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How Much Do Travelers Know?
By Davis Bitton
You
wouldn’t know it from listening to some of them, but historians
have lots of reasons for humility.
I
have been prompted to think along these lines by an English
reporter who traveled to the United States and wrote about
us yokels on the basis of his “first-hand” experience.
Consistently condescending, he could just tell by looking
at people how ignorant and uninformed they were. He was
unimpressed by the standardized food at the restaurant.
The geography around Birmingham, Alabama, lacked variety.
A
hilarious “fisking” by James Lileks points out some of the
problems with the reporter’s article.
“Around
Birmingham,” writes the reporter, “there is nothing but
miles and miles of Alabama.” Lileks responds: “Apparently
around Birmingham, England, there is nothing but miles and
miles of Belgium, Thailand and the Antarctic Ice Shelf.”
Desiring
to show Americans to be parochial, the reporter says only
one-sixth of all Americans possess a passport. The fisker
responds: “That’s because our nation is HUGE, pal; of course
Belgians all have passports; their country is the size of
an average American rumpus room. They’ve burned out every
available domestic vacation option by the time the kids
are six — whereas this joint is so big our senior citizens
retire, buy moving houses, and devote themselves to visiting
each of the fifty states. Plus, we don’t need passports
to go to Mexico, which one could spend another lifetime
exploring.@
The
reporter, in the States on an expense account from his English
newspaper, sits in a restaurant, looks out the window, talks
to a local, and draws conclusions that support his preconceptions.
How
reliable is travel literature? It is a genre with a long
pedigree. One thinks of the travel accounts of Franciscan
friars who went to Asia in the fourteenth century, of descriptions
of native cultures by European explorers as preserved in
Hakluyt’s Voyages. One of my favorite essays is
Montaigne’s “On Cannibals.” He wasn’t the traveler, but
purports to give a description of Native Americans in the
Caribbean as told by one who had seen them. Our good Michel
de Montaigne employs the device to direct critical barbs
at the Europeans of his own time.
When
travelers came to Utah in the nineteenth century, they wrote
letters. Some of them wrote articles for newspapers and
even books, describing the exotic land of the Mormons.
They were eyewitnesses.
It
goes without saying, perhaps, that much of this reporting
is superficial. Attending a Mormon meeting, travelers heard
talks. Homey examples and perhaps less than perfect grammar
could lead the visitor to conclude that Mormons were stupid
and their religion incoherent. Not up to the standard of
Henry Ward Beecher, Mormon sermons, in the words of one
observer, seemed like “strange ramblings.”
We
can understand the reaction. Do you ever have that feeling
about some of the talks in our meetings even now? On the
other hand, there is little evidence that the outside observer
was capable of recognizing the spiritual overtones that
resonated among the local population. Personal testimonies
communicate powerfully, touching the heart — of those who
are on the same wave length.
Looking
at Mormon children, some travelers saw them as ill-mannered.
They weren’t making this up, for church leaders and many
Mormon parents were similarly concerned about those children
and teenagers. Disrespectful, sassy, these youngsters were,
in the vernacular of the time, “rowdies.” Let=s see now, could such an attitude possibly be found in some
children elsewhere? Does this unflattering description
fit ten percent of the children or ninety percent? It does
make a difference.
More
than this, to some visitors Mormon children appeared ill-favored,
narrow of brow, sallow of complexion. As Gary Bunker and
I pointed out in an article, such a perception was not based
on a scientific sample but on an expectation. Polygamy,
some thought, must certainly pollute the blood stream produce
degenerate offspring. By selectively choosing examples,
the observer saw what he expected to see.
A
woman walks down the street. If she was not grinning and
laughing, the traveler looks at her pensive face and furrowed
brow and imagines what she must have been thinking. Obviously,
thinks the traveler, she reflects the misery of being oppressed
in a patriarchal society. Oh, yes, of course, Mr. Traveler.
I couldn’t be more convinced that you knew what she was
thinking if you had charts showing her brain waves. I submit
that she was troubled over the injustice of being misrepresented
by travelers who couldn’t be bothered to ask questions and
to listen. That is why she was not smiling.
We
are all familiar with Mark Twain’s famous description of
Mormon women. He came, he said, full of desire to achieve
a great reform, “until I saw the Mormon women. Then I was
touched. My heart was wiser than my head. It warmed toward
these poor, ungainly and pathetically ‘homely’ creatures,
and as I turned to hide the generous moisture in my eyes,
I said, ‘No — the man that marries one of them has done
an act of Christian charity which entitles him to the kindly
applause of mankind, not their harsh censure — and the man
that marries sixty of them has done a deed of open-hearted
generosity so sublime that the nations should stand uncovered
in his presence and worship in silence.’”
Very funny, Mr. Twain. The gag writers for Jay Leno and David Letterman could easily
come up with something similar about your relatives in Hannibal,
Missouri. The rigors of overland journeys and pioneer settlement
no doubt took a toll on one’s complexion and general physical
health, but that was true everywhere, from Colorado to Australia,
from Arizona to Siberia. Besides, some of us have the photographic
evidence that our foremothers were alert, attractive people
of strong character.
Writers
of travel accounts tend to be superficial and to see what
they want to see or expect to see. But not all travel literature
is on the same dubious level. Some travelers spent more
time among their hosts. Although limited by their lack
of in-depth understanding, travelers could look at a place
with fresh eyes. They missed much, but sometimes they perceived
connections the local people failed to see.
Our
friend Jo Snow, who with her husband Marcellus lives in
Honolulu, has studied William Chandless and his 1857 book
A Visit to Salt Lake. In her view, Chandless, even
though only twenty-six years old at the time of his sojourn
in Utah, was conscientious and quite reliable. Another
celebrated traveler was the colorful adventurer Sir Richard
Burton, who wrote The City of the Saints (1861).
Burton’s book is not without its problems, but some of his
observations, especially those based on a comparison of
cultures, are acute.
Much
depends on who the traveler talks to. Some early travelers
to Utah spent their time with anti-Mormons who filled their
minds with horror stories. JoAn and I have been guides
on Temple Square. What we used to say there, I suppose,
amounted to a simplified and ritualized account of Brigham
Young’s “This is the place” pronouncement, the miracle of
the seagulls and crickets, the sacrifice and exertion of
building a tabernacle in the desert, and so forth. I think
that was of value to most visitors. At least they would
know how the Mormons saw themselves.
We
later had the opportunity to take a tour of Salt Lake City’s
historic sites with a different kind of guide. At every
location the guide, obviously no friend of the “local culture,”
regaled the visitors with stories and jokes about the Mormons
and their strange ways. I was reminded of the hack drivers
who did the same thing for visitors in the old days. Realizing
what visitors were being told led to the decision in 1902
to establish a bureau of information on Temple Square.
A
recent book-length general treatment of the Mormons shows
some desire to be fair and avoids the obvious falsehoods
of many such books. Yet it is not profound and shows evidence
of being strongly influenced by a small number of Mormon-watchers
and malcontents. On the other hand, to cite an opposite
example, the English scholar Douglas Davies has been able,
perhaps because of his training in cultural studies, to
make important contributions to our understanding by respecting
the evidence produced by the Mormons themselves and placing
it in an understandable context.
Oversimplifying
and doing less than justice to another people, religion,
or culture is not confined to writing about the Mormons.
It is safe to say, I think, that Mormons who have spent
some time in travel, even two years, often return with a
limited, slanted understanding. Speaking more broadly,
I think we can say that military and foreign
service personnel who spend a tour of duty in a given
country often betray little understanding of the politics,
the literature, the history of that place. Yet some learn
a good deal.
“The
use of traveling is to regulate imagination by reality,”
said Samuel Johnson, “and, instead of thinking how things
may be, to see them as they are.” By all means, let us
travel and see with our own eyes. But there’s the rub:
seeing things “as they are” is easier said than accomplished,
and travel is no guarantee of a full grasp of truth.
In
approaching other cultures and world religions, we should
expect to find complexity, stresses and strains between
generations and subgroups, and change across time. That
awareness should stop us from the sweeping pronouncements
we sometimes hear. We should do a lot of listening. Perhaps
we should do more quoting, thus allowing people to represent
themselves. Let them say what
they think and explain why they do certain things.
In
imagination the historian goes to a different time and place,
learns some things, and reports what he finds. What kinds
of questions does the historian ask? How many witnesses
(primary sources) does he or she examine? Some of those
“witnesses” are travelers, and some of those travelers are
like the English reporter mentioned at the beginning of
this essay who sat in a restaurant and saw (or imagined)
what he wanted to see.
We
enjoy descriptions by travelers but should be aware of their
limitations. What bias did the traveler bring? What lens
did he look through? Who were his informants? What questions
did he ask? What confirming or disconfirming evidence is
available?
As
I said at the beginning, historians have good reason to
be humble. But isn’t that true of all of us? Here for
a brief period of time, dependent for our information on
a limited number of sources, we are all travelers in a sense,
pilgrims and strangers.
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© 2005 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Author: |
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Davis
Bitton is a retired University of Utah history professor. After
serving a mission in France, he graduated from BYU and then received
M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Princeton University. For ten years
he was assistant Church historian. His most recent books are "Images
of the Prophet Joseph Smith" and "George Q. Cannon: A
Biography." Davis had the good fortune and blessing to marry
JoAn, a convert and former missionary in Chile. Daughter of an immigrant
from Malta, JoAn edits a newsletter for Maltese Latter-day Saints
and missionaries. Davis and JoAn served as guides on Temple Square
for five years. They live on the lower avenues in Salt Lake City.
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