reading:anti-intellectualism_in_american_life

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revision Previous revision
Next revision
Previous revision
reading:anti-intellectualism_in_american_life [2022-08-21 00:33] – [The Revolt against Modernity] added section 2 notes asdfreading:anti-intellectualism_in_american_life [2023-05-29 21:15] (current) – inline edit asdf
Line 1: Line 1:
 ====== Anti-Intellectualism in American Life ====== ====== Anti-Intellectualism in American Life ======
-Bear in mind while working through this book that Hofstadter was a centrist interested in moving academic discourse away from materialism and toward psychoanalysis.+It's amazing to realize that Hofstadter was writing about time now more than 60 years past; many of the issues he discusses feel lifted straight out of today's political climate. In this book, he highlights various strands of American hostility to intellect and intellectuals, arguing that this feature is deeply entrenched in the American identity. 
 + 
 +===== Questions ===== 
 +  * How can we build a highly democratic society without discounting expertise? 
 +  * Can we have a church that values learning and discourse while remaining accessible to the congregation and without becoming overly ritualistic?
  
 ===== Chapter notes ===== ===== Chapter notes =====
 +Bear in mind while working through this book that Hofstadter was something of a centrist interested in moving academic discourse away from materialism and toward psychoanalysis.
 +
 ==== Anti-intellectualism in Our Time ==== ==== Anti-intellectualism in Our Time ====
   * this work, like others in Hofstadter's bibliography, exists very much in the shadow of 1950s McCarthyism   * this work, like others in Hofstadter's bibliography, exists very much in the shadow of 1950s McCarthyism
Line 362: Line 368:
   * in his ideal world, evolutionary biology would have been banned outright and modern science confined to private secularist schools; sound education and orthodox faith were to him one and the same   * in his ideal world, evolutionary biology would have been banned outright and modern science confined to private secularist schools; sound education and orthodox faith were to him one and the same
   * Bryan: "If we have to give up either religion or education, we should give up education."   * Bryan: "If we have to give up either religion or education, we should give up education."
 +    * I do wonder if this attitude made more sense when public education was still relatively new.
  
 +  * at the time of writing, the evolution controversy felt old hat to intellectuals in the East, but elsewhere the issue was (and is today) still very much alive
 +  * although the intellectuals were largely vindicated by the trial, the trial was a frightening time for them
 +  * during the buildup to the trial, the anti-evolution case had a great deal of support, particularly in the South but also outside it
 +  * even those intellectuals in the more secure centers of learning could still fear for the future of the nation's secondary education
 +  * at the time of writing, high school texts still often discussed evolution in guarded terms, and barely more than a third of adolescent poll respondents agreed with the statement "man was evolved from lower forms of animals" (40% responded "no", 35% responded "yes", and 24% "don't know")
 +  * look into: //Are American Teachers Free?// (Howard K. Beale)
 +  * the trial marked the first time in the 20th century that intellectuals and experts were denounced as enemies of the people by leaders of a large segment of the public
 +  * the militant fundamentalists, while a minority, were a significant minority, and their animus reflected wider anxieties about the direction of the country (cosmopolitan mentality, critical intelligence, experimentalism in morals and literature)
 +  * as they saw it, the loss of faith among their children would be the first step in a greater loss of morality; many were motivated by specifically sexual fears: "They had a good deal to say about the 'sensuality' inherent in the notion that man has descended from lower forms of life..."
 +    * my only guess on this last part is that "survival of the fittest" is about which individuals in a population get to reproduce and thus pass on their genes, which I suppose the sexually anxious would fixate on as "inherent sensuality". The 1920s, man.
 +    * thinking on that further, I can see that the Sexual Revolution really was a huge deal, if indeed that was the bridge between then and now; that a concept as unsexy as natural selection could arouse (pun intended) such a fervor is quite surprising to me
 +  * after the trial, the fundamentalists set to looking for other areas they could strike against the modernists
 +  * in the wake of the Great Depression, the non-fundie evangelical groups (the clergy more so than the laymen) began moving politically left, especially compared to their fundie counterparts; many conservative laymen felt that the social gospel had created a "priestly class" set apart from their congregations
 +  * this sense of isolation and impotence help pull the fundamentalists far to the right and into the ranks of New Deal opposition
 +  * "The fundamentalism of the cross was now supplemented by a fundamentalism of the flag."
 +  * this was the first mixture of fundamentalism with the far right, where their influence continues to be felt to this day
 +  * look into: //The Radical Right// (ed. Daniel Bell)
 +  * look into: //Apostles of Discord// (Ralph Lord Roy)
 +  * look into: "The Radical Right and the Rise of the Fundamentalist Minority" (David Danzig)
 +  * Charles B. Hudson: "We are going to take this government out of the hands of these city-slickers and give it back to the people that still believe two plus two is four, God is in his Heaven, and the Bible is the Word."
 +  * apparently there was little scholarship at the time tracing the links from the Depression to post-Depression right
 +  * many of the right-wing leaders had been preachers, ex-preachers, sons of preachers, etc. with rigid religious upbringings
 +    * I'm still struggling to understand the jump from fundie to fashy---were they just so butthurt about "losing" the country that they were willing to really stretch "make converts by any means necessary"?
 +  * some man associated with Billy Sunday in the mid-30s later turned up as right-wing or quasi-fascist agitators
 +  * Gerald Winrod, Gerald L. K. Smith, J. Frank Norris, Carl McIntire (look these dudes up, they are wild)
 +    * Gerald Winrod: "the Jayhawk Nazi"; wrote a book defending //The Protocols of the Elders of Zion//; believed that the Depression was the work of Satan, that F.D.R. was an element of the Jewish Communist conspiracy, and that Hitler would save Europe from Communism; his son was later involved with Christian Identity
 +    * Gerald L. K. Smith: started out as a leader of the Share Our Wealth before jumping dick first into Christian nationalism and white supremacy; his organization distributed //The International Jew//; started up the short-lived America First Party in the 40s
 +    * J. Frank Norris: described evolution as "hell-born, Bible-destroying, deity-of-Christ-denying, German rationalism"; pressed Truman to recognize the new state of Israel to satisfy his premillennial lust for Armageddon 
 +    * Carl McIntire: started two organizations to oppose liberal tendencies in the churches
 +  * the John Birch Society (which was new at the time) brought the far right's fundamentalist undertones to the fore
 +    * and we know that the JBS bled into the Patriots and the sovereign citizens and Christian Identity and so on
 +  * the literature of the extreme right is similarly continuous from Christian fundamentalism to militant nationalism
 +  * people like to believe their worldviews are complete, and the fundie mind feels more satisfied when linking religious and political antipathies
 +  * the fundies of the 20s linked issues of WWI with anti-German sentiment; in particular, higher (Biblical) criticism was strongest among German scholarship, which led them to assert a link between supposed "German amorality" and supposed attempts to undermine the Bible
 +    * you know that Eddie Izzard bit about Henry VIII and the origin of the Anglican church? Yeah, Billy Sunday said the exact same thing about the Kaiser and higher criticism, only Sunday was being serious. Yikes.
 +    * again, note the poor reasoning typical of authoritarian followers: "Germany bad, higher criticism bad, Germany pushed higher criticism, therefore higher criticism made Germany bad"
 +  * OK, Hofstadter mentions what he calls "the generically prejudiced mind" (footnote 3, p. 133), noting a strong correlation between religious orthodoxy and ethnic prejudice; as I've noted previously, I believe he's responding to right-wing authoritarianism as described by Altemeyer (indeed, one of the citations is a book titled //The Authoritarian Mind//)
 +    * he definitely is; the "one-hundred percent mind" is a //binaristic// one, incapable of handling scale
 +  * authoritarianism, he says, bridges fundamentalism and the modern right wing
 +  * pp. 134--135, he really goes in for the kill: we cannot overlook the essentially theological underpinnings of the right wing; it does not tolerate nuance or scale, and every conflict must be 
 +  * hence the derivation: liberal policies = socialist = communism = atheism
 +  * So what can we take from this to apply to today's political environment? This mindset has not at all dissipated in the intervening 60 years, but it does feel more pervasive. It would be cliché to blame the internet; but today's media landscape does allow people to exist entirely within a bubble that not only refuses to challenge these views but reinforces them and prevents ever more extreme versions.
  
 +  * while Protestantism has been the major focus thus far, American Catholicism has also contributed notably to anti-intellectualism
 +  * despite strong anti-Catholic sentiment, it has been growing in size and acceptance
 +  * American Catholicism has focused on Americanizing itself and denouncing the aspects of American life it could not approve
 +  * in other areas where it holds comparable influence, the Church holds some intellectual prestige
 +  * because of the early anti-Catholic sentiment in the US, the Church had to prove its Americanism; this was done through vigorous polemicism
 +  * footnote 5 (p. 137): French Catholics are apparently taught to think through modern problems in Catholic ways rather than through strict courses in apologetics
 +  * the Church also had to expend considerable resources to accommodate a massive influx of immigrants, so that what was left over for higher culture was spent on Catholic culture
 +  * footnote 6 (p. 138): Hofstadter argues that education can serve as a barrier between parents and upwardly-mobile children: "Parents often hope to give their children the social and vocational advantages of college without at the same time infusing in them cultural aspirations too remote from those of the home environment in which they have been reared."
 +  * Catholicism in the US had more adherents among immigrants; to American Catholics, the true Church seemed to be in Europe
 +  * 
 ==== The Decline of the Gentleman ==== ==== The Decline of the Gentleman ====
 ==== The Fate of the Reformer ==== ==== The Fate of the Reformer ====
Line 389: Line 448:
  
 ===== Related works ===== ===== Related works =====
-  * [[The Civil War as a Theological Crisis]]: should provide additional detail on inter- and intra-denominational schisms, particularly where the issue of slavery was concerned+  * [[the_civil_war_as_a_theological_crisis|The Civil War as a Theological Crisis]]: should provide additional detail on inter- and intra-denominational schisms, particularly where the issue of slavery was concerned 
 +  * [[:reading:Jesus and John Wayne|Jesus and John Wayne]]: expands on the heavy masulinization of evangelical Christianity 
 + 
 +{{tag>history politics}}
 ---- struct data ---- ---- struct data ----
 +readinglist.author   : Hofstadter
 +readinglist.title    : Anti-Intellectualism in American Life
 +readinglist.summary  : It's amazing to realize that Hofstadter was writing about a time now more than 60 years past; many of the issues he discusses feel lifted straight out of today's political climate. In this book, he highlights various strands of American hostility to intellect and intellectuals, arguing that this feature is deeply entrenched in the American identity.
 +readinglist.status   : reading
 +readinglist.subjects : history, politics
 ---- ----
  
  • reading/anti-intellectualism_in_american_life.1661041984.txt.gz
  • Last modified: 2022-08-21 00:33
  • by asdf