On the
stakes of 2012 for the American issue that can seem more abstract but has
plenty of very concrete effects, and that matters most to me.
Anyone who
has read
this blog for a while, or who has read my second book,
or who has ever talked with me about anything American Studies-related, knows
how centrally interested I am in the question of how we define “American,” of
what that idea, that identity, that community, means. As I argue at length in
that book’s Conclusion, I believe that the debates over Barack Obama’s “American-ness,”
over the question (to quote a Time cover story from just before the
2008 election) “Is Barack Obama American Enough?,” have been central to our
political culture for the last four years. You can see those debates in the
Birther movement, in the Tea
Party cry of “I want my country back,” and in so many other moments and
issues in contemporary America. And Mitt Romney has been a part of those
debates for just as long, dating back at least to his statement, during the
2008 presidential campaign, that “Barack
Obama looks toward Europe for a lot of his inspiration; John McCain is going to
make sure that America stays America.”
It’s easy
to see this issue as the least significant of the five with which I’ve dealt
this week, and I’m not going to argue that it has nearly the immediate and
practical relevance that they do. Certainly the question of where Obama was born,
while incredibly frustrating to those of us in the reality-based community,
would only be practically significant if one of the many Birther lawsuits
managed to actually keep him off of a state’s ballot or the like. But I think
there are any number of immediate and significant effects to each possible
definition of America, from the most to the least inclusive; is there any
doubt, to cite one ongoing current event, that the
debate over a possible mosque in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, depends entirely on
whether we see Muslim Americans as part of “America” or somehow outside of it? Isn’t
it clear, as Obama
acknowledged in the speech with which he announced his DREAM Act executive
order, that seeing its young beneficiaries as “Americans in their hearts,
in their minds” is crucial to supporting that policy change? The second of
those examples is without doubt more complex than the first, includes legal and
governmental factors much more centrally; but both nonetheless hinge on
precisely who and what we mean (and don’t mean) by “American.”
Yet there’s
another, and to my mind even more meaningful, effect to these debates: what
they mean for the identities and perspectives of each individual American. I’ve
expressed before my admiration for Colin Powell’s answer, during his 2008
endorsement of Obama, to lies about Obama’s Muslim identity, his statement that
while the correct answer is that Obama is not a Muslim, the “more correct”
answer is: “Is there something wrong with being a Muslim in this country? The answer is
no. That's not America. Is there something wrong with a seven-year-old
Muslim-American kid believing he or she could be president?” If I had to
express most succinctly why I think these debates over the meaning of “American”
are so crucial, I would ask precisely the same question, writ large: how do you
think it feels for a young kid—a Muslim American kid, or the child of
undocumented immigrants, or a kid realizing he or she is gay—to be told,
implicitly but often explicitly as well, that he or she is outside of “American”
identity, is an other within his or her homeland? That’s the stake of these
debates—and, I believe, one of the most fundamental stakes of the 2012
election, and many of our ongoing political arguments beyond it.
Crowd-sourced post on these topics this weekend,
Ben
PS. What do you think? I’d love to add your voice
and ideas about any of the week’s topics, or anything else election and
American Studies-related, to that weekend post!
6/22 Memory Day nominee: Billy
Wilder, one of America’s most talented
and successful
film directors and screenwriters, and one who contributed some of the 20th
century’s most pioneering
and important (as well
as popular and influential)
films.
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