[On February 8th,
1910, Chicago publisher William D. Boyce
incorporated the Boys Scouts of America,
a US
version of the international Scouting organization. So this week I’ll
AmericanStudy Boyce and a handful of other figures connected to the Boy Scouts,
leading up to a weekend post on the Scouts in the 21st century.]
On two
different, equally groundbreaking forms of extraterrestrial exploration.
It’s of course
not the biographical detail for which he’s best known, but Neil
Armstrong (1930-2012) was likely the most famous Boy and Eagle Scout of all
time. Armstrong joined
the Scouts as a boy in Ohio in the late 1930s, and attained the rank of
Eagle Scout as a teenager in the early 1940s; during his famous July 1969 space
voyage to the moon on the Columbia,
he radioed back, “I'd like to say hello to all my fellow Scouts and Scouters at
Farragut State Park in Idaho having a National Jamboree there
this week; and Apollo 11 would like to send them best wishes.” The
Scouting experiences of actor and activist George
Takei (1937- ) are far less well known, but pretty unique and interesting
in their own right; after spending much of his early life in a Japanese
internment camp, Takei moved with his family back to Los Angeles after World
War II, and there he joined Boy
Scout Troop 379, organized as part of the city’s famous Koyasan Buddhist Temple. While these
two 1940s Scouting (and life) experiences might seem dramatically distinct, I’d
also argue that they reflect the way that a national community such as the Boy
Scouts can in fact cut across such regional, cultural, and historical differences
and help link young Americans in symbolic but meaningful ways.
The Scouts aren’t
the only link between Armstrong and Takei, of course; and while the two men
journeyed to space—the final frontier—in vastly
different ways, both of their extraterrestrial experiences could be said to
have importantly pushed the boundaries of our society. In this
post from almost exactly three years ago I wrote about the persistent
conspiracy theories about Armstrong and company’s 1969 moon landing, and I
would argue that, ironically but definitely, those extremist theories
themselves reflect just how significantly the moon landing affected and shifted
our collective narratives and perspectives. That is, Armstrong’s “giant leap for
mankind” was giant not only for the more obvious (and certainly accurate) reasons
of exploration and science and human achievement and the like, but also for the
way it fundamentally and permanently altered our shared horizon. Authors and
artists had of course been imagining
voyages to the moon for centuries, but the trip, and thus in some
meaningful ways the place itself, had remained at that imaginative, that
speculative, level (not in actuality, where the moon has always been perfectly
real, but in our human perspectives). When Armstrong’s feet first touched the
surface of the moon, that all changed; now this distant celestial body was part
of our collective landscape of experience.
Unlike the Columbia, the Starship
Enterprise never got further off the ground than whatever contraption
might have been employed at NBC Studios to make it appear that the Star
Trek cast were indeed boldly
going where no man had ever gone before. But that doesn’t mean that Captain
Kirk and company didn’t truly expand our frontiers in all sorts of ways, and I
would argue that the show’s casting was in 1966 (the year it premiered) one prominent
form of expansion. African American actress Nichelle Nichols (as communications
officer Lieutenant Uhuru) was one important such casting
choice, a striking nod to an interracial and integrated crew on this future
exploratory mission. But casting George Takei as helmsman Lieutenant Sulu was
just as groundbreaking, and indeed perhaps even more so given the frustrating
paucity of Asian American characters and actors in 1950s and 60s television
shows. As with Nichols, I don’t believe that the show engaged much at all with
these characters’ racial or ethnic identities, which only amplified the sense
that they were simply members of the Enterprise’s
crew, participating in these extraterrestrial missions on equal terms with
William Shatner’s Kirk, Leonard Nimoy’s Spock, and all the rest. That Takei has
since become one of our culture’s most iconic and outspoken gay men (and gay
rights advocates) only adds one more layer to his contribution to those social and
cultural explorations and expansions.
Next Scouts
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Scouting histories or stories you’d share?
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