One Ship or Two? American History and the Stories We Tell
James Traub's recent review in The Atlantic of David S. Reynolds's Two Ships asks a question that reaches far beyond a single history book. Are Americans one people, or have we always been two nations occupying the same territory? The image is compelling. Reynolds argues that from the beginning America has been carried by two vessels: one devoted to liberty, constitutional government, and equality; the other shaped by slavery, racial hierarchy, and domination. The two ships sail the same waters but pursue different destinations. It is an arresting metaphor. Like all good metaphors, it does more than illustrate an argument. It changes what we see. But perhaps the most illuminating question is not whether Reynolds is right. It is why this metaphor has become so persuasive. Over the past generation, Americans have increasingly argued about the nation's "true" story. Samuel Huntington described America as fundamentally an Anglo-Protestant nation. The 1619 Project as...