Social theorists have tried many definitions of human
nature: human beings are the animals that
make tools, that laugh, that play. I have another:
Human-beings are history-makers. We eternally
make our present by looking backwards. We present
ourselves by expressing a significant past.
To know us in our history is to know who we are.
-Greg Dening (Performances)
At 4:30 A.M. on April 28, 1789 a series of events began which has ever since held a grip on Western imagination. Fletcher Christian lead a mutiny against Captain William Bligh aboard HMS Bounty. The aftermath of this rebellion included: Bligh's remarkable 4,000 mile journey with 18 loyal crewmen in an open launch; the sinking of HMS Pandora, which had been sent out to arrest the mutineers, with a loss of 34 men, including 4 of the Bounty crew; and the establishment of a weird sort of tropical commune on Pitcairn's Island by Christian and eight other men along with the Tahitian women (and a few friends and progeny) who may or may not have been the precipitating cause of the whole fiasco. Eventually Bligh would return to sea, three of the mutineers would be returned to England and hanged and all but one of the men on Pitcairn's Island would be murdered or die of disease.
Now there's obviously enough material there to justify the boatload of Bounty books, plays and movies that have poured forth in a steady stream over the past two centuries, but what Professor Dening has uniquely done is to consider the uses to which the story has been put over those years. He makes the convincing argument that Captain Bligh, contrary to popular imagery, was not particularly abusive of his men. Indeed, the title of the book is reflective of Dening's position that Bligh was mostly despised for the harsh language he used in upbraiding men, not for any physical measures nor for the quality of his command in general. Having made his case, Dening moves on to a consideration of why our historical understanding of Bligh requires that he be seen as an ogre. If the "reality" is that he was a fairly mild captain for his time, why do we, looking backward, see him as the very embodiment of tyrannical authority? Why are Christian and his cohorts seen as heroes, virtual freedom fighters?
The book is wide ranging, learned, entertaining and thought provoking, but its best feature is the balance that Dening strikes between the effort to present the story of the Bounty as ethnographic history ("an attempt to represent the past as it was actually experienced") and the realization that:
a historical fact is not what happened but that small
part of what has happened that has been used
by historians to talk about, History is not
the past: it is a consciousness of the past used for present
purposes.
Everyone who has ever been subjected to a history course in the modern
university is familiar with the obsession with primary sources, the Left
dictatorship which controls academia insists that the "truth" is to be
found in the pamphlets and diaries and letters of the unimportant and the
obscure, rather than in the texts and speeches of the great who shaped
our understanding of events. Dening, on the other hand, understands
that there is a fundamental dichotomy between the way participants experienced
historical events and their importance to the society as a whole.
In a very real sense, it is simply not important whether Christ was the
son of God, whether England ruled the colonies harshly, whether Southerners
fought for slavery, whether FDR ended the Depression, whether Nixon subverted
the Constitution and Clinton merely lied about sex--what matters is that
this is how we perceive these events. In Denings' felicitous phrase:
Illusions make things true; truth does not dispel illusion.
(Reviewed:)
Grade: (A-)
