Famously, E. H. Carr once gave his fellow historians the jolly advice to study ※the historian before you begin to study the facts§. He went on to say: ※when you read a work of history, always listen out for the buzzing§. Underneath the pure strings of Clio*s lyre, as a Victorian clergyman might put it, hums the industrial techno-grunge of the historian*s personal concerns, political allegiances and so on: their own life, in short. In Mischka*s War, like some West German experimental noisenik, Sheila Fitzpatrick, an eminent historian of Soviet Russia, has turned the buzzing right up and the strings right down: the book is about her late husband, Michael Danos.
Fitzpatrick has form for writing on the border between memoir and history (her fascinating A Spy in the Archives, for example). But this is slightly different: it*s not her life, but her husband*s, and throughout the book she wrestles with the rights and wrongs of this, unwilling to betray his memory, but unwilling also to betray her ※historian*s Hippocratic oath# &don*t leave things out because you don*t like them*§.
His story is certainly full and, as she says, singular. Born in Riga, Danos experiences first the Soviet occupation (terrible: ※when there was danger around, you had to go on &autopilot*#and make yourself as still and unnoticeable as possible, all the while looking for a chance to melt away from the scene of danger§); then the German occupation (better, if you weren*t Jewish). He witnesses a mass grave and tells his mother, Olga: she knows, she*d been hiding Jews and helping them to escape. In 1944, he leaves Riga heading not east but west, to Nazi Germany. The logic of going into the ※Lion*s Den§ was simple: if he stayed in Riga, ※he would be called up; if he went to Germany, he wouldn*t be§. There, he is on a date on the outskirts of Dresden when it is firebombed: his diaries give a remarkable account of the destruction and the aftermath, and of his own responses. His time as a Displaced Person in the West conveys the confusion of the immediate post-war period and the book ends with his and his mother*s emigration to New York (※we made it!§). That*s the melody.
The historiographical lesson, the buzzing, is more complex: archival work, Fitzpatrick writes, favours ※the general and the typical§, but individual histories show up the ※anomalies, divergences§: one*s late husband might deserve an encomium, but a historical subject needs to be seen warts and all. The book aims at 每 and achieves 每 the balance. Not a memoir, not a biography, not a history, but each, reflective and blended.
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Creative artists are sometimes thought to have a ※late style§, a movement beyond the work that established them to something that is simpler (The Tempest is more like a fable), somehow distils the ※central theme§ of their career and yet looks forward to a future that they won*t see. Perhaps historians have a ※late style§ too: having mastered the tight constraints of historical writing (Clio*s strings bind as well as play), they turn to a freedom that offers a profounder understanding of what history can be.
Robert Eaglestone is professor of contemporary literature and thought at Royal Holloway, University of London. The Broken Voice: Reading Post-Holocaust Literature and the fourth edition of Doing English were both published this year.
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Mischka*s War: A Story of Survival from War-Torn Europe to New York
By Sheila Fitzpatrick
I. B. Tauris, 320pp, ?20.00
ISBN 9781788310222
Published 13 July 2017
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