Book review of Jill Lepore, The Name of War: King Philips War and the Origins of American Identity.

Authors Avatar by thatoneguy (student)

History is often said to be written by the victors.  If one are on top, they get to decide how an event or conflict will be perceived by others because there will not be anyone to refute that story or account.  Just as every story has two sides, history itself has many sides to look at.  In any given war or conflict, it will be looked at different in the history books.  In the Revolutionary War, Americans saw themselves as people who were treated unfairly and were fighting to break away from the unfair tyrant that was Great Britain.  In Great Britain, Americans were not patriots, they were rebels.  They were anarchists who would rather kill their countrymen than be part of Great Britain.  Jill Lepore looks at this idea even further.  Her book is a “story of war, and how people write about it.”  The central argument is based on the fact that because history is often written by the victors, there is usually more to the story that one does not hear because it is covered up and lost with ones who lose the battle.  When the victors are able to write the history how they want, they are essentially winning the battle all over again.

By using King Philip’s War, she is able to look at a war that only has written accounts.  There was no media.  People could not see news reports or pictures.  Everything historians have learned has been from written accounts.   Generally when people hear oral histories, they are more likely to believe that they are myths or have been exaggerated over time.  Those same people generally accept that written history is true and is accurate.  Lepore basically sets out to show that written history is just as likely to be based on myth and one cannot always believe what one reads.  

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Before the conflict, there were relatively good relations between the Indians and the colonists.  The big change that set off this conflict was the murder of John Sassamon.  After this, there was a dramatic decline in attempts to convert the Indians to Christianity.  This shows a major change in the relations between the two groups.  She describes the conflict, but uses it more as a tool to explain the power of the written word.  Things such as the printing press made a difference in the conflict because it allowed documents distributed by the English to be read by more and ...

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