4.8 • 2.3K Ratings
🗓️ 4 October 2021
⏱️ 55 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In this episode of The Glenn Show, I’m talking to David E. Kaiser, author of many books about American and international political history. As a distinguished professional historian, David has seen many changes in the way history is written both inside and outside the academy, not all of them for the better. In this conversation, David talks about why Ta-Nehisi Coates’s highly influential 2014 essay “The Case for Reparations” and the view of race and American history it represents leaves out many crucial facts about how we came to be where we are.
We begin in a slightly counterintuitive place, with a discussion of how many historians’ views of the Cold War changed after Vietnam. In David’s telling, it became more and more common to see historians placing blame for escalating hostilities on the U.S.’s foreign policy rather than the U.S.S.R.’s. David sees a similar sort of revisionism at work in contemporary historians’ perspectives on the New Deal, which is now sometimes described as a purposefully racially discriminatory enterprise. David pushes back against this interpretation, pointing to the South’s pursuit of industry and cheap labor as a better explanation for the New Deal’s flaws than racial animus. We also discuss statistics indicating that, while blacks did earn significantly less money than whites, the years after World War II saw tremendous economic growth in black communities. And, while redlining policies certainly did have a negative impact on the ability of blacks to acquire wealth, those policies alone only tell part of the black economic story. Finally, David ends our discussion by reading from a fascinating 1940 editorial in the black newspaper the Chicago Defender that endorses FDR for a third term.
I truly enjoyed this conversation, and I hope you will as well!
A New Home for TGS
The video for this episode is hosted on my own new YouTube channel, which is now the home of The Glenn Show. I invite you to subscribe to this channel (and click the bell button!) now so that you don't miss future offerings. This newsletter will continue to publish as usual with the same benefits for subscribers.
0:00 Intro
2:35 The post-Vietnam reevaluation of the Cold War
13:12 David: Academic historians largely have abandoned the idea of objective truth
18:23 Were black people really excluded from the New Deal?
32:06 The fortunes of black veterans after WWII
40:19 Why redlining doesn't tell the whole story about the racial wealth gap
49:49 Why the Chicago Defender endorsed FDR in 1940
Links and Readings
David’s memoir, A Life in History
David’s book, No End Save Victory: How FDR Led the Nation into War
David’s book, American Tragedy: Kennedy, Johnson, and the Origins of the Vietnam War
Glenn’s conversation with Daniel Bessner, “American Empire before and after 9/11”
Ira Katznelson’s book, When Affirmative Action Was White: An Untold History of Racial Inequality in America
Ta-Nehisi Coates’s essay, “The Case for Reparations”
The Chicago Fed’s paper, “The Effects of the 1930s HOLC ‘Redlining’ Maps”
Andrew Fenton’s article, “WTF happened in 1971 (and why the f**k it matters so much right now)”
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Hi, this is Glenn Lauer. You are at the Glenn Show at substack.com and at the Glenn Lauer |
0:18.1 | YouTube channel, which you find described in the accompanying text. But this is the Glenn |
0:24.4 | Show. And I'm with David Kaiser. David is a, as a historian. He has taught at Carnegie |
0:30.1 | Mellon and at the Naval War College for many years and also at Williams College. He's a PhD |
0:36.6 | from Harvard. He and I are contemporaries from Cambridge in the 1970s and the 1980s. A historian |
0:43.8 | who I've spoken with here before at the Glenn Show about his book, A Life in History, a memoir |
0:49.7 | that recounts his many years as a historian historically oriented intellectual and the changes |
0:57.4 | that have happened in the American Academy over the course of his lifetime. So I'm very happy |
1:01.8 | to welcome David to the Glenn Show. How are you doing, David? I'm doing very well, Glenn. And |
1:07.7 | thanks again for having me. Well, it's my pleasure. I mean, we're having this conversation because |
1:14.2 | you've been insistent in bringing to my attention the problem of the influence of contemporary |
1:23.0 | political currents of anti-racism or whatever it might be on the way that history is written |
1:34.4 | and the way that it's interpreted. And I just thought we only began to scratch the surface of |
1:41.3 | that subject in our last conversation. I'm particularly interested in your thoughts about how |
1:47.5 | the reading of the racial inequality problem in contemporary America as a consequence of historical |
1:58.3 | races, the structural or systemic racism argument that's employed on behalf of all manner of |
2:05.6 | political program of reparations of affirmative action and so on. I'm particularly |
2:11.4 | interested in that, but I'm also just interested more generally in your perspective as historian on |
2:16.5 | how history is being used in the service of different kinds of political aspiration and so on. |
2:26.1 | So that's just setting the stage and giving you an opportunity to share some of your own thoughts |
2:32.6 | about this about this general subject. Okay. Well, what I specifically want to get to in a minute |
2:40.1 | is a reinterpretation if you want to call it that of the New Deal era and also the immediate |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Glenn Loury, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Glenn Loury and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.