Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Pinckney and Me: An Apology and a Promise

First, to put it as bluntly as possible: I screwed up badly in writing one of my recent public scholarly op eds, a piece for Talking Points Memo on the history of Muslim American communities in Revolutionary South Carolina. That piece focused on a few key histories and stories which I believed provide important context for the recent Chapel Hill shooting—but the culminating such story, and one which gave the piece its title, involved Charles Pinckney and an exchange during the Constitution ratification debate in SC.

I remembered reading this exchange long ago in primary documents related to those debates—ever since I read it, the exchange had stuck out to me as a singular moment that condenses and exemplifies such broader histories from the era. Perhaps because it had stuck out to me for so long, or perhaps because I was writing the piece quickly in order to connect and respond to this current event, I didn’t try to confirm the exchange in any available online sources (which include numerous transcripts of those historical debates). Whatever were the causes of my failure to do so, they’re neither excuses nor justifications—I should have confirmed this specific history in available sources; and when I found that I couldn’t do so, as I have indeed found in trying to confirm the history in response to follow ups to my post, I should have cut it and framed the broader histories instead.

So that’s the first and most important thing to say: I should have confirmed this particular detail, not with my imperfect memory but in any and all available sources right now. I’m very sorry that I didn’t do so, and thus that my piece offered a possibly inaccurate and certainly imprecise version of this important history.

I want to make sure to say two other things as well. First, I have published nearly 1500 online pieces in the last 4.5 years—almost 1400 on my daily AmericanStudies blog since November 2010, and lots of others on a wide variety of sites in the last couple years, including TPM. I believe in the vast, vast majority of those I have indeed confirmed all of my details in all available sources (hard copies when I have or have access to them, online when I don’t), not trusting my memory or perspective but rather verifying as fully as possible all of what I’m writing.

Second, though, it’s not enough to say “vast, vast majority” there. Such confirmation is important in each and every post and piece, in every case, all of the time. In moving toward producing more immediate and current public scholarship, engaged as quickly as possible in finding contexts for what’s happening now, I was perhaps in danger of forgetting that, or at least of minimizing its importance in favor of getting things out right now. Or at the very least, I clearly did so in this particular instance. And I promise you, promise myself, and promise the community of public AmericanStudiers of which I’m working to be part, that I will make sure from now on that every piece I write is as fully sourced and supported as possible.

Thanks for reading, and I welcome any feedback,

Ben