Problems of identity in America: two views

Modern Age, Summer, 2005 by John Zmirak, Jeremy Black

I

THIS IS A RARE BOOK -- erudite and readable, analytical but urgent, a work of political science which the author admits he wrote as "a patriot." While few political theorists outside of certain radical circles are likely to admit that they are not patriotic, one encounters fewer still who write from an explicit desire to preserve and to protect their country. Not just its political institutions, or the ideology which undergirds them, but the concrete, shared reality that is America--so much of which, Huntington convincingly demonstrates, is the result not of inexorable historical processes, or the unfolding of mankind's deepest yearnings and some obscure divine decree, but happy historical accidents. Serendipity.

Among these accidents, the author is not embarrassed to point out, is the national character which marked the North American colonists--specifically, their "Anglo-Protestant culture." Samuel Huntington convincingly challenges the corpus of Cold War (neoconservative and liberal) apologetics for American exceptionalism, which grounded America's virtues exclusively in the Enlightenment ideology of some of the Founders.

Professor Huntington notices that literally dozens of other nations were founded at almost the same time, by Enlightened liberal Freemasons from Colombia to Paraguay, yet few of them persevered in their liberal institutions. Why did Bolivar's Republic founder into chaos and tyranny while Washington's prospered and stayed (in certain ways) free? Because political seeds can only flourish when they fall in fertile ground. The soil in which liberal, decentralized government could survive--insofar as it has survived--was one which had been prepared for centuries before Jefferson ever set pen to paper.

Huntington points to the suspicion of centralized authority which persisted in the dominant (Presbyterian, Quaker, and Puritan) strands of Protestantism to which the overwhelming majority of American settlers adhered, the century or more of congregational (rather than papal or episcopal) decision-making through which these churches were governed, and the very worldly work-ethic which dominated men of these creeds. These churches, he says, were the "reformation of the Reformation." He contrasts their anti-authoritarianism, pragmatism, and general suspicion of institutions with the ways of Anglicans and Catholics--whose faith entails deference to established authority, resignation in the face of suffering, and a reverence for poverty. These are stereotypes, but who can look at Mexico and Texas (for instance) and fail to see their basis in fact? Compare, for that matter, the attitudes towards poverty, war and peace, and religious authority of President Bush and Pope Benedict XVI. One need not agree with the Puritan worldview to recognize that the psychological attitudes it inculcated still dominate American culture and are responsible for its most identifiable virtues and vices.

This Anglo-Protestant root was planted by America's earliest settlers--which Huntington carefully distinguishes from immigrants, dispelling the myth that this is a "nation of immigrants." The Puritans of Massachusetts, the Quakers of Pennsylvania, the Scots-Irish of Tennessee were not impoverished individuals asking admittance of a developed, pre-existing polity to which they would assimilate. They were alien invaders, arriving in groups with clearly defined communal beliefs, determined to buy or wrest a continent away from divided, mutually hostile tribes of hunter-gatherers. That is not the situation faced by subsequent and contemporary immigrants to the United States--at least, not yet.

With loving detail, Huntington shows how members of every ethnic group that arrived in the United States came to accept the cultural and political mores of its Anglo-Protestant founders. Jews who were not particularly observant in the Old Country established synagogues so they could attend weekly services like the Protestants. Catholics embraced the separation of Church and State--eventually dragging their mother Church after them. Even when religious groups set up their own parochial schools--to resist the steady pressure of Protestantization imposed in the public schools--they invariably laid heavy emphasis on patriotism, mastery of English, and the virtues of "Americanism." Yet such institutions of Americanization, Huntington warns, have by now largely broken down--leaving a degraded commercial culture and the mass media as the sole means by which new Americans learn the ways of their adopted country.

Huntington analyzes other developed and developing countries, in comparison and contrast with America, to suggest four themes around which national unity can develop:

1) Ethnic, based on perceptions of a close-knit, consanguineous group. Examples include the nationalism which arose in Japan, Germany, Ireland, India, and the early American colonies.

2) Racial, based on visible differences among peoples. Such a unifying principle, Huntington argues, inspired white Americans of various ethnicities once they had begun to intermarry and assimilate--until this identification was rendered morally repugnant during the Civil Rights Movement.

 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement

Content provided in partnership with Thompson Gale