Wednesday, December 17, 2003

AMERICA BY WAY OF FRENCH EXISTENTIALISM
Americans and Their Myths


Forget Alexis de Tocqueville. I prefer John-Paul Sartre's understanding of America. A flashback from the Nation, 1947:

The system is a great external apparatus, an implacable machine which one might call the objective spirit of the United States and which over there they call Americanism-a huge complex of myths, values, recipes, slogans, figures, and rites. But one must not think that it has been deposited in the head of each American just as the God of Descartes deposited the first notions in the mind of man; one must not think that it is "refracted" into brains and hearts and at each instant determines affections or thoughts that exactly express it. Actually, it is something outside of the people, something presented to them; the most adroit propaganda does nothing else but present it to &cm continuously. It is not in them, they are in it; they struggle against it or they accept it, they stifle in it or go beyond it, they submit to it or reinvent it, they give themselves up to it or make furious efforts to escape from it; in any case it remains outside them, transcendent, because they are men and it is a thing.

What's interesting is that, if anything, Sartre's analysis is even more accurate for 2003.

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