On what we think about our past and identity, and why it matters so much.
Today I focus on two very political stories that feel too
relevant to what I’m trying to do here—as well as my ideal goals for my
second book—not to engage with them. The first is a somewhat old story and
one in response to which (so to speak) I’ve already written, but one that bears
repeating nonetheless: Dan Severson, a candidate for Minnesota Secretary of State
in the 2010 election (I can’t bring myself to find out whether he won, although
I fear the worst), said in October that “There
is no such thing” as the separation of church and state, that “it just does not
exist, and it does not exist in America for a purpose, because we are a
Christian nation.” I can’t say that Mr. Severson needs to read my
earlier post on the Treaty of Tripoli, because I have a feeling he’s a lost
cause; but certainly the need to counter a position like his with historical
details about (for example) that Treaty, to add some AmericanStudies knowledge
to the conversations in contrast to that kind of rank fiction or ignorance, makes
a compelling argument that a blog like this has a role to play in our contemporary
conversations.
Even more meaningful than his nonsense about the separation
of church and state, however, is Severson’s final and more sweeping assertion
that “we are a Christian nation.” I argue explicitly in the conclusion to that second
book that what was at stake in the 2008 election, and what remains most
significantly at stake in (for example) debates over President Obama’s
American-ness, is a set of debates over America’s core, founding, fundamental
identity; more specifically and centrally, in relation to Severson’s quote, I
believe that the great majority of positions held by the contemporary right can
be boiled down to corollaries of such a belief about America’s Christian (and
Anglo, English-speaking, etc) origins. Along those lines, former Speaker of the
House, current pundit, and failed presidential candidate Newt Gingrich argued
in a March 2011 speech delivered at an evangelical Texas mega-church that
“I have two grandchildren — Maggie is 11, Robert is 9, [and] I am convinced
that if we do not decisively win the struggle over the nature of America, by
the time they're my age they will be in a secular atheist country, potentially
one dominated by radical Islamists and with no understanding of what it once
meant to be an American.”
The responses to Gingrich’s quote that I’ve read have
understandably focused on the tortured logic by which a secular atheist country
could be dominated by radical Islamists. But to my mind, the more significant
argumentative ideas here are the last and the first—Gingrich’s explicitly
Christian vision of “what it once meant to be an American,” and his desire to
pass down that fictitious heritage to a future generation of young Americans. On
the latter general idea Newt and I agree—there’s a reason why I put pictures of my boys on each
version of this blog, and a reason why the
cover of my book features a photograph of young American schoolchildren (of
a variety of ethnic and cultural backgrounds); the stakes of these debates over
what we are and have always been are most definitely tied to the future, and especially
to what future Americans recognize as our shared and communal and core
identities. And I would add the vitally important idea, also at the heart of my
book, that America has always been
defined not only by multiple cultures and peoples and languages and
religions—the emphasis of the multicultural historical narrative which often
counters the Christian one, and with which I agree in many ways but which still
defines cultures as individual and static and at least somewhat separate—but
also by the cross-cultural intersections and combinations and hybrid
transformations of that community.
What’s the difference between those two narratives, the
multicultural one and my cross-cultural idea? I would answer that by pointing
to another recent story, the
census results in which Hispanic Americans constitute roughly a sixth of the
nation’s population. In the Christian narrative, this is a dire trend, a
sign that things are indeed changing and for the worse; in the multicultural
narrative, it would I believe likewise be seen as a change, just a much more
positive one (toward increasing diversity, for example). Yet in my
cross-cultural vision of America, one that includes Spanish American arrivals
and settlers (in Florida, in Texas, in the Southwest and California) as first and
founding Americans alongside, in fact in cross-cultural mixture with, the
Puritans in Massachusetts and the French in the upper Midwest and the Catholics
in Maryland and the Dutch in New Amsterdam and African slaves in Virginia and
Native Americans everywhere and many others besides, those census results
merely highlight how much 21st century America stands, like our
President, as a descendent of what we have always been, of what has always
defined our most unique and significant community and identity. More tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you think?
11/13 Memory Day nominee: Buck O’Neil,
the Negro Leagues baseball
star, Civil
Rights activist, and all-around amazing
American legend.
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