plight of the oppressed frontier whites,
- making Nathaniel Bacon out to be a hero. Over the course of the next 80
- years, Zinn cites routine injustices against the working and under
- classes, saying that it ôseems quite clear that the class lines hardened
- through the colonial period; the distinction between rich and poor
- became sharperö (47).
- It is refreshing and commendable to see a history text that takes a
- stance on the side of the peoples that seldom get represented.
- ColumbusÆs treatment of the Native Americans was atrocious, abominable,
- and abhorrent, yet most history texts treat him as one the greatest men
- to have ever lived. If your value as a human being is measured by the
- number of lives you ruin, people you kill, and civilizations you
- destroy, then Columbus is on par with Josef Stalin. This example may
- seem extreme, but both men were directly responsible for the deaths of
- millions on innocent civilians and caused sheer terror and panic among
- millions of other people. The difference is that Columbus did it in the
- name of exploration and human progress, which Zinn correctly calls a bit
- of a misnomer, while Stalin did it to achieve his political ambitions,
- which Columbus was certainly not without himself. Columbus committed
- horrible atrocities, and Zinn accurately portrays them from a unique
- standpoint, which gives long overdue respect and recognition to the
- millions of Indians who died in the name of progress. Equally accurate
- is ZinnÆs portrayal of colonial relations. Both African slaves and
- proletarian whites were pushed around, tormented, and used as pawns in
- the political game of chess for the benefit of the bourgeoisie. Zinn
- asserts that there were clear contentions between the races that
- ultimately led to the revolution when the anger of the masses that was
- originally directed primarily at the bourgeoisie was redirected against
- England in the form of rhetoric, concessions, and propaganda calling for
- loyalty to AmericaÆs upper classes and rebellion, first quiet and then
- loud, against England. ô[The bind of loyalty] was the language of
- liberty and equality, which could unite just enough whites to fight a
- Revolution against England, without ending either slavery or inequalityö
- (58). Zinn is absolutely correct in seeing the ulterior motives of our
- founding fathers; they realized that splitting from England would be
- good for them financially, socially, and politically. What they did was
- harness the peopleÆs anger against them and used it, quite ironically,
- for their own advancement.
- Ultimately, for the first 250 years of AmericaÆs history, there was
- oppression and class warfare on varying scales that are traditionally
- ignored or unemphasized by traditional history texts, but Zinn
- masterfully shows the reader are major and influencial parts of American
- history. To ignore the plight of the conquored and oppressed is to
- ignore a part of history that cannot be ignored.