I flicked on the telly the other morning and saw Simon Schama giving his
all, yet again, in a rerun of his series on the History of Britain.
He was doing the Norman Conquest and, as you might expect, there were
several references to 'The Chroniclers' - the men (mainly monks) on both sides
of the Channel, who have told us almost all we know (or think we know) about
what happened in the mid-11th century.
I'm well aware that Simon Schama exercises appropriate caution when
faced with a 'source'. How does the writer
know these 'facts'? Who is he writing for? Why is he writing? etc, etc. Still, in the flurry of a TV script, there
was no time to labour the point that the reality might not have been exactly as
depicted in the surviving accounts.
Anyone who has ever done historical research knows the fatal lure of the
single, uncorroborated document: hard to disbelieve because it’s all we have to
go on, and valued (perhaps over-valued) precisely because of its
uniqueness. It’s the historian’s
equivalent of the penchant journalists and politicians have for ‘secret’
intelligence - their automatic assumption being that information is more likely
to be true if it isn’t public, when the opposite is more likely to be the
case.
WMD anyone? |
The chances are that a lot of the things we accept as historical fact are
only faintly related to what really happened.
Perhaps that doesn’t matter. If
the story is embedded in the national consciousness, maybe there’s a case for leaving
it undisturbed. After all, we can’t understand the literature, songs, or even
the politics of the past unless we know the old tales.
Although the academic historical game is all
about questioning and rewriting familiar stories, in practice, if people think
that Alfred burnt the cakes or Robert the Bruce was inspired by a spider, it
may not do any harm to let that notion lie.
In my time, I've had experience of helping the 'facts' to acquire a settled
shape. In the 1970s and 80s, I worked in
BBC news and current affairs. I suppose
that era qualifies as 'history' now, so I'll take the chance to tell you a
couple of anecdotes.
On the night of August 16/17 1977, I was a very junior sub-editor in Radio
News. In those days, before computers,
mobile phones, and with even the now-defunct CEEFAX in its infancy, we relied
for our information on stringers phoning up, and agency reports coming in by
teleprinter.
The machine looked something like this |
One of the jobs on the
night shift was monitoring this stuff as arrived. If anything significant or urgent turned up,
and you were reasonably sure it was true, you pressed a button on a microphone
on the desk, and your voice rang round BBC newsrooms and offices, alerting the staff to
the breaking story. It was unusual for
much to merit announcement on the blower during the night: there were no
bulletins on any radio outlets till the morning, and no morning TV at all. In any case, most overnight news came from
far-away lands that rarely made it into our summaries - places where our night was
their day.
On that August night, a flash came through from one of the American news
agencies, saying that Elvis Presley had died.
I pondered for a moment whether to announce this. You'd hardly believe it now, but in 1977,
Elvis wasn't such a big deal. For my
generation, born too late for his heyday, he represented a past age, eclipsed
by our home-grown talent.
Oh dear |
We knew him only as a flabby has-been, or the star of some rather
embarrassing flims in livid technicolour
(this is a view I have since revised
thanks to the post-mortem rediscovery of his early career!).
Anyway. I studied the flimsy piece of paper, and decided that I would go
ahead.
So it was that I broke the news of Elvis's death to the people who would
relay it to the nation hours later.
I was completely unprepared for what followed. Telephonists from the switchboard rang the
newsroom in tears to check. Serious
journalists I regarded as geriatric (they were probably in their 40s) started
arguing about how to cover the story in the morning bulletins. The genie was out of the bottle when another
piece of copy arrived, from the same agency and, lo and behold, it seemed that
Elvis was still alive. This new account had him in hospital, but
recovering. I felt a complete idiot,
imagining dismissal, or at best a savage bollocking in front of the rest of the
staff. A kind colleague suggested I
should wait till more information came in before returning to the squawk box to
retract my rash announcement and, sure enough, other agencies soon piled in
with confirmation of the death. I must
have been the only woman in the world who was relieved by that news. It turned out that the ‘alive’ report had
been bumped down the priority list of the American telex operator when news of
the death came through, and mistakenly left in the queue for transmission.
That didn’t matter in the UK. There
was no output overnight, and the ‘Elvis alive’ story was never broadcast. Few of my colleagues even knew it had
existed. But in America, were the news
programmes were live on air, that little blip became one of the foundations of
the conspiracy theories that led to the regular stream of Elvis ‘sightings’
which continue even today (when he would be 78 years old). For many people, it’s a ‘fact’ that the death
of ‘The King’ is a fiction.
By the way, back in our radio newsroom, that night continued with a
spectacular fight about which Elvis track to play on the morning news. The home
news editor was insisting on 'Blue Suede Shoes'; the Foreign Editor (a venerable
and cultured man, normally known for his calm dignity) was almost apoplectic in
his support for Hound Dog " For God's sake! Hound Dog was the very essence
of the man!" I seem to recollect things being thrown, grown men stomping
around, and some world-championship sulking in the small hours. I don't think I ever again witnessed such
passion over a news story in all my years at the BBC. As far as I can remember, the solution was to
play one track at 7am, and the other at 8 - quite a daring manoeuvre in those
days.
My other story comes from the year before, when, as a News Trainee, I was
temporarily posted to the newsroom at BBC Norwich. It wasn't exactly the Washington Post.
You may remember that the summer of 1976 was
unusually hot.
I don't think we would find those temperatures (in the high 70s Fahrenheit)
particularly extreme these days, but back then the astonishing weather was our
main story every night. The chocolate in a local sweet factory would not set,
and the whole city smelled of cocoa; you could fry an egg on the bonnet of a
car; there was botulism in the Norfolk Broads. And because of the heat, not
much else was happening.
After a few of weeks of the heatwave, we were getting stuck for new things
to say. Talking in the bar one lunchtime
(those were the days), someone suggested that when the rain eventually came, all
the oil and rubber that had collected on the roads during the drought was likely to get mixed
into a slippery mess. It might be
dangerous. That afternoon, I wrote a
story along those lines. I may have
managed to get some authority (such as a policeman or a representative of a
motorists' organization) to endorse the idea. I probably made it sound as if
the warning had originated with them, but essentially the item – though
plausible - was a complete invention.
The next day I took my driving test.
There was no written exam then. Instead,
the practical drive ended with a few technical questions from the
examiner. After some general Highway
Code stuff, he said, "Now, what will we have to look out for on the roads
when it starts to rain?" I'm not sure whether he was expecting the authoritative
answer he got, but it was enough to counterbalance my rather daring right-turn
across a dual carriageway. He must have been a Look East viewer. As far as he was concerned, the 'Killer Sludge'
risk was fact. I passed my test.
This business of how 'truths' are established is one of the subjects dealt
with in my new book, The Last Minute. It
is based in the present day, but the message about the unreliability of
evidence is the same as that propounded on all good History courses.
This is the sort of thing you'll see there. There's much more |
The reality and those reports don't match exactly, but it's the
post-event confection which, in the real world, would go on to become
established 'fact'.
There's no suggestion in The Last Minute that the distorted accounts are
malicious, or deliberately designed to mislead.
The syrupy tributes to victims we know to have been flawed are more the
product of human nature and lazy reporting than conscious mendaciousness. But what I hope I am doing is drawing
attention to the need for appropriate skepticism about 'evidence', even when it
comes from a source very close to an event.
I'll round off with another tale from the 1970s, which is loosely connected
with what I've been on about today. I'm
not suggesting that it's true, of course!
President Nixon woke up on a winter's morning and looked out of his bedroom
window to see 'Richard Nixon is a %*$!' written in urine in the snow. He commanded his security team to analyse the
urine to see who had written the message.
The news came back that it was a senior member of the administration. "Sack
him!" cried Nixon, "and make sure the press hear what a *!!!** he
is".
"You might not want to do that, sir," said the aide holding the
security file. "You see, its X' s pee, but it's Mrs Nixon's
handwriting."
when evaluating evidence, always ask yourself whose 'handwriting' it’s in,
and why.
www.eleanorupdale.com
PS Here's something for students of body language:
PS Here's something for students of body language:
The President meets the King. Elvis and Nixon, 1970 |
Completely fascinating, Eleanor! Loved the 'killer sludge.'
ReplyDeleteBrilliant post - loved it all, especially the heated argument about Blue Suede Shoes or Hound Dog! And I can't wait to read your book.
ReplyDeleteHighly interesting to hear how news facts are often created, though I could almost hear your heartbeat during the Elvis "Is he ? isn't he?" waiting. Liked the sludge story too! Thank you, Eleanor.
ReplyDeletePhew, I can imagine just how you must have felt during the Elvis is dead/alive/dead scenario! The book sounds a great idea, and I love the cover.
ReplyDeleteI was a teenager in the Seventies - you book lives for me!
ReplyDeleteBrilliant and fascinating! Beguiled a tedious train journey home - time sped!
ReplyDeleteTerrific! Love the Nixon story, almost as much as the Elvis one.
ReplyDeleteA fascinating and thought-provoking post - thank you!
ReplyDelete