Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins: Dark Times: The Uses and Abuses of History in an Authoritarian Era
Date: November 18, 4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
Location: Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery

Robert K. Webb Lecture
Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins, Wesleyan University
Part of the Fall 2025 Humanities Forum
Until recently, the history profession has expressed skepticism about using history to understand contemporary events. Fear of political bias, anachronism and simply bad historical comparisons were behind such skepticism. Moreover, there were concerns that doing the history of the present would cause students to lose interest in the distant historical past–a worry inseparable from the drop in number of students majoring in history. On these grounds so called “presentism” was considered anathema to the discipline. However, Brexit, Covid 19, and the current political turn toward authoritarianism, have led to an explosion of historical works attempting to make sense of the booming buzzing confusion of the present moment. At the same time, many historians have excelled at using historical comparisons to illuminate the current order of things. This lecture explains the origins of the recent turn to the present in the professional study of history, while looking at its promises and perils for the field.
Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins is an Assistant Professor in the College for Social Studies at Wesleyan University. He runs an interview series for The Nation. His book, Impossible Peace, Improbable War: Raymond Aron and World Order, is forthcoming from Yale University Press.
Admission is free.
The annual Robert K. Webb lecture is organized by the Department of History, and is co-sponsored by the Dresher Center for the Humanities.
