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- <text id=91TT1491>
- <title>
- July 08, 1991: Whose America?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 08, 1991 Who Are We?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 12
- COVER STORIES
- Whose America?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A growing emphasis on the nation's "multicultural" heritage
- exalts racial and ethnic pride at the expense of social cohesion
- </p>
- <p>By Paul Gray--Reported by Sam Allis/Boston, Jordan Bonfante/Los
- Angeles and Cathy Booth/Miami
- </p>
- <p> Exactly 215 years ago this week, some subjects of Britain's
- King George III adopted a Declaration of Independence that
- asserted the necessity for a sovereign and free United States of
- America. The ground moved under that hall in steamy, summertime
- Philadelphia; an idea was proclaimed that would shake and reshape
- the world. Yet the entire world was hardly represented. All 56 of
- the signatories were white males of European descent, most of
- them wealthy property holders. Like some of his co-
- revolutionaries, Thomas Jefferson, who was primarily responsible
- for the soaring language of the document ("We hold these truths
- to be self evident, that all men are created equal..."), owned
- black slaves. In this context, what could "equal" mean? And why
- were only "men" created that way?
- </p>
- <p> Americans over 40 might be startled by a description of
- the Glorious Fourth that points out the racial, sexual and
- social characteristics of the Founding Fathers, never mind
- taking a swipe or two at Jefferson. But most of today's
- schoolchildren would not be surprised. It is now fairly
- commonplace to learn American history in the context of who has
- oppressed, excluded or otherwise mistreated whom. All across the
- country, students are imbibing a version of the past and present
- that their parents would not recognize.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the fundamental images of the American gallery of
- national icons have received a dramatic reworking. Gone, or
- going fast, is the concept of the melting pot, of the U.S. as
- the paramount place in the world where people came to shed their
- past in order to forge their future. Gone too is the emphasis
- on the twin ideals that form the basis of the American
- experiment: that rights reside in the individual rather than
- with social or ethnic classes and that all who come to these
- shores can be assimilated by an open society that transforms
- disparate peoples into Americans. Instead there is a new
- paradigm that emphasizes the racial and ethnic diversity of
- American citizens, of the many cultures that have converged
- here, each valuable in its own right and deserving of study and
- respect.
- </p>
- <p> In the critical optic of this new "multicultural"
- perspective, American history as it was once written--those
- often tedious treks from Christopher Columbus to Dwight
- Eisenhower--leaves out too much, namely nearly everyone who
- was not a white male. Some adherents go further, questioning
- whether the Western ideas and ideals that gave birth to America
- discriminate against people from other traditions. A more
- radical school argues that those values are no more than the
- ethnic expression of "Eurocentric" culture and should be taught
- only as such.
- </p>
- <p> The spread of new multicultural perspectives throughout
- America's schools has taken place without much notice;
- curriculum revisions, even sweeping ones, do not appear on local
- ballots. But these are not merely academic disputes. Especially
- in diverse, secular societies such as the U.S., a shared sense
- of the past plays a pivotal role in the way values and vision
- are transmitted from one generation to the next. "History is
- part of a society's attempt to structure a self-image and to
- communicate a common identity," points out Eugen Weber, a
- professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. "No
- community can exist as a community without common references.
- In a modern nation they come from a history."
- </p>
- <p> The issues now being raised--although they are presented
- under the bland guise of syllabus reform--are thus too
- important to be left to teachers, school administrators and
- social commentators alone. Everyone deserves a say, for the
- customs, beliefs and principles that have unified the U.S.,
- however imperfectly, for more than two centuries are being
- challenged with a ferocity not seen since the Civil War.
- </p>
- <p> Put bluntly: Do Americans still have faith in the vision
- of their country as a cradle of individual rights and
- liberties, or must they relinquish the teaching of some of these
- freedoms to further the goals of the ethnic and social groups
- to which they belong? Is America's social contract--a vision
- of self-determination that continues to reverberate around the
- world--fatally tainted by its origins in Western European
- thought? What kind of people do Americans now think they are,
- and what will they tell their children about that?
- </p>
- <p> The multicultural crusade has become part of a wider
- ferment on American campuses that includes the efforts to
- mandate a greater "diversity" within faculty and student bodies
- as well as the movement, derisively labeled "political
- correctness," that seeks to suppress thoughts or statements
- deemed offensive to women, blacks or other groups. Some of this
- has provoked flare-ups, notably at Stanford University, which
- in 1988 decided to revamp its first-year course, Western
- Culture, in response to critical pressure. Some students and
- faculty members at the elite, ethnically diverse institution had
- complained that the course syllabus offered only the writings
- of white males. The prospect of one or more of these--Plato?
- Shakespeare?--being kicked out to make room for women and
- minorities caught traditionalists' attention, as did a
- demonstration at which students chanted "Hey, hey, ho, ho,
- Western Culture's got to go!" In the end, Stanford excised no
- one from the reading list; it added optional new assignments.
- </p>
- <p> Now multiculturalism is again in the glare of public
- attention, thanks to the release of a report recommending
- changes in the way social studies are taught in New York State
- public schools. State Education Commissioner Thomas Sobol,
- responding to complaints from a number of minority groups, chose
- a panel of 24 educators to review the curriculums in history and
- related courses. One of their tasks was to suggest innovations
- that would improve students' understanding of "the cultures,
- identities, and histories of the diverse groups which comprise
- American society today." Some critics predicted that the report,
- a year in preparation, would be a hatchet job on existing
- academic standards.
- </p>
- <p> They were right, although this report avoids the
- blistering tone of an earlier Task Force on Minorities, also
- commissioned by Sobol, that hit its controversial stride in the
- opening sentence: "African-Americans, Asian-Americans, Puerto
- Rican/Latinos and Native Americans have all been the victims of
- an intellectual and educational oppression that has
- characterized the culture and institutions of the United States
- and the European American world for centuries."
- </p>
- <p> By contrast, there is no inflammatory rhetoric in the new
- report. In fact the document is filled with soporific
- educationese ("Foundational to this end is the commitment to the
- development of intellectual competence in our students").
- Perhaps to assuage those potential critics not put to sleep by
- the prose, the report throws in periodic tributes to the concept
- of national unity: "With efforts to respect and honor the
- diverse and pluralistic elements in our nation, special
- attention will need to be given to those values,
- characteristics, and traditions which we share in common."
- </p>
- <p> But the document is curiously silent on what those shared
- values are. It even seems hesitant to acknowledge the fact of
- U.S. citizenship; wherever possible, it advocates an awareness
- of global "interdependence" as a fundamental educational
- concern. In its constant elevation of group and ethnic
- interests, it represents a radical departure from the way
- Americans have traditionally viewed the passing on of knowledge
- in the common school as a means of creating citizens out of a
- polyglot and diverse pool of young citizens-to-be.
- </p>
- <p> This fact did not account for the report's initial
- notoriety. A few easily isolated examples of suggested reforms
- got most of the attention. Among them:
- </p>
- <p>-- Students would be discouraged from calling Africans who
- were brought to the U.S. in bondage "slaves." Instead they
- would be referred to as "enslaved persons," which would "call
- forth the essential humanity of those enslaved, helping students
- to understand from the beginning the true meaning of slavery."
- </p>
- <p>-- Thanksgiving would be discussed not only as a feast day
- for whites but as a less joyous occasion for Native Americans.
- </p>
- <p>-- The habit of looking at geography from a European point
- of view would cease. "The Far East" and "the Middle East" would
- disappear, replaced by "East Asia" and "Southwest Asia and
- North Africa."
- </p>
- <p>-- Describing certain Americans as "minorities" would also
- be phased out: "If social studies is to be taught from a global
- perspective, many of the so-called minorities in America are
- more accurately described as part of the world's majorities."
- </p>
- <p> All these proposals have the merit of being specific and
- thus open to debate. The improvement wrought by "enslaved
- person" over "slave" may not strike everyone as immediately
- apparent; to Americans who know their own history, "slave" is
- a word heavily charged with the connotations of brutal,
- involuntary degradation. As to the matter of Thanksgiving,
- Edmund Ladd, 65, a Zuni Pueblo Indian and an anthropologist in
- New Mexico, says, "We celebrate Thanksgiving, Christmas and all
- the holidays that are Anglo-induced because that's the day we
- don't have to go to work. Thanksgiving is an excuse for us to
- get together." The adoption of "East Asia" raises the question
- "East of where?" It is difficult to imagine what a "global
- perspective" might be, given the report's vague prose.
- </p>
- <p> The most revolutionary changes propounded by the Sobol
- panel are harder to identify, since they rest on a series of
- buried premises that are offered, sometimes glancingly, as
- assumptions shared by all Americans. But are they? Does everyone
- agree that "education should be a source of strength and pride"
- for diverse ethnic groups? How about the notion that teaching
- individuals to fulfill their own abilities is secondary to
- training them to participate in "cultural interdependence"? Or
- that U.S. children should view themselves as citizens of the
- world rather than of America? Are we all on the same page when
- it comes to the classroom as a training ground for "social
- action"?
- </p>
- <p> And what of the following sentence: "Unlike earlier
- periods when one demonstrated one's intellect by how much one
- knew, i.e., how many facts one has at her/his command,
- increasingly we recognize the mark of intellect to be the
- capacity independently to analyze, manipulate, synthesize and
- critically interpret information in the interest of problem
- solving." In other words, it is now more important to know how
- to think than to have anything concrete to think about. Perhaps
- facts can be imported from Japan. Now, may we see a show of
- hands on all this?
- </p>
- <p> We already have. Two members of the Sobol panel--Kenneth
- T. Jackson of Columbia University and historian Arthur M.
- Schlesinger Jr.--inserted their dissents from the report's
- conclusions within the report itself. Said Jackson: "I would
- argue that it is politically and intellectually unwise for us
- to attack the traditions, customs and values which attracted
- immigrants to these shores in the first place." Also appended,
- somewhat jarringly in the prescribed context of racial and
- ethnic harmony, is a lengthy statement by Ali A. Mazrui, Albert
- Schweitzer Professor in the Humanities at the State University
- of New York, Binghamton, arguing that the word holocaust should
- not be reserved exclusively for the Jewish experience under the
- Nazis. American Indians and African Americans, the professor
- insists, have a right to that term as well.
- </p>
- <p> How did things--not just in New York but in school
- systems across the nation--get to the muddy pass epitomized
- by the Sobol report? Principally because an abstract theory
- happened to catch and ride a new wave of actuality. The idea of
- multicultural education in its most extravagant current form was
- born during the 1960s amid the campus turbulence and
- intellectual stimulation provoked by the civil rights movement
- and, later, protests against the war in Vietnam. The established
- centers of authority in U.S. life were not holding; to defend
- traditional values in the teeth of outraged demonstrations by
- young people was somehow to condone genocide in Southeast Asia,
- not to mention racism in the American South. Many deans adopted
- a defensive policy of giving students whatever they wanted, if
- only to keep them quiet. And among the things they wanted were
- special programs in black studies, then similar enclaves of
- women's studies, which were followed by successive demarcations
- of subject matter along racial or ethnic boundaries.
- </p>
- <p> To the surprise of many doubters, the work and the
- students turned out by such programs were often first rate.
- These supposedly marginal areas of academic inquiry produced
- information--about the achievements of women, facets of life
- outside the U.S. mainstream, the work of minority artists,
- Americans whom history had ignored--that rattled the
- complacency of orthodox humanities departments. And many of the
- graduates of these programs remained in academe, either studying
- for advanced degrees or earning tenure as teachers.
- </p>
- <p> While they moved up the rungs, something else was going
- on. The 1965 Immigration Act passed by Congress had reversed a
- policy, in place for four decades, of favoring Europeans and
- making things tough for other applicants. Suddenly people from
- throughout the Third World found it easier to enter the U.S.,
- rapidly changing the demographics of the nation. Between 1980
- and 1990, the white non-Hispanic majority in Los Angeles County
- turned into a minority. In the U.S. as a whole during the same
- decade, the number of Hispanics increased by 53% to 22.4
- million, roughly 9% of the nation's population. The Dade County,
- Fla., school district, the nation's fourth largest, now includes
- students from 123 countries.
- </p>
- <p> The new immigrants came for the same reasons that had
- propelled their predecessors: to escape poverty, hopelessness
- or oppression, to seek economic opportunities and to live in
- freedom. This huge influx of people can be seen as the latest
- affirmation of American values, of the global allure exercised
- by the ideals on which the nation was founded.
- </p>
- <p> But that is not the vision conveyed by many of the
- multiculturalists, those veterans of the '60s and their younger
- colleagues, who looked at the people arriving in their
- classrooms and noticed that many of them, in some cases nearly
- all of them, had no connection whatsoever with Europe. As Sobol
- himself has noted, "By the year 2000, 1 out of 3 children in New
- York public schools will be minority. In New York City, 1 out
- of 4 children under 10 has non-English-speaking immigrant
- parents. This is not the world of the 1950s."
- </p>
- <p> Why, then, were these children being forced to learn a
- history that derived almost exclusively from Western thought and
- examples? This was a good question that was probably answered
- too quickly by teachers and administrators on the front lines:
- No reason, no reason at all. In their defense, these educators
- faced formidable problems--students who did not speak English,
- classrooms disrupted by the clash of different mores and
- patterns of behavior confined in close quarters. Also, there was
- the troubling matter of school dropouts and of the persistent
- underperformance of some blacks and Hispanics, as compared to
- that of most Asians and whites. Blame for all this could not be
- placed on children who lacked the preparation or the motivation
- to learn, so the fault must lie with what they were being
- taught.
- </p>
- <p> At this point the debate over multicultural viewpoints
- stumbled into a philosophical muddle from which it has yet to
- emerge. Broadening the base of available knowledge was one
- thing, and an admirable one at that. Thanks to the proddings and
- scholarship of the multiculturalists, histories of the U.S. have
- grown remarkably more inclusive, representative and accurate.
- Oldsters who spent time in school learning that Myles Standish
- was too bashful to propose to Priscilla Mullens and had to ask
- John Alden to do it for him (to which Priscilla is apocryphally
- said to have replied, "Why don't you speak for yourself, John?")
- may now wonder why teachers never found a few minutes for
- Harriet Tubman or W.E.B. Du Bois.
- </p>
- <p> In 1987 California adopted a new social-studies curriculum
- for its public schools, from kindergarten through the 12th
- grade, that is widely regarded as a model of its kind. The
- course of study pays great attention to the variety of world
- cultures; it also "recognizes the multiracial character of
- American society, now and in the past." Yet the conceptual focus
- for all this information remains fixed on the challenge of
- becoming an educated American citizen. The syllabus "teaches
- democratic values and holds them up as a measure against which
- we may judge ourselves as well as others."
- </p>
- <p> But amplified histories did not satisfy some
- multiculturalists, including a number of influential
- African-American scholars, who objected that new wine was simply
- being poured into the same old bottle. The central narrative of
- the American saga was still white and European, as were most of
- the main characters; filling the background with a smattering
- of minorities did not remove this problem.
- </p>
- <p> Inconveniently enough, this "problem" cannot be accurately
- erased. North America was populated by a number of indigenous
- peoples long before the Europeans arrived, but the society that
- evolved and that persists today was modeled on Western examples.
- More specifically, the influence of the British, who held and
- ruled the original 13 colonies, is inescapable. The language,
- the system of representative government, the structure of law
- and the emphasis on individual liberty were all adopted from
- the Enlightenment ideals being formulated in what was once
- known as the mother country. Other basic American principles,
- such as the idea of the separation of powers, which is
- fundamental to the American Constitution, derive from the French
- philosopher Montesquieu.
- </p>
- <p> It is an article of faith among most multiculturalists
- that no system of values is innately superior to any other; all
- cultures are created equal. As a way of looking at the world,
- this notion has considerable merit. It is, among other things,
- a useful corrective to chauvinisms and insularities. But to
- describe the Western tradition as just one of many equally
- important contributors to the American identity is to make hash
- of history, and of one of history's boldest experiments.
- </p>
- <p> Faced with the pervasive traces of Western thought
- embodied in American life, some multiculturalists claim that
- this Eurocentric bias discriminates against those from different
- traditions. But for openers, Eurocentric is decidedly a fuzzy
- term, lumping together a vast diversity of nationalities and
- peoples, past and pres ent. In what person or doctrine can
- Eurocentrism be embodied? Savonarola? Jane Austen? Deism?
- Communism? Insofar as it means anything specific, Eurocentric
- looks suspiciously like a code word for "white." In attempting
- to combat racism, radical multiculturalists seem all too willing
- to resort to racism of another stripe.
- </p>
- <p> Furthermore, the oppressive effects of Western thought on
- nonwhites is not as clear-cut as most multiculturalists assume.
- Certainly, many past immigrants were encouraged to ape their
- "betters," as the parlance then called them--to model their
- speech and demeanor on the dominant examples of white
- Anglo-Saxon Protestants, some of whom, in turn, were trying to
- imitate the British aristocracy. But this imperative belongs to
- the transient domains of fashion and snobbery, and in any case
- sycophancy is not unique to America or to Western societies.
- Harder to grasp is the way in which Western principles
- discriminate against the non-Western or nonwhite. Who or what
- is the villain here? Galileo? Einstein? The Magna Carta? The
- Bill of Rights? Was Martin Luther King Jr. diminished, made to
- feel inferior, when he read Henry David Thoreau along with
- Gandhi on civil disobedience? Or for that matter when he
- contemplated the Reformation launched by his 16th century
- German namesake?
- </p>
- <p> Ultimately, multicultural thinking, for all its nods
- toward pluralism and diversity, can lead to several regressive
- orthodoxies. One is the notion that truth is forever
- encapsulated within collective identities, that what white males
- or females or blacks or Hispanics or Asians know about their
- experiences can be communicated only imperfectly to people
- beyond their pales. Those without the experience can never
- really know its essential features. The authority of any
- statement is locked within the skin of the speaker.
- </p>
- <p> Afrocentrism, a cult within the multicultural movement,
- displays some distressing signs of authoritarianism. A series
- of "baseline" essays, commissioned by the Portland, Ore., school
- district as a reference for teachers and now in widespread use
- elsewhere, contains some sweeping assertions: "Black literature
- is manipulated and controlled by white editors and publishers."
- And: "Until the emergence of the doctrine of white superiority,
- Cleopatra was generally pictured as a distinctly African woman,
- dark in color." The claim that ancient Egypt, one of the cradles
- of Western civilization, was a black culture is a central tenet
- of Afrocentrism. Corroborating evidence is flimsy, but that is
- apparently not important. Writes John Henrik Clarke, professor
- emeritus of Black and Puerto Rican Studies at City University,
- New York: "African scholars are the final authority on Africa."
- </p>
- <p> The Western tradition contains a refutation of this
- take-my-word-for-it approach. It can be seen in the Greek and
- Roman philosophers, then again most vividly in the writers of
- the European Enlightenment--Voltaire, Locke, Berkeley, all
- DWEMs (dead white European males), but perhaps worth a hearing
- in spite of this handicap. In one way or another, they argued
- that the validity of any statement can be tested independently
- of, and in no logical way depends upon, the person who makes it.
- This idea, totally color-blind, is one of the greatest
- instruments for human freedom ever conceived. It made democracy
- possible, since it enabled each citizen to reach reasoned
- judgments, and its spirit pervades the documents that
- established the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps most unsettling, radical multiculturalism turns
- upside down the principles that drew, and continue to draw,
- people to America: the freedom to create a new personal
- identity, and the chance to become part of a nation of people
- who have done the same thing. There is a contradiction between
- these commands to be oneself while also being part of a common
- culture, a creative tension that has produced a literature
- populated by loners, rebels and misfits. Also, come to think of
- it, a lot of stress and nervous breakdowns. No one ever said it
- was easy to be an American, to learn the rules anew each day,
- every day.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever else it may accomplish, the current debate
- highlights the enduring volatility of the American experiment.
- There is no guarantee that the nation's long test of trying to
- live together will not end in fragmentation and collapse, with
- groups gathered around the firelight, waiting for the attack at
- dawn. No guarantee, that is, except the examples its citizens
- have set--examples not as frequent as their ideals mandate,
- but precious nonetheless--of getting out of the skins of their
- prejudices and meeting each other as the equals they truly are.
- </p>
- <p> And a very Happy 215th Birthday to us all, whoever we
- think we are.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-