The colonial expansion that eventuated in the
establishment of the United States has its own particular version of the
ideology of space, captured perfectly in the opening pages of one of the most
successful college American History textbooks of the twentieth century, The American Pageant, by Thomas A.
Bailey. Bailey, by the way, at one point
served as the President of the leading professional organization in the field,
the Organization of American Historians. He introduced generations of readers to the
colonization of the North American continent with these words:
"The American republic, which is still relatively
young, was from the outset singularly favored.
It started from scratch on a vast and virgin continent, which was so
sparsely peopled by Indians that they could be eliminated or pushed aside. Such a magnificent opportunity for a great
democratic experiment may never come again."
The American continent was, to be sure,
"virgin," in the eyes of English colonists, because not a single
square foot of it had attached to it a claim of property that an English court
was bound to observe. The claims of the
local inhabitants to hunting grounds, grazing lands, territorial boundaries or
sacred burial sites were null and void, so far as an English magistrate was
concerned. Indeed, in many cases they
were not even recognized as claims at all.
Deeply embedded in the American consciousness is the belief that, as
Americans, they have an unassailable right to everything between the Atlantic
and Pacific oceans. It is striking to
contrast this with the claims advanced by the Germans or the Russians or the
French to borderlands, claims that inevitably run up against counter-claims
from other nations that must at least be attended to and rebutted.
I encountered a fascinating variant of the American myth
of the virgin continent several years ago when Susie and I made a brief
three-day visit to Israel. We hired a
guide, an officer in the Army Reserve, who drove us here and there to see the
sights. At one point he paused and waved
his hand toward a large valley, which, I suspected, had for many years prior to
the establishment of Israel been populated by Palestinians. "There was nothing here until we
came," he said, clearly meaning all of Israel and the Occupied Territories,
not simply that valley. It was at roughly that moment that I began to regret
our decision to detour to Israel on our way to Paris.
I have spoken of the ideological conception of space that
underlies International Capitalism, Traditional Patriotism, Imperialism, and Colonialism,
but what of Revolutionary Socialism? As
we should expect if we have been paying close attention to Marx, the ideology
of socialism is an evolution beyond that if capitalism, not a throwback to
earlier ideological orientations. Like Capitalism,
Revolutionary Socialism is unambivalently international in orientation. [Hence the unofficial anthem of the movement,
The Internationale.] It organizes the world not spatially but
along class lines, treating national borders as obstacles to be overcome. If there is a space that carries any
ideological freight in the imagination of a revolutionary socialist, it is not a
region but a demarcation: the barricade,
which is to say, the line, wherever it is, that divides the working class from
the ruling class. When the First World War broke out, socialists
around the world [including my own
grandfather] confidently expected French and German working men to refuse to
fight their comrades facing them in the trenches. The utter frustration of that hope crushed a
dream that had been several generations in the making.
With the orientation
toward space of Revolutionary Socialism we may contrast that of Utopian
Socialism, or more generally of Utopianism.
Utopia is a word coined by Sir
Thomas More and used as the title of a book.
The word means "nowhere" [see Samuel Butler's Erewhon and Erewhon Revisited], but it also is a pun on a very similar Greek
word meaning "a nice place."
Marx had great disdain for the critics of nineteenth century capitalism
whom he dubbed Utopian Socialists because their speculative descriptions of
ideal societies were, he thought, not grounded in any sort of analysis of the
reality of capitalism as they experienced it.
An interesting
modern version of this rootless speculative political philosophy is A Theory of Justice, by John Rawls, whose "veil of ignorance" is
conceived as an objective, neutral standpoint free of parti pris. In fact, of
course, the book turns out on examination to be an ideological rationalization
of late twentieth century welfare state capitalism.
And with that, I
conclude my effort to suggest how we might do for the consciousness of space
what Mannheim does so brilliantly for the consciousness of time. These are no more than preliminary notes, but
I hope you found something of interest in them.
There is some reason to think that North America was relatively empty as a result of repeated pandemics.
ReplyDeleteSo who were the locals with whom the colonists traded and made military alliances?
ReplyDelete