By William Tucker on 9.22.08 @ 12:08AM
Barack Obama is discovering his compelling narrative is hardly the only one affecting voters this year.
Barack Obama's nomination is a historical event, a watershed in
the long saga of America's racial agony. We seem to have been
waiting 150 years for this moment. So why isn't he sweeping all
before him?
The place of blacks in American society, of course, is a
narrative extending far back to Colonial days. The Civil War was
fought over it. Revisionist historians occasionally try to point to
economics factors or the inherent antagonisms between an agrarian
and industrial society, but any memoir of the era will tell you
that the war was fought over slavery. After the freeing of the
slaves, America became a caste society, with "Negroes" confined to
a distinctly limited role -- and suffering threats and violence if
they tried to step out of line.
These Jim Crow barriers began breaking down in the 1960s and
African-Americans have since won an ever-widening place in American
society. There is still racism and great inequalities, but it is
hard to argue that America is not an open society that is earnestly
trying to open itself to blacks and other minorities.
Now comes Obama as an apotheosis of this vision -- an
African-American bidding to lead the country. Yet there is more
than just equal opportunity at stake. Obama is a child of mixed
race, with a white mother and an African father. He is not just a
tale of realized ambition but the actual melding of the races. It
is hard not to think this is where he gets his messianic vision.
"We are the change we have been waiting for," he says, obviously
seeing himself as a physical embodiment of racial
reconciliation.
So were does that leave us? Will the election of Obama mean that
America's racial narrative has finally reached its conclusion? Or
conversely, would his defeat mean that America has reverted to
being a racist society?
I DON'T THINK this is the main issue in the election. On the
contrary, the real question is whether race is the only
important issue or whether there are other equally compelling
narratives at this time.
Here are a few others that are competing for attention:
The Frontier. In 1893, Frederick
Jackson Turner published a seminal essay in which he argued that
having an open frontier on our westward boundary had been a
decisive influence in shaping the American character. The frontier
experience had leveled the class traditions from Europe, proffered
opportunity to the common individual, and created a spirit of
independence that had constantly posed a challenge to entrenched
Eastern elites. Populist movements that had continually
reinvigorated American politics had all arisen on the frontier.
It is no accident that this year the two Republican candidates
come from thinly populated Western frontier states. Sarah Palin
perfectly embodies this frontier spirit and both candidates are
considered "mavericks," earning their spurs by taking on entrenched
interests. Obama, on the other hand -- though he may not realize it
-- draws his strongest support from Eastern colleges and
established hierarchical institutions. He is the candidate of the
non-profit sector, that odd hybrid of a capitalist society in which
educated people try to claim money from profit-making institutions
and "turn it to good use," usually following their own
proclivities.
topics:
Barack Obama, Sarah Palin, Economics, Africa