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- <font face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica" size="-1"><b><a href="lectures.html">
- INDEX</a></b><br><br><font size="+1"><center><i>Reading Revolutions: Intellectual History</i><br><br>
- <font size="+1">
- What is an American? Crevecoeur, Tocqueville, and the<br>
- Ideology of American Exceptionalism<br><br><font size="+0">Allen Berger</center>
- <font face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica" size="-1">
- <br><br>The following is the outline of his lecture written by Allen Berger:</font></font></font><br>
- <font face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica" size="-1">
- <br>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 0.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 1.<span> </span><b>Why Crevecoeur and Tocqueville: Explanation and
- Confession</b></span></span><img border="0" src="pictures/Crevocoer/tocquevillewater.jpg" width="184" height="224" align="right" hspace="8"></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- a.<span> </span>Concerns about health of American democracy: some ideas of
- Crevecoeur and Tocqueville can be instructive</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- b.<span> </span>No expertise in either author (not a historian, political
- scientist, or expert in American Studies)—background as cultural anthropologist </span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- c.<span> </span>Instead I come to the topic primarily as an educator</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- i. Started career teaching at a small Catholic college—Core program—Crevecoeur
- and Tocqueville included in common first-year, general education curriculum that
- aspired to create community-wide discourse about: a) factors shaping individual
- lives and life chances in America, and b) the nature of American society </span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- ii.<span> </span>Longstanding belief in need for college education to prepare
- students for citizenship and leadership in a democratic society (liberal
- education)</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- iii. Concerned that while we continue to give lip service to this idea, the
- reality is that our commitment to education for citizenship has been seriously
- undermined by two related trends-</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 1.<span> </span>Barry Schwartz (Swarthmore)—<i>economic imperialism—</i>def.:
- the spread of economic considerations to previously non-economic aspects of life
- (perceptions of value and purpose of college)</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 2.<span> </span>Culture of individualism and consumer choice: student choice
- and faculty choice in a “Chinese menu” distributive curriculum that values
- breadth in education but at the same time sacrifices commonality and community </span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- iv.<span> </span>My interest in moral education and in education for citizenship
- undoubtedly makes me seem very old fashioned; conservative even—certainly
- countercultural (evidence from recent <i>Diversity Digest</i>
- study--handout)</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- v.<span> </span>Brian Bex and I: we differ in our politics, but we ask identical
- questions:</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 1.<span> </span>If a college education is effectively to prepare students for
- citizenship and for leadership, are there certain issues and ideas that we ought
- to aspire to engage seriously together across the academy as a true community of
- learners?</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 2.<span> </span>Should there be a common core that doesn’t eliminate all
- choice in general education, but complements and balances it?</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 3.<span> </span>And if so, what common readings belong in such a Core?</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- vi.<span> </span>No proposal tonight for a grand curricular design (and not a
- CAO’s role)--but suggest that Crevecoeur and Tocqueville aren’t bad places to
- start, at least for students who will be the next generation of citizens in this
- country (my own experiences at U of C).</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 0.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 2.<span> </span><b>So who are these guys?</b></span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- a.<span> </span>Both Frenchmen; both visitors to America, one in the colonial
- period, in the years leading up to the revolution, the other in the early
- decades of the American Republic</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- b.<span> </span>Both wrote about America: comparisons to old world of Europe
- (particularly France) and with a fascination for what made America different or
- exceptional</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- c.<span> </span>Basic biographical facts:</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- i. J. Hector St. John de Crevecoeur</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 1.<span> </span>born in Normandy in 1731</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 2.<span> </span>finished education in England; embarked for America in 1754</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 3.<span> </span>worked as a surveyor, peddler, Indian trader; traveled
- throughout the colonies and beyond into the wilderness of the interior</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 4.<span> </span>settled in Orange County, NY, married into fairly prominent
- British family, became something of a gentleman farmer on “Pine Hill,” a 120
- acre farm</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 5.<span> </span>started a manuscript on American society and agrarian life</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 6.<span> </span>Tory, but distrusted by British</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 7.<span> </span>1780-returned to England, later France, publishing in both
- countries “Letters from an American Farmer,” which was enormously influential in
- Europe</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 8.<span> </span>returned to New York in 1783, served as French consul; Pine
- Hill had been burned in an Indian raid, his wife was dead, and his three
- children were gone (although he later tracked them down)</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 9.<span> </span>associated with many leading figures of the early American
- scene, including Benjamin Franklin whom he had befriended in Paris</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 10.<span> </span>returned to France in 1790; died in 1813</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in">
- <font size="+0" face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica">
- <img border="0" src="pictures/Crevocoer/28-tocqueville.jpg" width="174" height="322" align="right" hspace="10"></font><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">ii.<span> </span>Alexis
- de Tocqueville (Comte Alexis-Henri-Charles-Maurice Clérel de Tocqueville)</span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 1.<span> </span>born in Paris in 1805</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 2.<span> </span>aristocratic background; studied law and served as a
- magistrate</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 3.<span> </span>traveled to America in 1831 w. another young magistrate,
- Gustave de Beaumont, landing in Newport, RI, a month before turning 26</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 4.<span> </span>traveled here ostensibly for purpose of studying American
- penal system; T. later labeled this a “pretext”; said the real purpose was to
- see firsthand “what a great republic is”</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 5.<span> </span>spent nine months in America, visiting both cities and the
- frontier; met ordinary Americans, road in stage coaches and steam boats, met
- leaders of the day (such as John Quincy Adams, Daniel Webster, and Andrew
- Jackson), and read broadly</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 6.<span> </span>eventual result—<i>Democracy in America</i>, published in
- France in 1835</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 7.<span> </span>some scholars judge it the best book on democracy and the best
- book on America every written; certainly it may be the most often quoted</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 8.<span> </span>later in life served as a public official, including as a
- representative to the Chamber of Deputies and minister of foreign affairs</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 2in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 9.<span> </span>died in 1859</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 0.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 3.<span> </span><b>Why is Crevecoeur and in particular <i>Letters from an
- American Farmer</i> worthy of our attention or our students’ attention?</b></span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- a.<span> </span>perhaps the first author to ask the question: “What is an
- American?” (certainly still a relevant question) His work is part
- autobiographical memoir, part philosophical travel book, and part formal
- essays—all framed as a series of letters from an American farmer, James, to a
- correspondent in England who is curious about the manner of life in the American
- colonies</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- b.<span> </span>it is a work that defined America to Europeans (along w.
- Franklin)</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- c.<span> </span>Not great literature or ethnography or social theory, but
- introduces ideas and visions of America that have shaped both our ideas and
- myths about ourselves and also how others have perceived us; Crevecoeur
- portrayed American society as different from any that had previously existed; he
- described what he considered revolutionary principles of social and economic
- organization and a distinctive, non-European consciousness or ethos that emerged
- as a result.</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- d.<span> </span>READINGS FROM LETTER 3: “What is an American?”</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- e.<span> </span>In just these short excerpts, a rich number of themes and
- ideas:</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in">
- <font size="+0" face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica">
- <img border="0" src="pictures/Crevocoer/crevecoerw.jpg" width="254" height="349" align="right" hspace="10"></font><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">i.
- America as a melting pot: what melts is memory—memory (of old world and old
- identities.</span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- ii.<span> </span>“American Adam”—a special or unique breed of human who is
- less parochial, more open-minded, and more engaged civicly (Emerson --America
- offered “new lands, new men, new thoughts.”)</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- iii.<span> </span>Identification of individualistic, egalitarian, anti-statist,
- and laissez faire values as the core of American national identity (Lipset: in
- Europe “nationality is related to community, and thus one cannot become
- un-English or un-Swedish. Being an American, however, is an ideological
- commitment. It is not a matter of birth. Those who reject American values are
- un-American.” Teddy Roosevelt-- America is a “question of principle, of
- idealism, of character, not a matter of birthplace, of creed, or line of
- descent.” To think of Americans, as Benjamin Barber has written, “as a special
- people capable of realizing a special destiny” takes hubris, but perhaps the
- greatest purveyor of this idea in the eighteenth century was a Frenchman, not an
- American.</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- iv.<span> </span>Lack of class consciousness in America (later generations
- of historians folded this into the notion of American exceptionalism—no
- tradition of working class radicalism, no significant socialist movement or
- labor party)</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- v.<span> </span>Optimism, grounded in materialism and environmental
- determinism—where people live, the material conditions of their lives, what they
- do, and how they work determines how they think, indeed who they are. The
- European transplanted to America can literally become a “new man.” (Crevecoeur’s
- use of the masculine)</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.125in; margin-left: 1.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- vi.<span> </span>The American dream</span></span></p>
- <p style="margin-left: 1.375in"> </p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in">
- <span style="font-family: 'Verdana">f.<span> </span></span><font size="+0" face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica"><img border="0" src="pictures/Crevocoer/TocquevilleCrevecoeur3321w.jpg" width="300" height="225" align="left" hspace="10" vspace="10"></font><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">CONCLUSION:
- Whether or not one agrees with these ideas, it is hard to deny that they have
- had a strong impact on American culture; they are an important part of a
- national story that we tell about ourselves. Having students read passages
- from Crevecoeur is therefore a wonderful launching pad for conversations about
- the nature of America and American myth. Of course, there are competing visions
- and competing stories, stories of hyphenated Americans, of multicultural
- identity, of diversity, of disadvantage, of imperialism rather than innocence.
- But isn’t that the point? Our stories define for us who we are. And
- our students need to understand these stories, their origins, their limitations,
- what they show and what they hide, whose interests they serve, and how they
- function in the context of a society that has changed dramatically since the
- time of Crevecoeur. And, I would argue, perhaps no future citizen needs
- this education more than a citizen who aspires to be a future teacher (of which
- we have many at UMF). If there’s one thing Crevecoeur makes clear it is
- this: the ideology of American exceptionalism not so much an example of 20<sup>th</sup>
- century superpower arrogance or 19<sup>th</sup> century imperialist
- revisionism/hypocrisy; it is our original story and it is a story whose repeated
- telling has wielded enormous influence.</span></p>
- <br>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 0.5in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 4.<span> </span>Why is Tocqueville and <i>Democracy in America</i> worthy of
- our attention as college educators interested in preparing future citizens?
- Answer: Tocqueville “is the best friend that democracy has ever had, and
- also democracy’s most candid critic.” Limitations of my discussion; Matt
- McCourt’s follow-up lecture. Focus tonight:</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- a.<span> </span>Tocqueville as an apostle of civic engagement</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- b.<span> </span>Tocqueville as a critic of Americans’ addiction to material
- well-being</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- c.<span> </span>Tocqueville as a skeptic of majority rule</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- d.<span> </span>Tocqueville as an appreciative analyst of a print-based
- culture</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 1in">
- <br>
- </p>
- <p>
- <span style="font-weight: 700; font-style:italic; font-family:'Verdana; font-size: =-1">
- Civic Engagement</span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Perhaps more
- than anything else, Tocqueville was impressed with Americans’ propensity for
- participation in civic associations. He wrote: “Americans of all ages, all
- stations in life, and all types of disposition are forever forming associations.
- There are not only commercial and industrial associations in which all take
- part, but others of a thousand different types—religious, moral, serious,
- futile, very general and very limited, immensely large and very minute… Nothing,
- in my view, deserves more attention than the intellectual and moral associations
- in America.”</span></span><br>
- </p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">In
- Tocqueville’s mind, this propensity was the basis of democracy—</span></span></p>
- <blockquote>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">It encouraged the development of
- social trust</span></p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">It broadened people’s sense self,
- creating more enlightened participants in the policy capable of thinking
- in terms of the common good and mutual self-interest</span></p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">It facilitated coordination and
- cooperation for collective benefit</span></p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">It developed political and
- organizational skills</span></p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">It resulted in an active
- citizenry that was not excessively dependent upon government</span></p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- <font size="+0" face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica">
- <img border="0" src="pictures/Crevocoer/TocquevilleCrevecoeur3206w.jpg" width="350" height="263" align="right" hspace="10"></font><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Since
- Tocqueville, many political scientists have studied this aspect of American
- society and have tried to specify the mechanisms by which civic engagement
- and social connectedness lead to a healthier democracy </span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Banfield on
- southern Italy: <i>The Moral Basis of a Backward Society</i>: problem of amoral
- familism</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Recent trend
- in political science to despair the disappearance of voluntary associations and
- the decline of civic engagement in America</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Putnam:
- “Bowling Alone”</span></span></p>
- <blockquote>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- Putnam: “The rise of solo bowling threatens the livelihood of
- bowling-lane proprietors because those who bowl as members of leagues
- consume three times as much beer and pizza as solo bowlers, and the
- money in bowling is in the beer and pizza, not the balls and shoes.
- The broader social significance, however, lies in the social interaction
- and even occasionally civic conversations over beer and pizza that solo
- bowlers forego.”</span></span></p>
- </blockquote>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Not just
- bowling: declining participation in PTA’s; disappearance of labor unions;
- shrinkage of fraternal organizations (Lions, Elks, Jaycees, Masons, etc.); fewer
- volunteers to be Boy Scout troop leaders; even declining socialization with
- neighbors</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Common
- framework for understanding this phenomenon: decline in SOCIAL CAPITAL</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana"><span>
- </span>(community resources that facilitate coordination and
- cooperation for mutual benefit)</span></span></p>
- <p> </p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Questions:</span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana"><span>
- </span>Is it really happening?</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana"><span>
- </span>Does it really have a dire impact on democracy?</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana"><span>
- </span>Are new kinds of networks and organizations—e.g., those
- formed through electronic media—capable of making up for this loss?</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana"><span>
- </span>Why is it occurring?</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana"><span>
- </span>Geographic mobility</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana"><span>
- </span>Women’s entry into the workforce</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana"><span>
- </span>Affluence (e.g., vacations vs. holidays)</span></span></p>
- <p style="margin-left: 1in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- Technological transformation of leisure: television, VCR’s and DVD’s, computers</span></span></p>
- <p style="margin-left: 1in"> </p>
- <p>
- <span style="font-weight: 700; font-style:italic; font-family:'Verdana; font-size: =-1">
- Material Well-Being</span></p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">United States as most affluent society in
- the history of the world</span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana"><span>
- </span>Not an unmixed blessing: (recent Howe lecture)</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Tocqueville
- for a different set of reasons thought the bourgeois addiction to material
- well-being, which he found particularly strong in America, was problematic (in
- particular, dangerous to democracy)</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Tocqueville: “It is a strange thing
- to see with sort of feverish ardor Americans pursue well-being and how they show
- themselves constantly tormented by a vague fear of not having chosen the
- shortest route that can lead to it.” </span></p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Tocqueville had two fears:</span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 0.75in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 1)<span> </span>the desire for material well-being, when it degenerates into
- materialism, is self-defeating: it leads to continuous cravings, escalation of
- needs, and paradoxically a reduction in levels of satisfaction</span></span></p>
- <p style="text-indent: -0.25in; margin-left: 0.75in"><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">
- 2)<span> </span>more importantly, it weakens social bonds and increases
- selfishness, and therefore is a threat to community and to democracy</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Tocqueville advocated “self interest well
- understood”—as antidote to dangers of materialism—encompasses more than the
- self. Similarly, he spoke of a “sort of refined and intelligent egoism,” which
- he said was “the pivot on which the whole machine turns.”</span></p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Tocqueville: religion particularly
- important in producing this enlightened self-interest: “The main business
- of religion is to purify, control, and restrain that excessive and exclusive
- taste for well-being.”</span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Religion +
- civic engagement: produced a “second language” that united individuals, created
- communities and acted as counter-weight to the language of individualism.</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana"> “Habits of
- the heart.” vs. acquisitive individualism; virtue vs. materialism</span></span></p>
- <p>
- <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style:italic; font-family:'Verdana; font-size: =-1">
- Majority Rule</span></p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Tocqueville as America’s greatest fan,
- but also wrote: “I do not know of any country where, in general, less
- independence of mind and genuine freedom of discussion reign than in America.” </span></p>
- <p><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Tocqueville particularly skeptical of the
- tyranny of the majority: “In America, the majority draws a formidable circle
- around thought. Inside those limits, the writer is free; but unhappiness awaits
- him if he dares to leave them. It is not that he has to fear an auto-da-fe, but
- he is the butt of moritifications of all kinds of persecutions every day.”</span><br>
- </p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Irony: even
- though Americans value individualism above almost all else, we do not place
- particular value on individuation of thought. In fact, we punish free-thinkers.
- (in some ways we punish thinkers period)</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Rich body of
- sociological and political literature in the wake of Tocqueville that has
- examined the supposed anti-intellectual strains in American society.</span></span></p>
- <br>
- <p><span style="font-weight: bold; font-family:'Verdana; font-size: =-1"><i>
- Print-based culture</i> </span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">I have saved
- this part of Tocqueville’s observations for last, because it so closely relates
- to why we’re all here tonight: Brian Bex has lent us these first editions of
- great books, because he believes there is value in the printed word. There is
- not a faculty member at UMF who would disagree. In fact, what is college about
- if it is not about reading and discussing what one has read?</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">However, in
- this day and age, most college students arrive in the academy without having
- developed a habit of reading. Many even report that they don’t enjoy reading.</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Tocqueville,
- on the other hand, was struck by the extent to which America was a nation of
- readers. He took particular note of the proliferation of newspapers, pamphlets,
- and broadsides.</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Of course,
- for us it’s difficult to imagine a world without radios, without television,
- without computers, without movies, without telephones, without even photography.
- Printed matter was all that was available. And rates of literacy in the late
- eighteenth and early nineteenth century were higher in America than anywhere
- else in the world. Political discourse in our early democracy was written
- discourse. </span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">In addition
- to penny newspapers, two other institutions grew at a phenomenal pace—libraries
- and lecture halls. Alfred Bunn: “Practically every village has its lecture
- hall… It is a matter of wonderment to witness the youthful workmen, the
- overtired artisan, the worn-out factory girl rushing after the toil of the day
- is over, into the hot atmosphere of a crowded lecture room.”</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Lectures as
- “the oral equivalent of print”—w. linear, analytical structure of expository
- prose. The business of politics was conducted entirely through print and
- through lectures.</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Try to
- imagine how different that is from the world in which we live today, where the
- business of politics is conducted primarily through 30 or 60 second television
- commercials. Where even the so-called debates that our presidential
- candidates have are little more than scripted exercises and opportunities for
- creating impressions rather than advancing cogent arguments, chances for honing
- a message, which of course means shrinking it down to bite-sized one liners that
- don’t even require a command of syntax. </span></span></p>
- <p>
- <font size="+0" face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica">
- <img border="0" src="pictures/Crevocoer/TocquevilleCrevecoeur3352w.jpg" width="300" height="225" align="left" hspace="10" vspace="10"></font><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">What
- is the impact on our democracy? On the quality of our decisions as
- voters? On the kinds of candidates we elect? </span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">Most
- Americans today agree that Abraham Lincoln was our greatest president. He
- was also, of course, a great orator. But he was gangly, awkward, many would say
- ugly, and he had a homely wife who was mentally ill. Could his candidacy
- have survived in the age of television?</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">If not, and
- I gather you agree not, then here’s the more important question (Postman):
- if our democracy arose in a print culture where public discourse was
- characterized by the coherent, linear, orderly arrangement of facts and ideas,
- can it survive in a video, electronic culture characterized by sound-bites,
- multi-tasking, short attention spans, and flashy visuals?</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">These are
- the kinds of questions that reading Tocqueville forces us to ask?</span></span></p>
- <p><span style="font-size: =-1"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana">And, to
- return to where I started, if you agree with me that these questions are of
- utmost importance if we are to preserve our democracy, then shouldn’t every
- college student be reading Tocqueville and perhaps Crevecoeur too?</span></span></p>
- <br>
- </body></html><font size="+1"><div align=right>
- <font size="+0" face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica">
- <hr width="60%">
- <hr width="40%">
- <p align="left"><font face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica" size="-1">
- Following the presentation the audience was invited to examine the three
- volumes of essays.</font></p>
- </font>
- <table border="0" width="100%" id="table1">
- <tr>
- <td>
- <p align="center">
- <font size="+0" face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica">
- <a href="pictures/Crevocoer/TocquevilleCrevecoeur3397wl.jpg">
- <img border="0" src="pictures/Crevocoer/TocquevilleCrevecoeur3397w.jpg" width="268" height="400"></a></font></td>
- <td>
- <p align="center">
- <font size="+0" face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica">
- <a href="pictures/Crevocoer/TocquevilleCrevecoeur3385wl.jpg">
- <img border="0" src="pictures/Crevocoer/TocquevilleCrevecoeur3385w.jpg" width="284" height="400"></a></font></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <p align="center"><font face="Tahoma" size="2">J. Hector St. John de
- Crevecoeur,</font><font face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica" size="-1">
- 1782<br>
- click to enlarge</font></td>
- <td>
- <p align="center"><font face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica" size="-1">
- Alexis de Tocqueville, 1841<br>
- click to enlarge</font></td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- <p align="left"><br>
- </font></font></font></font>
- <font face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica" size="-2">Crevecoeur and de Tocqueville</font><font face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica" size="-1"><font size="+1"><font size=-2 face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica">
- portraits from
- <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tocqueville">Wikipedia</a> </font></p>
- </font><br><br><br>
- <center><table border="6" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" style="border-collapse: collapse" width="80%" id="decorative" bgcolor="#cccccc">
- <tr>
- <td width="100%"><center><table border="6" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" style="border-collapse: collapse" width="100%" id="credits" bordercolor="#111111" bgcolor="#cccccc">
- <tr>
- <td width="100%"><blockquote><font face="Verdana,Arial,Helvetica" size="-1"><br>Citation:<br><br>
- Berger, Allen. "What is an American? Crevecoeur, Tocqueville, and the
- Ideology of American Exceptionalism."
- Outline of lecture presented at the University of Maine at Farmington, November 16, 2005.
- Retrieved _______.  <http://hua.umf.maine.edu/Reading_Revolutions/Tocqueville_Crevecoeur.html>. <br><br>URL: <a href="http://hua.umf.maine.edu/Reading_Revolutions/index.html">
- http://hua.umf.maine.edu/Reading_Revolutions/index.html</a> <br><br>
- Marilyn Shea, 2005<br><br>
- </blockquote></td></tr></table></center>
- </td></tr></table></center>
- </td>
- <td width="110" background="wrightcenter.jpg" height="456"> </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td width="110" height="105">
- <img border="0" src="wleftbottcorner.jpg" align="top" width="108" height="105"></td>
- <td width="100%" background="wbottcenter.jpg" height="105"> </td>
- <td width="109" height="105">
- <img border="0" src="wrightbotcorner.jpg" align="top" width="105" height="105"></td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- </body>
- </html>
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