[To follow
up Monday’s Patriot’s Day post, I stole a phrase from Glenn Greenwald’s great book and
briefly highlighted five genuinely and impressively patriotic past Americans,
one per post-contact century. This post adds you to the mix—so add your
nominees in comments, please!]
This
weekend’s genuinely patriotic American is you.
The
problem with what I called (in Monday’s post) the “easy” version of American
patriotism, the version that asks us to pledge allegiance, stand for the
anthem, say “God Bless America” at the drop of a hat, and so on, is not that
everybody can do it. The problem, as I see it, is that everybody can do it
without much effort at all (other than the rote performance of those kinds of rituals),
and certainly without thinking or critical engagement with complex questions
and narratives, with defining debates over our ideals and our realities. The
problem, in short, is that it’s easy—and, to quote from one of my favorite
moments in American literature (a line from the culminating section of Leslie
Marmon Silko’s Ceremony [1977]), “The
only thing is: it has never been easy.”
So this is
where you come in—you fellow AmericanStudiers, whoever and wherever you are. If
I could highlight one ongoing goal for my work on this site, I’d say the same
thing that I’d say for my published writing and works in progress, for my contributions
to Talking Points Memo and other sites, for my year-plus of book talks, for my
work with students, for my work in the Adult
Learning classes I’ve had the chance to teach, for everything I do these days as
a professional and public scholar: to help people engage more fully, with more
complexity, with our American histories and stories, our national identity and
community. While of course I have my own ideas and arguments about those topics,
at the end of the day I promise that I’m not trying to get everybody to buy
into them—I can’t imagine a better America, in fact, than one in which we can
all debate these questions, from positions of knowledge and engagement, of
passion and empathy, of civic responsibility and personal stakes.
My guess,
without knowing many of you personally yet (and again and as always—introduce
yourselves, please!), is that we’re all on the same page here. So the next step
is to extend these efforts, to share these goals and ideals with more and more
of our fellow Americans (and AmericanStudiers everywhere). Am I asking you to
send your friends and loved ones to this blog?? Maybe a bit. But mostly I’m
just asking you to have these conversations, to do this work, in your ways and
communities with your own voice and perspective, to share in the work that is
and will continue to be so crucial to our American future. I know it won’t be
easy—it never has been—but I can’t imagine anything more important, nor more
patriotic.
Next
series starts Monday,
Ben
PS. Any
thoughts? Any other patriotic Americans you’d nominate?
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