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The other America
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by Edward
Said
A small item in the press a
few days ago reported that Prince Ibn Al-Walid of Saudi Arabia had
donated 10 million dollars to the American University in Cairo to
establish a department or centre of American Studies there. It should be
recalled that the young billionaire had contributed an unsolicited 10
million dollars to New York City shortly after the 11 September
bombings, with an accompanying letter that, aside from describing the
handsome sum as a tribute to New York, also suggested that the United
States might reconsider its policy towards the Middle East. Obviously he
had total and unquestioning American support for Israel in mind, but his
politely stated proposition seemed also to cover the general American
policy of denigrating, or at least showing disrespect, for Islam.
In a fit of petulant rage, the
then Mayor of New York (which also has the largest Jewish population of
any city in the world), Rudolph Guiliani, returned the check to Al-Walid,
rather unceremoniously and with an extreme and I would say racist contempt
that was meant to be insulting as well as gloating. On behalf of a certain
image of New York, he personally was upholding the city's demonstrated
bravery and its principled resistance to outside interference. And of
course pleasing, rather than trying to educate, a purportedly unified
Jewish constituency.
Guiliani's churlish behaviour
was of a piece with his refusal several years before (in 1995, well after
the Oslo signings) to admit Yasser Arafat to the Philharmonic Hall for a
concert to which everyone at the UN had been invited. Typical of the cheap
theatrics of the below average American big city politician, what New
York's mayor did in response to the young Saudi Arabian's gift was
completely predictable. Even though the money was intended, and greatly
needed, for humanitarian use in a city wounded by a terrible atrocity, the
American political system and its main actors put Israel ahead of
everything, whether or not Israel's amply endowed and highly mobilised
lobbyists would have done the same thing. In any case, no one knows what
would have occurred if Guiliani didn't return the money; but as things
turned out he had nicely preempted even the well- oiled pro-Israeli
lobbying apparatus. As the celebrated novelist and essayist Joan Didion
wrote in a recent New York Review of Books article, it has become a
staple of US policy first articulated by FD Roosevelt that America has
tried against all logic to maintain a hopelessly contradictory support for
the Saudi monarchy on the one hand and, on the other, with the state of
Israel, so much so, she adds, that "we have become unable to discuss
anything that might be seen as touching on our relationship with the
current government of Israel" (p56, Jan 16, 03).
The two stories about Prince
Al-Walid dovetail nicely with each other, and show a continuity that has
been quite rare so far as Arab views of America have been concerned. For
at least three generations, Arab leaders, politicians, and their more
often than not American-trained advisers have been formulating policies
for their countries whose basis is an almost completely fictitious and
quite fanciful idea of what America is. Far from coherent, this idea is at
bottom all about how 'the Americans' really run everything, even though in
its details the notion encompasses a wide, not to say jumbled, range of
opinions, from on the one hand seeing America as a conspiracy of Jews, to
theories on the other stipulating that America is either a bottomless well
of benign good feeling and help for the downtrodden, or that it is ruled
from A to Z by an unchallenged white man sitting like an Olympian figure
in the White House.
I recall many times during the
20 years that I knew Yasser Arafat well, trying to explain to him that
this was a complex society with all sorts of currents, interests,
pressures, and histories in conflict within it and that far from being
ruled the way Syria was, for instance, a different model of power and
authority ought to be studied. I enlisted my late friend, the scholar and
political activist, Eqbal Ahmed, who had an expert knowledge of American
society but was also perhaps the finest theorist and historian of
anti-colonial national liberation movements in the world, to talk to
Arafat and bring along other experts so that a sharper, more nuanced model
might develop for use by the Palestinians during their preliminary
contacts with the US government in the late 1980s -- but all to no avail.
Ahmed had carefully studied the Algerian FLN's relationship with France
during the war of 1954-62 as well as the North Vietnamese while they were
negotiating with Kissinger during the 1970s.
The contrast between a
scrupulous, detailed knowledge of the metropolitan society with which
these insurgents had been in conflict and the Palestinians' almost
caricatural knowledge of America (based mainly on hearsay and cursory
readings in Time magazine) was stark. Arafat's single-minded
obsession was to make his way personally into the White House and talk to
that whitest of white men Bill Clinton: in his view that would be the
equivalent perhaps of getting things done with Mubarak of Egypt or Hafez
Al-Assad of Syria. If in the meantime Clinton revealed himself to be the
master- creature of American politics, completely overwhelming and
confusing the Palestinians with his charm and his manipulation of the
system, so much the worse for Arafat and his men. Their simplified view of
America was monumentally unchanged, as it still is today. As for
resistance or knowing how to play the game of politics in a world with
only one, all- conquering super-power in it, matters remain as they have
for over half a century. Most people throw up their hands in despair like
disappointed lovers: America is hopeless, and I don't ever want to go back
there, they often say, though one also notices that green, permanent
residence cards are much in demand, as are university admissions for the
children.
The other, more hopeful side
of the story concerns what seems to have been Prince Al-Walid's later
change of direction, about which I can only surmise. But I do know that
apart from a few courses and seminars on American literature and politics
scattered throughout the universities of the Arab world, there has never
been anything like an academic centre for the systematic and scientific
analysis of America, its people, society, and history, at all. Not even in
American institutions like the American Universities of Cairo and Beirut.
This lack may also be true throughout the Third World, and maybe even in
some European countries. The point I am making is that to live in a world
that is held in the grip of an extraordinarily unbound great power there
is a vital need for knowing as much about its swirling dynamics as is
humanly possible. And that, I believe, also includes commanding an
excellent working command of the language, something few Arab leaders (as
a case in point) possess. Yes, America is the country of McDonald's,
Hollywood, blue jeans, Coca-Cola and CNN, all of them products exported
and available everywhere by virtue of globalisation, multinational
corporations, and what seems to be the world's appetite for articles of
easy, convenient consumption. But we must also be conscious of from what
source these come and in what ways the cultural and social processes from
which they ultimately derive can be interpreted, especially since the
danger of thinking about America too simply or reductively and statically
is so obvious.
Even as I write these lines
much of the world is being bludgeoned into a restive submission by (or, as
are the cases of Italy and Spain, an utterly opportunistic alliance with)
America as it readies itself for a deeply unpopular war against Iraq. But
for the ongoing global demonstrations and protests that have erupted
entirely at the popular level, the war would simply be a brazen act of
unopposed cynical domination. Yet contested as it is by so many Americans
as well as Europeans, Asians, Africans and Latin Americans who have taken
to the streets and to their local newspapers at least suggests that at
last there is an awakening to the fact that the United States, or rather
the small handful of Judeo-Christian white men who currently rule its
government, is bent on world hegemony. What to do then?
In what follows I shall offer
a rapid sketch of the extraordinary panorama presented by today's America,
as seen by someone who is American and has lived comfortably in it for
years and years, but who by virtue of his Palestinian origins, still
retains his perspective as a comparative outsider, but a kind of insider
also. My interest is simply to suggest ways of understanding, intervening
in, and if the word isn't too inappropriate, resisting a country that is
far from the monolith it is usually taken to be, specially in the Arab and
Muslim worlds. What is there to be seen?
The difference between America
and the classic empires of the past is that, even though each empire
asserted its utter originality and its determination not to repeat the
overreaching ambitions of imperial predecessors, this one does so with an
astonishing affirmation of its nearly sancrosanct altruism and
well-meaning innocence. For this alarming delusion there is, even more
alarmingly, a new squadron of formerly Left or liberal intellectuals alike
who had historically opposed American wars abroad but who are now prepared
to make the case for virtuous empire (the figure of the lonely sentry has
been used) using a variety of styles, from tub-thumping patriotism to sly
cynicism. The events of 11 September play a role in this volte face, but
what is surprising is that the Twin Towers-Pentagon bombings, horrible
though they were, retreated as if they came from nowhere, rather than in
fact from a world across the seas driven crazy by American intervention
and ubiquitous American presence. This is of course not to condone Islamic
terrorism, which is a hateful thing in every way. But it is to remark that
in all the pious analyses of America's responses to Afghanistan and now
Iraq, history and proportionality have simply dropped out of the picture
entirely.
What the liberal hawks
specially don't refer to, however, is the Christian Right (so similar to
Islamic extremism in fervor and righteousness) and its massive, indeed
decisive presence in America today. The qualities of that vision derive
from mostly Old Testament sources, very much of a piece with those of
Israel, its close partner and analogue. A peculiar alliance between
Israel's influential neoconservative American supporters and the Christian
extremists is that the latter support Zionism as a way of bringing all the
Jews to the Hold y Land to prepare the way for the Messiah's Second
Coming; at which point Jews will either have to convert to Christianity or
be annihilated. The bloody and rabidly anti-Semitic teleologies are rarely
referred to, certainly not by the pro-Israeli Jewish phalanx.
America is the world's most
avowedly religious country. References to God permeate the national life,
from coins to buildings to common forms of speech: in God we trust, God's
country, God bless America, and on and on. George Bush's power base is
made up of the 60-70 million fundamentalist Christians who, like him,
believe they have seen Jesus and are here to do God's work in God's
country. Some sociologists and journalists (including Francis Fukuyuma and
David Brooks) have argued that contemporary American religion is the
result of a desire for community and a long-gone sense of stability, given
the fact that approximately 20 per cent of the population is moving from
home to home all the time. But the evidence for that desire is true only
up to a point: what matters more is religion by prophetic illumination,
unshakeable conviction in a sometimes apocalyptic sense of mission, and a
heedless disregard of small-scale facts and complications. The enormous
geographical distance of the country from the turbulent world is another
factor, as is the fact that Canada and Mexico are continental neighbours
with little capability of tempering American enthusiasm.
All of those things converge
around an idea of American rightness, goodness, freedom, economic promise,
social advancement that is so ideologically woven into the fabric of daily
life that it doesn't even appear to be ideological, but rather a fact of
nature. America=good=total loyalty and love. Similarly there is an
unconditional reverence for the Founding Fathers, and for the
Constitution, an amazing document, it is true, but a human one
nevertheless. Early America is the anchor of American authenticity. In no
country that I know does a waving flag play so central an iconographical
role. You see it everywhere, on taxicabs, on men's jacket lapels, on the
front windows and roofs of houses everywhere. It is the main embodiment of
the national image, signifying heroic endurance and a beleaguered sense of
fighting of unworthy enemies. Patriotism is still the prime American
virtue, tied up as it is with religion, belonging, and doing the right
thing not just at home but all over the world. Patriotism is also
represented in retail consumer spending, as when Americans were enjoined
after the events of 9/11 to do a lot of shopping in defiance of evil
terrorists. Bush and employees of his like Rumsfeld, Powell, Rice and
Ashcroft have tapped into all of that to mobilise the military for war
7000 miles away in order 'to get' Saddam, as he is referred to
universally. Underlying all this is the machinery of capitalism, now
undergoing radical and, I think, destabilising change. The economist Julie
Schor has shown that Americans now work far more hours than they did three
decades ago, and are making relatively less money for their efforts. But
still there is no serious, systematic political challenge to the dogmas of
what are referred to as the opportunities of a free market. It's as if no
one cares whether the corporate structure in alliance with the federal
government, which still hasn't been able to provide most Americans with
decent universal health coverage and a sound education, has to be changed.
News of the stock market is more important than re-examining the system.
This is a crude summary of the
American consensus, which in fact politicians exploit and try endlessly to
simplify into slogans and sound bites. But what one discovers about this
amazingly complex society is how many counter- currents and alternatives
run across and around this consensus all the time. The growing resistance
to war that the president has been essentially minimising and pretending
to ignore, derives from the other less formal America that the mainstream
media (newspapers of record such as The New York Times, the main
networks, the publishing and magazine industries in large measure) always
tries to paper over and keep down. Never has there been so unashamed, if
not scandalous, complicity between TV news and the government's rush to
war: even the average newsreader that turns up on CNN or one of the major
networks talks excitedly about Saddam's evils and how 'we' have to stop
him before it's too late. And if that is not bad enough, the airwaves are
filled with ex-military men, terrorism experts, and Middle East policy
analysts who know none of the relevant languages, may never have seen any
part of the Middle East, and are too poorly educated to be expert at
anything, all of them arguing in a memorised jargon about the need for
'us' to do something about Iraq, while preparing our windows and cars for
an impending poison gas attack.
Because it is a managed and
constructed thing the consensus operates in a sort of timeless present.
History is anathema to it, and in accepted public discourse even the word
'history' is a synonym for nothingness or non-entity, as in the scornful,
typically dismissive American phrase, 'you're history.' Otherwise history
is what as Americans we are supposed to believe about America (not about
the rest of the world, which is 'old' and generally left behind, hence
irrelevant) uncritically, loyally, unhistorically. There is an amazing
polarity at work here. In the popular mind America is supposed to stand
above or beyond history. On the other hand, there is an all-consuming
general interest that one encounters across the country in the history of
everything, from small regional topics, to the vaster reaches of world
empires. Many cults develop out of both these carefully balanced
opposites, which encompass the road from xenophobic patriotism to
other-worldly spiritualism and reincarnation.
One rather more worldly
example of the struggle about history is worth recalling here. A decade
ago a great intellectual battle was waged in the public sphere over what
kind of history should be taught in schools. What was clear about the
va-et-vient that occurred over many weeks was that the promoters of the
idea of American history as a heroically unified national narrative with
entirely positive resonances for young minds, thought of history as
essential not only for the truth, but for the ideological propriety of
representations that would mould students into essentially docile
citizens, ready to accept a set of basic themes as the constants in
America's relationships with itself and the rest of the world. Purged from
this essentialist view were to be the elements of what was called
postmodernism and divisive history (that of minorities, women, slavery,
etc) but the result, interestingly enough, was a failure so far as the
imposition of such risible standards was concerned. As Linda Symcox sums
it up, "Certainly one would argue, as I do, that...[the neoconservative]
approach to cultural literacy is a thinly disguised attempt to inculcate
students with a relatively conflict-free, consensual view of history. But
the project ended up moving in a different direction altogether. In the
hands of social and world historians, who actually wrote the Standards
with the K-12 teachers, the Standards became a vehicle for the pluralistic
vision the government was trying to combat. In the end, consensus history,
or cultural reproduction... was challenged by those historians who felt
that social justice and the redistribution of power demanded a more
complex telling of the past."
In the public sphere over
which in so many ways the mass mainstream media preside there are thus a
series of what one might call narrathemes that structure, package and
control discussion, despite the appearance of variety and diversity. I
shall discuss only a small number of them that strike me as acutely
pertinent at this time. One of course is that there is a collective 'we',
a national identity represented without apparent demurral by our
president, our secretary of state at the UN, our armed forces in the
desert, and our interests, which are routinely seen as self-defensive,
without ulterior motive, and in an overall way, innocent in the way that a
traditional woman is supposed to be innocent, pure, free of sin, etc.
Another narratheme is the irrelevance of history, and the inadmissibility
of illegitimate 'linkage', for example, the facts that the US once had
armed and encouraged Saddam Hussein and Osama Bin Laden, or that Vietnam
(when it is mentioned at all) and its particular form of devastation was
'bad' for the country or, as Jimmy Carter once put it memorably, that it
was a form of "mutual" self-destruction. Or even more staggering, the
ongoing and even institutional irrelevance of two immensely important and
constitutively American experiences, the slavery of the African-American
people and the dispossession and quasi-extermination of the native
American population. These have yet to be figured into the national
consensus in any serious way. (Whereas there is a major Holocaust Museum
in Washington DC, no such memorial exists either for African-Americans or
native Americans, anywhere in the country).
A third is the unexamined
conviction that opposition to our policies is 'anti-Americanism' which is
based on jealousy about 'our' democracy, freedom, wealth and greatness or,
as the current obsession with French resistance to an American war against
Iraq has it, plain and ordinary foreign nastiness. In this context
Europeans are constantly reminded of how America saved them twice in the
past century, with the subsidiary implication that most Europeans simply
sat back watching while American troops did all the real fighting. And
when it comes to places where the US has been extraordinarily entangled
for at least 50 years like the Middle East or Latin America, the
narratheme of America as the honest broker, the impartial adjudicator, the
entirely well-intentioned international force for good, has no serious
competitor to it; what we have therefore is a strand of thought that has
little place in it for issues relating to power, or financial gain, or
resource grabbing, or ethnic lobbying, or forcible and/or surreptitious
regime change (as in Iran and Chile, for instance), and as a result
remains quite undisturbed except for occasional efforts to recall them.
The closest one gets to that kind of realism is in the abhorrently
euphemistic idiom of the thinktanks and the government, idioms that
discuss soft power and projection and American vision. Still less
represented (or even alluded to) are policies of extraordinary cruelty or
invidiousness for which America is directly responsible like support for
the Sharonian campaign against Palestinian civilian life, or the terrible
civilian casualties incurred by Iraqi sanctions, or the support given the
Turkish and Columbian regimes for horrendously inhuman punishments against
ordinary citizens. These are considered out of bounds during serious
discussions of 'policy'.
Finally, the narratheme of
unchallenged moral wisdom as represented in figures with official
authority (eg Henry Kissinger, David Rockefeller, plus every present
official of the current administration) is reproduced over and over
without very much of a twinge of doubt. The fact, for instance, that two
Nixon-era convicted felons (Elliott Abrams and John Poindexter) have
recently been endowed with significant government positions attracts
little comment, much less objection. This sort of blind appreciation of
authority past or present, pure or sullied, occurs in many different
forms, all the way from the respectful, even abject forms of address used
by commentators and pundits, to a total unwillingness to see anything in
the authority figure except his or her polished appearance (for instance,
the de rigueur dark suit, white shirt, and red tie), unscarred by anything
in the past record that might be incriminating to a serious degree.
Buttressing that is, I believe, the American belief in pragmatism as a
philosophic system of dealing with reality that is anti-metaphysical,
anti- historical and, curiously, even anti-philosophical. Postmodern anti-nominalism
of the kind that reduces everything to sentence structure and linguistic
context is allied with this, and is a very influential style of thought
existing alongside analytic philosophy in the American university. In my
own university, figures such as Hegel and Heidegger, for example, are
taught in literature or art history departments, rarely in philosophy.
It is this amazingly
persistent set of master stories that the newly organised and mobilised
American information effort (especially in the Arab and Islamic worlds) is
designed by hook or crook to spread. What gets deliberately obscured in
the process are the stunningly obstinate dissenting traditions --
America's unofficial counter-memory that stem in large part from the fact
that this is an immigrant society -- that flourish alongside, or at the
interior of this handful of narrathemes. Few commentators abroad take much
notice of this forest of dissent, alas. These clumps of both the
progressive or regressive kind provide and to a trained observer make
visible linkages between the master narrathemes that are normally not in
evidence. If one were to examine the components of the impressively strong
resistance to the proposed Bush war against Iraq, for example, a very
different, highly mobile picture of America emerges, one that is much more
amenable to foreign cooperation, dialogue and significant action. I shall
leave aside the considerable number of people who oppose the war on
grounds having to do with its human cost in blood and treasure as well as
its disastrous effect on an already badly disturbed economy. I shall also
not discuss the great swirl of Right-wing opinion that sees America as
traduced by treacherous foreigners, the United Nations, and godless
communists. In addition, the libertarian and isolationist constituency,
which is a strange combination of Left and Right, needs no further comment
here. I would also include among these categories that must be left
unexamined here a very large and idealistically inspired university
student population that is deeply suspicious of American foreign policy in
almost all of its forms, especially economic globalisation: this is a
principled and sometimes quasi-anarchical group that has kept American
university and college campuses alive to such issues in the past as the
war in Vietnam, South African apartheid, and civil rights at home.
This leaves several important
and in many ways formidable constituencies of experience and conscience
for me to survey very rapidly here. These generally pertain, in European
and Afro-Asian terms, to the Left, given that anything like an organised
parliamentary Left-wing or socialist movement has never really existed for
any length of time in post-World War Two America, so powerful is the grip
of the two-party apparatus. As for the Democratic Party today, it is in a
shambles from which it will not soon recover. One would have to include
for a start the positively disaffected and still fairly radical wing of
the African-American community, that is, those urban groups who agitate
against police brutality, job discrimination, housing and educational
neglect, and are led or represented by iconic or charismatic figures such
as Rev Al Sharpton, Cornel West, Muhammad Ali, Jesse Jackson (faded as a
leader though he is) and several others who see themselves as continuing
in the tradition of Martin Luther King Jr. Associated with this movement
are numerous other activist ethnic collectivities, including Latinos,
Native Americans, and Muslims, each of which of course has devoted
considerable energy to trying to slip into the mainstream, in pursuit of
important political assignments in local and national governments,
appearance on prestigious television talk shows, and membership on
governing boards of foundations, colleges, and corporations. But in the
main, however, most of those groups are still more activated by a sense of
injustice and discrimination than they are by ambition, and therefore
aren't ready to enlist completely in the American (mostly white and
middle-class) dream. The interesting thing about someone like Sharpton,
for example, or say Ralph Nader and his loyal supporters in the protesting
but still struggling Green Party, is that though they may have visibility
and a certain degree of acceptability they remain outsiders, basically
uncoopted, too intransigent, and not sufficiently interested in the
routine rewards that the society offers.
One huge wing of the women's
movement, active on behalf of abortion rights, abuse and harassment
issues, professional equality is also a major asset to the dissenting
current in American society. Similarly, sectors of the normally sedate,
interest- and advancement-oriented professional groups (physicians,
lawyers, scientists, academics in particular, as well as a number of labor
unions, and a sector of the environmental movement) feed into the dynamic
of counter- currents I am listing here, even though of course as corporate
bodies they retain a major interest in the orderly functioning of society
and the agendas that derive from them.
Then too the organised
churches themselves can never be discounted as seedbeds of change and
dissent. Their membership is to be clearly distinguished from the
fundamentalist and televangelist movements I mentioned above. Catholic
Bishops, for example, the laity and clergy of the Episcopal Church, in
addition to the Quakers and the Presbyterian synod -- despite the various
travails that include sexual scandals in the first and depleted
memberships in most of the others -- have been surprisingly liberal on war
and peace questions, and quite willing to speak out against international
human rights abuses, the hyper-inflated military budgets, and neo-liberal
economic policies that have mutilated the public sphere since the early
1980s. Historically there was always a segment of the organised Jewish
community involved in progressive minority rights causes domestically and
abroad, but since the Reagan period the ascendancy of the neo-conservative
movement, the alliance between Israel and the religious Right in this
country, and feverish Zionist- organised activity equating criticism of
Israel with anti-Semitism and even fear of a new American Auschwitz, have
reduced the positive agency of that force quite considerably.
Finally, a large number of
groups and individuals sought out for rallies, protest marches, and
peaceful demonstrations has stood out of the mind-deadening patriotism in
the post-9/11 period. These have clustered around civil liberties
(including free speech and constitutional guarantees) that have been
threatened by the Terrorist and Patriot Acts. Agitation against capital
punishment, occasional protests at the abuses represented by the detention
camps at Guantanamo Bay, a general distrust of civilian authorities in the
military, as well as an increasing discomfort at the increasingly
privatised carceral system that has locked up the highest number of people
per capita in the world (a disproportionate number of them men and women
of color), all these radiate like so many perpetual disturbances inside
the prevailing middle class social order. A correlative of this is of
course the rough and tumble of cyberspace, fought over unrelentingly by
both the official and unofficial Americas. In the current malaise produced
by an unmistakably steep decline in the country's economy, disruptive
themes like the growing difference between rich and poor, the
extraordinary profligacy and corruption of the corporate higher echelons,
and the manifest danger to the social security system through various
audaciously rapacious schemes of privatisation, continue to take a heavy
toll out of the firmly held and much celebrated virtues of the capitalist
system that is uniquely American.
Is America indeed united
behind this president, his bellicose foreign policy, and his dangerously
simple-minded economic vision? This is another way of asking whether
American identity has been settled once and for all and whether for a
world that has to live with its far- reaching military power (there are
American troops now in dozens of countries) there is something monolithic
that the rest of the world that isn't willing to be quiescent can deal
with as a sort of fixed entity lurching all over the place with the full
support of all 'Americans'. I have tried to suggest another way of seeing
America as indeed a troubled country with a more contested actuality than
is usually ascribed to it. I think it is more accurate to apprehend
America as embroiled in a serious clash of identities whose counterparts
are visible as similar contests throughout the rest of the world. America
may have won the Cold War, as the popular phrase has it, but the actual
results of that victory within America are very far from clear, the
struggle not yet over. Too much of a focus on the American executive's
centralising military and political power ignores the internal dialectics
that continue and are nowhere near being settled. Abortion rights and the
teaching of natural evolution are still issues of unsettled
contentiousness.
The great fallacy of
Fukuyama's thesis about the end of history, or for that matter
Huntington's clash of civilisation theory, is that both wrongly assume
that cultural history is a matter of clear-cut boundaries or of
beginnings, middles and ends, whereas in fact, the cultural- political
field is much more an arena of struggle over identity, self-definition and
projection into the future. They are fundamentalists when it comes to
fluid, turbulent cultures in constant process, trying to impose fixed
boundaries and internal rules of order where none really can exist.
Cultures, specially America's, which is in effect an immigrant culture,
overlap with others, and one of the perhaps unintended consequences of
globalisation is the appearance of transnational communities of global
interests, as in the human rights movement, the women's movement, the
anti-war movement and so on. America is not at all insulated from any of
this, but one has to excavate beyond the intimidatingly unified surface to
see what lies beneath, so as to be able to join in that set of disputes,
to which many of the people of the world are a party. There is hope and
encouragement to be gained from that view.
Source:
by courtesy & 2003 Al-Ahram weekly & Edward Said
by the same author:
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