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- <text id=91TT1493>
- <title>
- July 08, 1991: The Cult of Ethnicity, Good and Bad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 08, 1991 Who Are We?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 21
- COVER STORIES
- The Cult of Ethnicity, Good and Bad
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A historian argues that multiculturalism threatens the ideal that
- binds America
- </p>
- <p>By Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
- </p>
- <p>[Professor Schlesinger is the author of 14 books, including
- The Age of Jackson and The Disuniting of America.]
- </p>
- <p> The history of the world has been in great part the
- history of the mixing of peoples. Modern communication and
- transport accelerate mass migrations from one continent to
- another. Ethnic and racial diversity is more than ever a salient
- fact of the age.
- </p>
- <p> But what happens when people of different origins,
- speaking different languages and professing different religions,
- inhabit the same locality and live under the same political
- sovereignty? Ethnic and racial conflict--far more than
- ideological conflict--is the explosive problem of our times.
- </p>
- <p> On every side today ethnicity is breaking up nations. The
- Soviet Union, India, Yugoslavia, Ethiopia, are all in crisis.
- Ethnic tensions disturb and divide Sri Lanka, Burma, Indonesia,
- Iraq, Cyprus, Nigeria, Angola, Lebanon, Guyana, Trinidad--you
- name it. Even nations as stable and civilized as Britain and
- France, Belgium and Spain, face growing ethnic troubles. Is
- there any large multiethnic state that can be made to work?
- </p>
- <p> The answer to that question has been, until recently, the
- United States. "No other nation," Margaret Thatcher has said,
- "has so successfully combined people of different races and
- nations within a single culture." How have Americans succeeded
- in pulling off this almost unprecedented trick?
- </p>
- <p> We have always been a multiethnic country. Hector St. John
- de Crevecoeur, who came from France in the 18th century,
- marveled at the astonishing diversity of the settlers--"a
- mixture of English, Scotch, Irish, French, Dutch, Germans and
- Swedes...this promiscuous breed." He propounded a famous
- question: "What then is the American, this new man?" And he gave
- a famous answer: "Here individuals of all nations are melted
- into a new race of men." E pluribus unum.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. escaped the divisiveness of a multiethnic society
- by a brilliant solution: the creation of a brand-new national
- identity. The point of America was not to preserve old cultures
- but to forge a new, American culture. "By an intermixture with
- our people," President George Washington told Vice President
- John Adams, immigrants will "get assimilated to our customs,
- measures and laws: in a word, soon become one people." This was
- the ideal that a century later Israel Zangwill crystallized in
- the title of his popular 1908 play The Melting Pot. And no
- institution was more potent in molding Crevecoeur's "promiscuous
- breed" into Washington's "one people" than the American public
- school.
- </p>
- <p> The new American nationality was inescapably English in
- language, ideas and institutions. The pot did not melt
- everybody, not even all the white immigrants; deeply bred racism
- put black Americans, yellow Americans, red Americans and brown
- Americans well outside the pale. Still, the infusion of other
- stocks, even of nonwhite stocks, and the experience of the New
- World reconfigured the British legacy and made the U.S., as we
- all know, a very different country from Britain.
- </p>
- <p> In the 20th century, new immigration laws altered the
- composition of the American people, and a cult of ethnicity
- erupted both among non-Anglo whites and among nonwhite
- minorities. This had many healthy consequences. The American
- culture at last began to give shamefully overdue recognition to
- the achievements of groups subordinated and spurned during the
- high noon of Anglo dominance, and it began to acknowledge the
- great swirling world beyond Europe. Americans acquired a more
- complex and invigorating sense of their world--and of
- themselves.
- </p>
- <p> But, pressed too far, the cult of ethnicity has unhealthy
- consequences. It gives rise, for example, to the conception of
- the U.S. as a nation composed not of individuals making their
- own choices but of inviolable ethnic and racial groups. It
- rejects the historic American goals of assimilation and
- integration. And, in an excess of zeal, well-intentioned people
- seek to transform our system of education from a means of
- creating "one people" into a means of promoting, celebrating and
- perpetuating separate ethnic origins and identities. The balance
- is shifting from unum to pluribus.
- </p>
- <p> That is the issue that lies behind the hullabaloo over
- "multiculturalism" and "political correctness," the attack on
- the "Eurocentric" curriculum and the rise of the notion that
- history and literature should be taught not as disciplines but
- as therapies whose function is to raise minority self-esteem.
- Group separatism crystallizes the differences, magnifies
- tensions, intensifies hostilities. Europe--the unique source
- of the liberating ideas of democracy, civil liberties and human
- rights--is portrayed as the root of all evil, and non-European
- cultures, their own many crimes deleted, are presented as the
- means of redemption.
- </p>
- <p> I don't want to sound apocalyptic about these
- developments. Education is always in ferment, and a good thing
- too. The situation in our universities, I am confident, will
- soon right itself. But the impact of separatist pressures on our
- public schools is more troubling. If a Kleagle of the Ku Klux
- Klan wanted to use the schools to disable and handicap black
- Americans, he could hardly come up with anything more effective
- than the "Afrocentric" curriculum. And if separatist tendencies
- go unchecked, the result can only be the fragmentation,
- resegregation and tribalization of American life.
- </p>
- <p> I remain optimistic. My impression is that the historic
- forces driving toward "one people" have not lost their power.
- The eruption of ethnicity is, I believe, a rather superficial
- enthusiasm stirred by romantic ideologues on the one hand and
- by unscrupulous con men on the other: self-appointed spokesmen
- whose claim to represent their minority groups is carelessly
- accepted by the media. Most American-born members of minority
- groups, white or nonwhite, see themselves primarily as Americans
- rather than primarily as members of one or another ethnic group.
- A notable indicator today is the rate of intermarriage across
- ethnic lines, across religious lines, even (increasingly) across
- racial lines. "We Americans," said Theodore Roosevelt, "are
- children of the crucible."
- </p>
- <p> The growing diversity of the American population makes the
- quest for unifying ideals and a common culture all the more
- urgent. In a world savagely rent by ethnic and racial
- antagonisms, the U.S. must continue as an example of how a
- highly differentiated society holds itself together.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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