[On July
22, 1893, Wellesley Professor Katharine
Lee Bates first composed the words to what would become “America the
Beautiful.” So this week I’ll AmericanStudy “America” and other national songs,
leading up to a special weekend post on 21C nominees for new anthems!]
On two reasons why
my long-time favorite song is also a perfect American anthem.
I’ve written on at
least two prior occasions in
this space, as well as at length in the opening of my second book, about
Bruce Springsteen’s “American
Skin (41 Shots)” (2000; I still prefer that live version to any subsequent
one, although this post-Trayvon
Martin performance from 2012 comes very close for sure). But I don’t think
I’ve ever mentioned in this space a very cool complement to my own love for the
song: my younger son’s early and continuing affection for it as well. Of course
that began with my playing it for the boys, but I’ve played plenty of songs for
them, and it was “American Skin” that really grabbed my son and has endured
across many years and many other shifts in musical taste. To hear him sing
along to my favorite lines—“We’re baptized in these waters/And in each other’s
blood”—has been one of those singularly moving moments that parenting can offer,
and reflects the song’s multi-generational appeal and audience.
So that’s one
way Springsteen’s song can be seen as a contemporary American anthem. But
another is the reason I’m highlighting it today: earlier this month my new
book, We
the People: The 500-Year Battle over Who is American, was published.
I’ve been thinking about the book’s two central threads, competing yet
interconnected exclusionary and inclusive visions of American identity, pretty
much nonstop for the last couple years, and I’m not sure I’ve encountered a
cultural work that more succinctly and powerfully highlights both of them than
does “American Skin.” Even the title alone features both ends of the spectrum: Amadou
Diallo was killed because of the color of his skin and what it meant to
certain other Americans; but by calling it his “American skin,” Springsteen
reminds us that those racist and exclusionary attitudes do not and cannot deny
Diallo his full participation in an American community and identity. That we
still so desperately need to hear that message is just one more reason to keep
listening to “American Skin (41 Shots).”
Special post
this weekend,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other national songs you’d highlight?
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