[On April
9th, 2003 a group of both Iraqi civilians and U.S. military
forces together toppled the statue of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad’s Firdos
Square, a hugely symbolic moment that highlights the role statues can play in
our communal spaces and identities. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that moment
and four other statues, leading up to a weekend post on my own continuing
thoughts on Confederate statues like those in my
hometown.]
On the gaps in
our memories of an iconic American statue, and why they need filling.
The John Harvard Statue, located
at the center of Harvard Yard and a favorite spot for tourist and
parent-student pictures, is colloquially and accurately known as the statue
of three lies: the statue’s likeness is not of 17th-century
Pilgrim John Harvard but of a 19th-century student who posed for the
sculptor; John Harvard is identified in the statue’s inscription as Harvard’s
“Founder” but in fact was just one of the college’s earliest and most crucial
financial backers; and the 1638 founding date listed in that same inscription
is two years later than the actual
1636 founding (by a vote of the Massachusetts Bay Colony’s General Court).
The lesson here is, to my mind, two-part and significant: people are drawn to
statues as particularly evocative and unifying symbols of a place or community
or history; and yet they can not only condense but also oversimplify and even
misrepresent those broad and complex identities and stories. And while none of
the misrepresentations contained in the John Harvard Statue have much import
outside of the Yard (if they do even inside it), those connected to one of the
nation’s and world’s most famous Statues, the Statue of
Liberty, are much more influential.
The oversimplifications and
misrepresentations in our national narratives about the Statue exist on two
distinct and even interestingly contrasting levels. For one thing, most of
those narratives and our central images of the Statue link it to the broad
theme of immigration to the United States; those connections are superficially
verified yet significantly complicated by Emma Lazarus’s great sonnet
“The New Colossus” (1883), which was written as part of a collection to
raise money for the construction of the Statue’s pedestal and eventually
(although only long after Lazarus’s 1887 death) inscribed onto the completed
pedestal. Lazarus’s poem is, like many of the dedications at the Statue’s
opening, most certainly a tribute to what she calls America’s stance of
“world-wide welcome”—but I would stress just how strikingly democratic and open
her vision of this core national attribute truly is, in the era of (in fact
just one year after the passage of) the
Chinese Exclusion Act and a decade in which the first huge waves of Eastern
European and Jewish immigration (communities to which Lazarus was connected by
ethnicity and distant nationality, although her family had been in America for
over a century) were being greeted with significant degrees of distrust and
open hostility. Virtually every adjective and phrase with which Lazarus’s
“Mother of Exiles” describes her hoped-for immigrants carries a seemingly
negative connotation (tired, poor, huddled masses, wretched refuse, homeless),
and so the Statue’s and poem’s embrace of these arrivals thus not only welcomes
them to America, but makes clear how fully our most ideal national identity is
constituted out of, not in spite of, such superficially unwanted immigrants and
communities.
On that level the gap between the
Statue’s identity and the popular images and narratives is not a particularly
large one, although I think we could use some more consistent reminders of the
call to welcome all arrivals, now
more than ever. Much more wide and meaningful, though, is the gap between
definitions of the Statue as connected to immigration and ideal images of
America as the Land of the Free (which would include Lazarus’) and its actual
point of origin. The idea for the Statue originated with a Frenchman, Edouard
Laboulaye, and both his overall perspective and his moment of inspiration
were extremely specific: Laboulaye was the chairman of an anti-slavery society,
and it was at a dinner party mourning the assassination of Abraham Lincoln that
he conceived of a monument to liberty in the United States as a gift for the
nation’s 1876 Centennial. While certainly he was thinking in part of the
nation’s founding and its ideals of liberty (and France’s role in helping it
achieve independence from England), he very definitely hoped to remind
Americans and outsiders alike of both the tragic legacy of slavery that existed
alongside those ideals and of the role of a leader like Lincoln in helping end
that system and bring America’s practices of liberty a bit more fully in line
with the ideals. Once Laboulaye’s chosen sculptor, Auguste
Bartholdi, came to America and began planning the Statue, he moved away
from those specific connections and toward the broader and more ideal American
visions; the speeches and dedications at the opening ceremonies entirely echoed
those emphases, as did works like Lazarus’, and the Statue’s separation from
those questions of slavery and abolition became entrenched in the narratives
and images from then on.
As with most of the narratives
and images I’ve argued for in this space and in my career, I don’t think this is either-or—we
can most definitely celebrate the ideals of our history as a nation of
immigrants and of our founding values of liberty and equality while remembering
some of our most dark historical realities and betrayals of those ideals. And
if the Statue of Liberty could become thus a symbol not only of all that it has
already meant and continues to mean, but also of (for example) slavery and of
the Chinese Exclusion Act, it would be that much more meaningful and authentic
of an American icon. Next statue tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other statues you’d highlight and analyze?
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