[My annual MLK
Day post kicks off a week on under-remembered figures, histories, and stories
from the Civil Rights movement.]
On the limits to
how we currently remember King, and how to get beyond them.
It probably puts me at significant
risk of losing my AmericanStudies Card to say this—and you have no idea how
hard it is to get a second one of those if you lose the first—but I think the
“I Have a Dream” speech is kind of overrated. I’m sort of saying that for
effect, since I don’t really mean that the speech itself isn’t as eloquent and
powerful and pitch-perfect in every way as the narrative goes—it most
definitely is, and while that’s true enough if you read the words, it becomes
infinitely more true when you see video and
thus hear audio of the speech and moment. But what is overrated, I think,
is the weight that has been placed on the speech, the cultural work that it has
been asked to do. Partly that has to do with contemporary politics, and
especially with those
voices who have tried to argue that King’s “content of their character”
rather than “color of their skin” distinction means that he would oppose any
and all forms of identity politics or affirmative action or the like; such
readings tend to forget that King was speaking in that culminating section of
the speech about what he dreams might happen “one day”—if, among other things,
we give all racial groups the same treatment and opportunities—rather than what
he thought was possible in America in the present.
But the more significant
overemphasis on the speech, I would argue, has occurred in the process by which
it (and not even all of it, so much as just those final images of “one day”)
has been made to symbolize all of—or at least represent in miniature—King’s
philosophies and ideas and arguments. There’s no question that the speech’s
liberal univeralism, its embrace (if in that hoped-for way) of an equality that
knows no racial identifications, was a central thread within King’s work; and,
perhaps more tellingly, was the thread by which he could most clearly be
defined in opposition to a more stridently and wholly Black
Nationalist voice like Malcolm X’s. Yet the simple and crucial fact is that
King’s rich and complex perspective and philosophy, as they existed throughout
his life but especially as they developed over the decade and a half between
his real emergence onto the national scene with the 1955 Montgomery
Bus Boycott and his assassination in 1968, contained a number of similarly
central and crucial threads. There were for example his radical perspectives on
class, wealth, and the focuses of government spending, a set of arguments which
culminated in the last years of his life in both the “Poor People’s
Campaign” and in increasingly vocal critiques of the military-industrial
complex; and his strong belief not only in nonviolent resistance (as informed
by figures as diverse as Thoreau and Gandhi) but also in pacifism in every
sense, which likewise developed into his very public opposition to the
Vietnam Year in his final years. While both of those perspectives were
certainly not focused on one racial identity or community, neither were they
broadly safe or moderate stances; indeed, they symbolized direct connections to
some of the most radical social movements and philosophies of the era.
To my mind, though, the most
significant undernarrated thread—and perhaps the most central one in King’s
perspective period—has to be his absolutely clear belief in the need to oppose
racial segregation and discrimination, of every kind, in every way, as soon and
as thoroughly as possible. Again, the contrast to Malcolm has tended to make
King out to be the more patient or cautious voice, but I defy anyone to read “Letter
from a Birmingham Jail”—the short piece that King wrote in April 1963 to a
group of white Southern clergyman, while he was serving a brief jail sentence
for his protest activities—and come away thinking that either patience or
caution are in the top twenty adjectives that best describe the man and his
beliefs. King would later expand the letter into a book, Why
We Can’t Wait, the very title of which makes the urgency of his
arguments more explicit still; but when it comes to raw passion and power, I
don’t think any American text can top the “Letter” itself. Not raw in the sense
of ineloquent—I tend to imagine that King’s first words, at the age of 1 or
whenever, were probably more eloquent than any I’ll ever speak—but raw as in
their absolute rejection, in the letter’s opening sentence, of his audience’s
description of his protest activities as “unwise and untimely.” And raw as well
in the razor sharp turn in tone in the two sentences that comprise one of the
letter’s closing paragraphs: “If I have said anything in this letter that overstates
the truth and indicates an unreasonable impatience, I beg you to forgive me. If
I have said anything that understates the truth and indicates my having a
patience that allows me to settle for anything less than brotherhood, I beg God
to forgive me.”
I guess what it
boils down to for me is this: to remember King for one section of “I Have a
Dream” is like remembering Shakespeare for the “To Be or Not to Be” soliloquy
in Hamlet. Yeah, that’s a great bit,
but what about the humor? The ghost? The political plotting and play within the
play? The twenty-seven other great speeches? And then there’s, y’know, all
those other pretty good, and very distinct, plays. And some poetry that wasn’t
bad either. It’s about time we remembered the whole King, and thus got a bit
closer to the real King and what he can really help us see about our national
history, identity, and future. Next MLK week post tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Civil Rights figures, histories, or stories you’d want to add to our collective
memories?
I remember viewing the 63 March with some trepidation--concerns among moderate liberals that it wouldn't be impressive, it would be violent, all sort of fears, etc. Afterwards, my big takeaway was that the March was successful, which was very important at that stage. JFK was still fighting with Congress and civil rights seemed an uphill battle.
ReplyDeleteSo for me the Dream speech came later, not particularly important at the moment but of growing symbolic importance as time passed.
Thanks so much for the comment and for sharing those thoughts, Bill! Among other things of course collective memories often emphasize in hindsight moments and ideas very differently from how they developed in their own era.
ReplyDeleteBen