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How to read a document: analyzing a historical text

Franklin Delano Roosevelt's inaugural speech in 1933 is explored. Amid the Great Depression, Roosevelt uses biblical references and authoritative language to inspire hope. He blames the crisis on bankers and proposes government intervention for recovery. His speech sets the stage for his New Deal policies.

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Video transcript

- [Voiceover] In our last video, we started looking at this speech by Franklin Delano Roosevelt which he gave at his innaguration in March of 1933. We took some time to just identify what was happening in this speech and also the context of this speech, coming at the height of the Great Depression. - [Voiceover] Now we're gonna dive deeper into our textual analysis and explore the soucre, figure out what is going on with Roosevelt's language and what he's trying to say and what his biases are. - [Voiceover] Let's get a little more into what else goes on in this speech, not just the very famous opening paragraph. We start here with saying people are facing the grim problem of existence, and a foolish optimist can deny the dark realities of the moment, and then what comes next? - [Voiceover] Let's hear all this in context. Yet our distress comes from no failure of substance. We are stricken by no plague of locusts, compared with the perils which our forefathers conquered, because they believed and were not afraid, we still have much to be thankful for. Nature still offers her bounty and human efforts have multiplied. Plenty is at our doorstep, but a generous use of it languishes in the very sight of the supply. Primarily this is because the rulers of the exchange of mankind's goods have failed through their own stubbornness and their own incompetence. Having admitted their failure and abdicated, practices of the unscrupulous money changers stand indicted in the court of public opinion, rejected by the hearts and minds of man. Restoration calls however, not for changes in ethics alone. This nation asks for action and action now. What's interesting about this paragraph is that there's a lot of Bible stuff going on in here. There's a lot of biblical references that serve to do I think a lot of work for Roosevelt in this inaugural address. - [Voiceover] As you talked, I just underlined the things that really stood out to me as maybe kind of the heart of what he was saying, and you're saying these are like Biblical references. What do you mean by that? - [Voiceover] Some of them are. When we're talking about plague of locusts and money changers specifically, we're looking at old and new testament references respectively, in fact, later in this speech, he refers to money changers being chased out of our nation's temple which is a deliberate reference to the New Testament. - [Voiceover] This is very grand. We love to hear this speech so much, because it has that kind of ringing of authenticity in a way that maybe a modern speech does not. - [Voiceover] Some of that authenticity comes through association with ethic literature and the Bible. He's making these illusions to great Biblical events. Like the plague of locusts being visited upon Egypt which was like a great and terrible plague, and he's using that as a counter point to the misery of the present moment. He's saying, look, things could be worse. We could be ancient Egypt in the Bible, and locusts could be eating all of our crops. Things are bad, but it's not like God himself is willing destruction upon us. - [Voiceover] Yeah, I think this is also another one of the really interesting things about the great depression. It's true that there were farm failures during the dust bowl, but on the whole it's not like people stopped producing food. This wasn't a famine. What it was was a crisis of confidence where prices went down significantly, and so farmers could not make a living on their crops. It's not that they didn't have food. It's that they didn't have money, and I also feel like there's a different aspect to the reason that he uses this biblical language here, and I think that's because it's very authoritative. When you stand up in front of a group of people and Roosevelt has this powerful voice which really resonates with people, and you speak like a preacher would speak. It says, this is a man of authority. This is a man who perhaps is in touch with the moral authority associated with the Christian Bible. - [Voiceover] Sure, for a very long time, authority was kind of correlated with your ability to quote chapter and verse. I mean we're talking about a man who is just put his hand on a Bible in order to swear himself in. - [Voiceover] It really makes him seem not only like he knows what he's talking about, but also that he's got a handle on the situation. - [Voiceover] What we're saying that by harnessing the language, he's trying to harness the authority that people have invested in the church by using the language of the church. - [Voiceover] What we're doing here, I might call step three which is to identify how an argument is made. We're looking at his rhetorical strategies and seeing how they're effective or in perhaps another case, not effective in conveying his opinion, and I say opinion. At this point, what would we say that his opinion of the Great Depression is? - [Voiceover] That it's specific people's fault, that it is at the fault of not just this wave of panic, but on a count of some greedy people, the unscrupulous money changers and the rulers of the exchanges. He's blaming bankers for the great depression, which I think is fair. There's very little regulation in the 1920s that would prevent the kind of fraud that could lead to a collapse of banking. For example, insider trading is not illegal, and most people bought stocks on margin which is a terrible idea which means you only have to put 10% of the value of a bond down before you buy it, which means that there's a lot of theoretical money floating around out there that's not backed by much real money. - [Voiceover] That sounds like a terrible idea. - [Voiceover] It was a terrible idea. - [Voiceover] It's like buying stocks on credit. - [Voiceover] Exactly. - [Voiceover] Oh, man. - [Voiceover] His argument is that first, things could be worse. Second of all, the reason things are bad is because of these people. Thing number three, here's how we're going to get back on track. - [Voiceover] This is where we get here at the end. The nation asks for action, and action now, which it says not only a mention of how he's going to get things done but a covert poke at Herbert Hoover for not doing much, and then he says, our greatest primary task is to put people to work. Remember there's an unemployment rate of 25%. - [Voiceover] That is so many people. - [Voiceover] Our current unemployment rate is less than 5% to give you an idea. This is no unsolvable problem if we face it wisely and courageously. it can be accomplished in part by direct recruiting by the government itself, treating the task as we would treat the emergency of a war, but at the same time, through this employment, accomplishing greatly needed projects to stimulate and reorganize the use of our natural resources. - [Voiceover] This is a radical idea. - [Voiceover] It is a really radical idea, and this is one reason why historians love to study the great depression and the administration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, because this is kind of the decade where we threw out the rulebook, and I think what Roosevelt is saying here is he was willing to try anything to conquer the great depression, and one of the things he tries is bringing the government into the process of giving people work. We've got a sense of what he's arguing and how he's arguing it. Let's take a higher level look now. Let's say step four is seeing if you can analyze the potential bias of a source, and I wanna be clear that all sources are biased. I think a common misconception is that if you're looking at a source, it's either biased or it's not. It's written by someone who has an agenda or someone whose completely impartial, and that is never the case. - [Voiceover] What about a photograph? If I take a photograph of something or someone, isn't that then objective rendering of that person or object? - [Voiceover] It certainly shows what was there at that moment in time, but even photographers are making choices. When you pick up a camera and you take a picture of a thing, you are taking a picture of that thing and not something else, which in itself a form of bias to say I think this is important or this is what I want you to see. - [Voiceover] Where we put the frame is a choice. The question is what is Roosevelt not saying in this speech? What is he not taking a photograph of? What's just outside the view of his camera? - [Voiceover] And why is he taking this photograph of a speech? When he sat down to write this, what was motivating him? And what are some of the perhaps even less obvious factors about why he makes the argument that he does. - [Voiceover] Obviously, the man has a bias in favor of his own politics. These are his administrations, ideas. He's going to be coming out in favor of those very strongly. - [Voiceover] FDR is a democrat. There really haven't been many democrats in office since before the Lincoln administration since the 1860s. That's a new thing. This is the popular base rejecting Hoover and the Republican party because of the Great Depression. - [Voiceover] Right. - [Voiceover] He's bringing democratic political ideas to the table here. - [Voiceover] He's trying to make a case for those political ideas in this speech. He was elected by the majority of American voters, but now he has to make the case to the rest of the United States. He has to make a case to the people that didn't elect him. - [Voiceover] He's saying that direct recruiting by the government itself, government jobs, having the powers as if the depression were war, that is a case for really strong government intervention which is a key stone of the democratic party compared to Republicans who generally advocate for a smaller government. He's saying this is what's gonna work. The democratic platform of using the government in the economy and in social programs is what's going to work to get us out of this depression. - [Voiceover] He's making a big strong case for federalism. - [Voiceover] Exactly, what I think is interesting though here is that there's a lot he doesn't say, and I think that's also important to look at when you're analyzing a primary source. There's a lot that you could talk about, but you make choices about what to talk about and what not to mention. What could you say he doesn't mention here? - [Voiceover] He doesn't mention how any of this is going to work. - [Voiceover] Yeah, I think that's maybe the biggest missing piece here. This is broad strokes. This is getting people on board, but no where does he say, okay here's exactly what I'm going to do. Let me tell you how many dollars I'm going to spend, how many people I'm going to hire, what sort of cabinets I'm going to create. This is not a time for specifics he says. This is almost more of an inspirational speech to say okay, I gotcha. We've looked at the source. We've analyzed it's rhetorical strategies, and it's potential bias. The last thing we might wanna do with this is now think about how we could use it as a source. - [Voiceover] We're taking this primary source, and we're turning it into a secondary source. - [Voiceover] Right, so say that you are sitting down to write an essay about the Great Depression, and you've gotta say, now can I use Franklin Delano Roosevelt's inaugural address to make my point in my essay? Step five let's say synthesize perhaps. Using my big words, as a tool for your own argument. - [Voiceover] I would say that this speech is the frame that Roosevelt is putting on the depression. This is how he is creating the narrative that he wants Americans to adopt or he is identifying the crisis and this is how he wants people to see it. - [Voiceover] Yeah, so this might be a great primary source to tell you about Roosevelt's strategy or his communication strategy. What might it not be a very good primary source to help you make an agrument for? - [Voiceover] It probably wouldn't be a very good primary source for the Republican legislative response. You might wanna go with Senator Reid Smoot of Utah for something like that. - [Voiceover] Right, and it's probably not a great source for really diving into the specifics of the new deal. He doesn't say anything about the civilian conservation corp. He doesn't say anything about the national recovery administration. This is not the nuts and bolts of the new deal. It's the grand idea behind it. - [Voiceover] Right, he's trying to sell the new deal. - [Voiceover] It's I think, a really powerful primary source for understanding the impetus behind the new deal, but not the programs. - [Voiceover] Sweet. - [Voiceover] Alright, well thank you for bringing your sweet grammarian skills to the table as we look at Roosevelt's speech. - [Voiceover] My pleasure, thank you for bringing your sweet historian skills to the table. - [Voiceover] Kim and David out. - [Voiceover] Scholarly high five!