Why study history?
As a Greek and Roman studies minor, I encounter a lot of people asking this question. I think it stems partially from the ‘humanities are useless’ mindset that pervades every conversation on postsecondary studies, but also from the assumption that history is not relevant to modern life. “It’s not like it’s useful,” I’ve heardsome people say.
But what’s past is prologue. We cannot successfully make choices in the present without first understanding the past. Everything that society is today comes from our history. We would not be living, breathing, in this moment without the actions of our ancestors.
What’s past is prologue.
Aside from the research and analytical skills that are cultivated through the study of history, it gives us a broader perspective on life. It’s reassuring to know that you are not alone in the struggles you face—someone long ago probably experienced the same thing. Feuding with your friends? Caesar and Pompey went through it as well. Caught in a love triangle? So were Harmodius and Aristogeiton—though I wouldn’t suggest murdering your Hipparchus as a means of resolving romantic tensions. History tells us that our joys and sorrows were shared by people living centuries before us—and will likely be felt centuries after we are gone.
How are you to be remembered?
It’s an interesting side effect of studying the past, but I often find myself thinking of how future generations will look back on our time. What will they think about our technology, our politics? What of the lives we led? What of our personal legacy—when scholars and historians read about the 21st century, whose names will be written in the history textbooks? Sappho, the 7th century poet, wrote, “Someone will remember us, I say—even in another time.” But how are you to be remembered? What will people say of our actions in the present?
When I study stories of those who are long passed, when I read words inscribed centuries ago, it is with the knowledge that the past is anything but dead. History is happening in the now—it’s up to us to make it.
That’s why I study history.
Previously published on abookmuse.blogspot.com
Featured image via Igor Miske on Unsplash
Frequent use of derogatory terms can create a hostile and toxic environment, both in social settings and workplaces, making it harder for women to thrive.