If you're speaking to the public, or doing an event with spectators, you're presenting yourself as a public historian. If you're doing something publicly, you've opened yourself up to discussion. If you're doing something wrong, you've opened yourself up to criticism. Teaching incorrect history, be it through a poor talk, showing the public an incorrect camp, showing the public incorrect material culture, showing the public a hokey battle, or showing the public poor drill, should rightfully be criticized whether the person doing it asks for such criticism or not.
Anybody who has heard me give a talk at a living history, especially at a battlefield, knows that I always tell the public that they need to forget whatever they might have seen at a reenactment. I tell them that most reenactors are not historians, most have no idea what they're talking about, that what they saw was a theme camp, and that it bore virtually no resemblance to the Civil War. Part of what the authentic living history community is forced to do today is try to correct what people have learned from what the mainstream has been doing wrong for years. Letting people know that reenactors are doing it wrong is just part of proper public interp now.
I do History for a living. Get paid to do it. Your tax dollars have, at times, gone to pay me to try to correct what the public has been taught by mainstream reenactors. If a reenactor looks like an idiot, puts on a hokey battle, or tells some fantasy story about the Civil War, somebody should say something about it. Hopefully, in doing so, it either shames people into improving or pushes them out of the hobby.
-Craig Schneider
Anybody who has heard me give a talk at a living history, especially at a battlefield, knows that I always tell the public that they need to forget whatever they might have seen at a reenactment. I tell them that most reenactors are not historians, most have no idea what they're talking about, that what they saw was a theme camp, and that it bore virtually no resemblance to the Civil War. Part of what the authentic living history community is forced to do today is try to correct what people have learned from what the mainstream has been doing wrong for years. Letting people know that reenactors are doing it wrong is just part of proper public interp now.
I do History for a living. Get paid to do it. Your tax dollars have, at times, gone to pay me to try to correct what the public has been taught by mainstream reenactors. If a reenactor looks like an idiot, puts on a hokey battle, or tells some fantasy story about the Civil War, somebody should say something about it. Hopefully, in doing so, it either shames people into improving or pushes them out of the hobby.
-Craig Schneider
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