Eric
P. Kaufmann, The Rise and Fall of Anglo-America
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2004, $49, 95,
384 pages, ISBN 0-674-01303-4)—Gerardo Del Guercio,
Independent Researcher
The 2000 American census determined that the White Anglo-Saxon
Protestant race is gradually becoming a minority culture
in the United States. At one time the dominant ethnic
core of America, WASP culture has experienced a significant
decline in political power and national influence. Anglo-Saxon
myth symbols including yeoman lifestyle, communal eternity
and pilgrim/Puritan ideology have slowly given way to
mass immigration and liberal cosmopolitan ideology.
Eric P. Kaufmann’s The Rise and Fall of Anglo-America
charts WASP history from shortly after American independence
to the present, suggesting that Anglo-Saxon ethnicity
moved from the core to the periphery of America’s power
structure because WASP leaders adopted a cosmopolitan
progressive liberal mindset that questioned their own
authority. Liberal reformers like John Dewey and Jane
Addams, along with subaltern groups such as women, African
Americans and eastern Europeans, challenged the supremacy
that WASP culture held. My assessment of Kaufmann’s
study will show that multiculturalism enhanced America’s
global image for the reason that it adapted peacefully
to shifting cultural norms that eventually led to an
inclusive sociological order.
Eric
P. Kaufmann defines “American” ethnicity as a type of
cultural influence from within the dominant ethic core
rather than a segment of the national population. White
Anglo-Saxon Protestants are defined as ancestors of
British settlers who escaped from Britain to the United
States to separate completely from the English monarchy.
Kaufmann places quotation marks around the term “American”
when describing first-settlers because most demographic
studies do not consider Americans of British decent
as part of an ethnic group. A liberal ideology that
manifested itself during the Avant-Garde era marked
the start of the end of “the Protestant crusade in favor
of a ‘left-liberal’ posture” [6]. Powerful Protestant
elites ensured that multiculturalism would supersede
WASP ascendancy. Subaltern groups were soon allowed
into “universities, boardrooms, cabinets, courts, and
legislatures” [3] in an effort to diversify America’s
power structure. Although WASP authority slowly moved
away from America’s ethnic core, their decline was one
desperately resisted throughout the twentieth century.
White
Anglo-Saxon Protestants seized total control of the
United States once they evicted British forces in an
effort to secure Puritan cultural beliefs. Once independence
was achieved, America converted into the free territory
that the Puritans had envisioned. A WASP national identity
flourished since it would inevitably assimilate various
cultures into one unified nucleus. Puritan settlers
maintained rule partly because they were America’s first
record-keepers. Manipulating history gave WASP leaders
the opportunity to place themselves at the center of
American society. Groups that refused WASP standards
were systematically disqualified from the American market
economy and denied the chance to succeed financially.
Ethnogenesis quickly spread across America guaranteeing
that the British would never again occupy the United
States. Rulers reinforced their stance on “100 percent
Americanism” [30] by funding “private and government
initiatives like the ‘America First’ campaign of the
Bureau of Education, the Committee of One Hundred of
the National Education Association, or the Conference
on Methods of Americanization held in Washington.” Leaders
made certain that US citizens would follow the governing
norm. Autonomy was compromised considering that most
still viewed American culture as an exaggerated form
of English character. Kaufmann incorporates Ralph Waldo
Emerson’s theory of double-consciousness to elucidate
how “liberal cosmopolitanism and ethnicity [existed]
in the same space” [31]. Implicit in Emerson’s dialectic
is that America had not yet separated enough from its
English ancestry to claim total independence, but nonetheless
maintained liberal ethics.
Establishing
a melting-pot mentality was the WASP’s primary mode
of retaining its supremacy. The melting pot made sure
that Anglo-Saxon practices remained the only influential
ones in identity formation. Eric P. Kaufmann quotes
St. John de Crèvecoeur to demonstrate the popular
sentiment among first-settlers that the American ideal
left behind all its “ancient prejudices and manners,
while on American soil, individuals of all races are
melted into a new race of men, whose labors and posterity
will one day cause great changes in the world” [39].
Beyond the surface Crèvecoeur’s declaration was
anything but liberal since it asserted that every individual
was invited into American culture provided s/he conformed
to WASP social codes. WASP culture has been deemed a
closed-minded one that refuses notoriety to other groups
unless they adhere to Anglo-Saxon ideology. The American
faith therefore required acceptance of an Anglo-Saxon
myth of descent that included honoring the pilgrims,
Puritans, founding fathers, and the American Revolution.
Late
nineteenth-century America saw its cultural capital
shift from Boston to New York. New York’s Avant-Garde
community systematically crumbled “Anglo-Protestant
influence in progressive intellectual circles—overseeing
its replacement with cosmopolitan modernism” [144].
Avant-Garde philosophy stressed a continuing European
power on American culture. Constant European exiles
by key intellectual figures exemplified cultural liberty
and cosmopolitanism. America’s intellectual community
gathered in New York’s Village district to take in lectures
orated by prominent thinkers such as Max Eastman, Floyd
Dell, Randolph Bourne, Alfred Stieglitz, and Hutchins
and Norman Hapgood. John Dewey and Jane Addams were
the originators of the Avant-Garde movement establishing
the understanding that cosmopolitan liberalism encouraged
immigrants to “develop their individuality and join
the American mainstream” [99]. Pluralism therefore became
firmly embedded within American ideology since
[I]ndividuals
give freely to others of the particular value, essence,
quality, and contribution of the group to which they
belong, and receive freely the corresponding treasures
of every group, and this without violence to complete
the uniqueness of any group [131].
Cultural
mixing connoted a sharing of values between diverse
groups with the aim of enhancing the United States’
image by means of welcoming foreign cultures. Allowing
several cultures into the majority inherently caused
Anglo-Saxons to share political power. Expressive pathfinders
fought against restrictive measures like immigration
quotas because they felt such practices violated liberal
mobility rights. Swaying from Puritan values was essential
considering that colonial beliefs disallowed free expression.
Avant-Garde activists helped expand equal education
opportunities for subaltern groups despite opposition
from more traditional thinkers who believed that immigrants
should not attend universities or hold prestigious positions
that were typically reserved for Anglo-Saxon decedents.
Anglo-Saxon
principles waned in America as a result of high immigration
levels that radically shifted US demographics in favor
of non-Anglo ethnic groups. Between 1910 and 1990 non-white
immigration rose from 5% to slightly over 80%. British
and Irish immigration, on the other hand, dropped from
roughly 98% to 20% during the same span. Low fertility
rates among the native-immigrant population were another
determining factor as to why whites declined demographically
in the United States during the twentieth century. Moreover,
Protestants ceased being active members of their church
marking a disinterest in Protestant values. A rising
liberal cosmopolitan sentiment within the WASP elite
core questioned its own power and subsequently permitted
minority groups into the mainstream. Minorities were
then encouraged to show their individuality in America’s
public sphere.
Eric
P. Kaufmann concludes his study with an examination
of Anglo-Saxon discourse in the postmodern era. Contemporary
research data forecasts that Anglo ethnic identity will
revert to a rural one whose discourse will have very
little influence in American life. WASP activist advocate
that immigration restriction is the ideal tactic to
counter a declining WASP ethnic core. Anti-restrictionists
favor free immigration since admitting more foreigners
into the country would increase the number of eligible
voters. Postmodern America has benefited greatly from
multiculturalism for the reason that it proved that
the United States has modernized peacefully. I am not
suggesting that discrimination is no longer a problem
that plagues America. What I mean to say is that America
has complied with a global trend that incorporates assorted
perspectives from different cultures into its political
rhetoric.
Eric P. Kaufmann’s The Rise and Fall of Anglo-America
is an inter-disciplinary examination that tracks shifting
sociological, historical, anthropological, philosophical,
literary, and economic changes in the United States
from independence to the present day. Readers of multicultural
studies will benefit greatly from Kaufmann’s text for
its in-depth investigation of why WASP culture has declined
significantly since the Avant-Garde period. Although
Kaufmann’s points may at times seem rather repetitive,
each fact compliments his argument that an emerging
liberal and cosmopolitan mindset within Anglo-Saxon
elitist circles generated doubts concerning their own
power, causing them to ultimately move themselves to
the margin of American culture.
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