A man should learn to detect and watch that gleam of light
which flashes across his mind from within, more than the
lustre of the firmament of bards and sages. Yet he dismisses
without notice his thought, because it is his. In every work
of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts:
they come back to us with a certain alienated majesty.
— Emerson, “Self-Reliance”, 1841
America — the real, the messy, the absurd America — didn’t really begin in 1776. The real America is not a set of documents, or a people, or a big landmass. Even in decline, America is a maze of dizzying and lethal ideals. An untameable instinct to escape: to escape society, history, other people, ourselves. It’s a never-ending yearning for newness and a primal horror at repetition, which stretched across and conquered a continent, before it doubled back on itself and spilled out like a flood over the world. America is extraordinary; America is terrible. Like everywhere else, it drives its citizens nuts. But the whole world knows Americans are crazy in a uniquely grand, stupid way.
The degree to which I can even write those words has much more to do with the mind of Ralph Waldo Emerson than with any Founding Father. In rhetoric, in spirit, the one writer who fixed all the most difficult American paradoxes, like guiding stars for centuries after, was Emerson.
Growing up in Middle America, going to public schools, I never had to read Emerson. My first encounter with him was a sparsely-attended state university survey, which I took to satisfy a requirement. In one semester we blitzed through the first “half” of American literature (from John Winthrop’s Puritan speeches to Uncle Tom’s Cabin) landing briefly on Emerson’s one or two most famous essays. I take this as more or less the normative experience: since then, I’ve met only a handful of Americans who’ve read much of Emerson’s work. My more personal encounters with his writings came later, and they came to me when I was alone. I think it tends to be like this. Emerson still doesn’t quite work in the classroom. Like Michel de Montaigne, like Dr Johnson, or Friedrich Nietzsche (who profoundly admired him), he remains resistant to all but the most single-minded, solitary reader, privately seeking out the man called “the Mind of America”.
But there are always intimations of the Emersonian. There are for each American, whether they know it or not. My father, a liberal Presbyterian minister, had something of the Emersonian in him before he retired. In his tempered and essentially universalist preaching, wherein the Bible was an imperfect human document and there was resolutely no Hell: the mind, the heart, Nature itself — everything was radiant and testified to God. And this God was, in the theologian Paul Tillich’s sense, the “ground of being”, a foundation of love and faith.
A calm, scholarly kind of Protestantism, in other words — hardly the charismatic or enthusiastic Evangelism I saw in other churches. Places where you’d find a very American Christ: a demigod Jesus, with whom the faithful spoke daily, whose powers were the sole arbiter of safety or success in a world largely governed by demons. But I recognise, now, that even these separable styles were intertwined at base, with the same sense of very personal religious revelation: what the critic Harold Bloom once called the American Religion. He meant a religious and political style in which morality came down to individual souls in direct communication with God, not community or society. European Protestantism had become something stranger on the American continent, something intimately wrapped up in the colonisation of the land, the search for a wilderness Eden, the sacrosanctity of individual rights inscribed in the laws. And who was it Bloom identified the American Religion with most? Hart Crane, Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, Herman Melville…but, above all, Emerson.
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SubscribeThis is an interesting read and a nice change from the churned out political pieces.
“They are on their way to being genuine Emersonians: they don’t work from a need for approval or salvation, or for the sake of some bigger political picture. The good they do is out of a personal sense — a common sense — that it is right.”
We often read stories that focus on this aspect of American life, the good they do out of a sense of what is right. Which seems to me to be an aspect of being human, not American. I’m sure this way of living occurs throughout the world. But I’m not sure that anything comes of it, except on a very small local level. Though i’m not even sure a local level exists anymore.
Maybe it’s true that Americans are on their way to becoming genuine Emersonians, but America culture strikes me as being anything but that. How long must we wait to see this flowering? The individual seeking a right way of living is likely to be crushed or pushed aside these days, and yet the author suggests there is a slow evolution towards this idea. I’m sure they’re out there, but whether they’ll create an American character and an America itself seems doubtful to me.
That they may do this out of a personal sense – a common sense, some great American moral position, is so typically American in its contrived view of itself. That moral view is not America, not from my view anyway. Just like the rugged individualism all countries like to claim there is no real substance to it. If it did exist once, and it might have, it’s not here today. We are no longer anything in the socio/political world we’re thrown into. That’s also how the next generation will emerge.
Rewatched the film based on part of Sinclair Lewis’s Elmer Gantry recently, with its tension between individual ‘Freedom’ and the symbiotic need for security in an earthly and transcendental Order. Tends to suggest that what you’re saying here has long been embedded there.
This essay reads like a nicely written manifestation of its own Emersonian/Whitmanesque themes….it’s kind of delightfully all over the place. This line – for me anyway – brought it back to earth: “Emerson’s belief that a great society might be made up entirely of free-thinking individuals reads now as disturbingly naive.” For that is Western Liberalism’s great tragedy isn’t it?….”What’s next”; “What do we want?…. Progress!….When do we want it?….Now!”; What about ME!”. I am a conservative pessimist and “Certainly some conservative pessimism about progress is mere grumpiness. But at its best it is a wry observation – based on close observation of friends and enemies, family and colleagues, literature and ‘current affairs’ – that there are, and always will be, honesty and self delusion, real and faux expressions of generosity of spirit, bullies dressed up as champions of liberty…wise men and fools in other words.” https://grahamcunningham.substack.com/p/are-we-making-progress
Suppose you wouldn’t allow that honesty and real generosity are more often found among hopeful ‘progressives’ than sceptical conservatives?
Honesty is (and has been since Orwell tried to out Stalin) a rare beast on the left, just as generosity is in short supply on the right (funnelling unpaid taxes into “intelligent philanthropy” is not this).
In a word No! The attraction of being ‘progressive’ is not about self-sacrifice nor is it about looking yourself straight in the eye; it is about telling yourself a pretty little story about yourself….how much nicer and more sophisticated you are than all those ‘nasty reactionaries.
It’s frustrating to hear people arguing a point that it’s “more often” something as a way of condemning the opposition as “less often”, therefore wrong. It’s subjective and meaningless. And nor do you give evidence for it anyway. Opinions and feelings are not facts.
Whatever happened to Lake and Palmer?
Of all the Emersonians, it’s Thoreau who best teaches us to listen to ourselves in genuine solitude. Something he left ‘the lass of men leading lives of quiet desperation in Concord to ‘step to the music’ which he heard at Walden Pond.
One studies Emerson to polish discursive practice, not to actually analyse or understand anything. When people say that Thoreau’s ‘philosophy’ is poetic conceit, that highlights both the similarity and the difference between them. No risk either that calmly resulute Thoreau could be likened to decentred, carnivorous Trump.
“Emerson’s belief that a great society might be made up entirely of free-thinking individuals reads now as disturbingly naive.”
Not to me. Maybe I am too “American” to see the problem with this. Free thinkers can still follow rules and therefore live within a civil society. Free thinkers, in my view, are the essence of all that has produced the greatest inventions of both the physical and moral worlds.
Without free thinkers, we are what? Borg?
It’s a false dichotomy. Haven’t read Emerson so don’t know whether that’s his theory or a misinterpretation by the author of this article.
“We feel, deep down, that individual freedom is simply incompatible with society and social responsibility. Emerson’s belief that a great society might be made up entirely of free-thinking individuals reads now as disturbingly naive.”
Call me disturbingly naive then.
The problem is that philosophers and their commentators rely on common language to convey their ideas. Language is evidently open to interpretation so when someone talks of ‘individual freedom’, what do they really mean? The freedom to commit murder at will? Or simply to say out loud what one thinks? Where should the boundary be and who should decide it?
I think the phrase ‘disturbingly naive’ is unfortunate but perhaps I’m reading too much into an otherwise stimulating essay.
I agree. I wish he would rewrite that paragraph. Or the last sentence at least. Naive is too easy. And loaded.