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IN MEMORIAM: SEYMOUR MARTIN LIPSET, 1922–2006: An Exceptional American
By Michael Barone
Marty Lipset's life work was like that of
Tocqueville: explaining the United States to itself. His abiding theme was
American uniqueness. By Michael Barone.
To understand a nation’s character, it seems to
help to be a foreigner: Who has understood the American character better
than the French aristocrat Alexis de Tocqueville? Seymour Martin Lipset,
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Altogether, Marty Lipset wrote or cowrote 21 books, edited 25 books, and wrote hundreds of scholarly articles. His work was cited more often than that of any other contemporary political scientist.
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who died December 31, was not a foreigner or even, quite, an immigrant: He
was born a year after his parents emigrated from Russia, in the few years
after World War I and before restrictive immigration laws went into effect.
Born in Harlem, raised in the Bronx, he attended City College of New
York—a background, he once noted, that he shared with Colin Powell,
except that Powell joined ROTC and Lipset joined the Trotskyite Young
People’s Socialist League. His parents wanted him to become a
dentist, but he was interested in other things—like why the rest of
America was not as favorable to socialism as so many of his peers at CCNY.
He started off by looking at exceptions to the
American—or, rather, North American—rule. His doctoral thesis
and his first book, published in 1950, was Agrarian
Socialism, on the Social Credit Movement in the
Canadian province of Saskatchewan. Through a long career, he kept an eye on
Canada, as an interesting test case of a former British colony that has
taken a different course; he contrasted the United States and Canada in Continental Divide in 1990.
Another early subject was Union Democracy, a study of the International Typographical Union. At
Columbia, Berkeley, Harvard, Stanford, George Mason, the Hoover
Institution, the Woodrow Wilson Center, the Progressive Policy Institute,
and the American Enterprise Institute, he straddled the disciplines of
political science and sociology; he was the only person to head both the
American Political Science Association and the American Sociological
Association.
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“There can be little question that the hand of providence has been on a nation
which finds a Washington, a Lincoln, or a Roosevelt when it needs him,” he once wrote.
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In 1960, he published the classic Political Man: The Social Bases of Politics, which became a standard text and sold more than 400,000 copies.
Three years later came The First New Nation, an analysis of the uniqueness of America. Later books
covered student politics, right-wing extremism, the politics of professors,
public confidence (or lack of it) in institutions, and the place of Jews in
American life. Altogether he wrote or coauthored 21 books, edited 25 books,
and wrote hundreds of scholarly articles. His work was cited more often
than that of any other contemporary political scientist or sociologist;
type his name in Amazon.com and you come up with 3,105 entries.
Marty Lipset was a formidable scholar, developing new
ways of quantifying behavior, but he was far from unapproachable. He was
generous in training hundreds of graduate students and encouraging them to
publish their work. In conversation and interviews he showed a sure command
of scholarly articles on every subject even remotely relevant to his work
and rattled off statistics with aplomb. He was a tall, imposing man, with a
gentle demeanor and more than occasional flashes of humor.
Lipset’s life work, said historian John Patrick
Diggins, was to “explain America to itself”—he was
Tocqueville’s heir. And to explain our many particularities and
peculiarities: why, as journalist Martin Walker put it, Americans exhibit
almost Iranian levels of religiosity, and why they hate turning out to vote
but enjoy joining voluntary associations. He appreciated the role of
religion in shaping the national character. “The United States is the
only Protestant sectarian country in the world,” he told an
interviewer in 2000, “and Protestant sectarians are very moralistic
and believe that one should do what’s right, not what other people
want.” But he didn’t see America through rose-colored glasses.
He noted that treaties with Indians were routinely broken, “not by
the government but by local settlers,” and—with a glance
northward—that after Custer’s defeat, “the Sioux, who had
wiped out an American battalion, went across the border and surrendered to
six Mounties! The reason they did so was that they knew the Queen’s
treaties were kept.”
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Lipset pondered why Americans exhibit almost Iranian levels of religiosity,
and why they hate turning out to vote but enjoy joining voluntary associations.
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Like many of his comrades at City College, Marty
Lipset moved to the right politically over the years, though never to the
Republican Party. But he was less interested in spirited persuasion than in
clear-eyed perception. He recognized that America’s strengths were
also its weaknesses. “I view the organizing principles and
institutions of the United States as doubled-edged,” he wrote in American Exceptionalism, published
in 1996 and perhaps the summa of his work, “that many negative traits
that currently characterize the society, such as income inequality, high
crime rates, low levels of electoral participation, a powerful tendency to
moralize which at times verges on intolerance toward political and ethnic
minorities, are inherently linked to the norms and behavior of an open
democratic society that appear so admirable.” And he realized that
the success of democratic government depended not only on institutional
design but also on great leaders—“independent variables,”
in political-science language—which America has been exceptionally
lucky in having.
“There can be little question that the hand of
providence has been on a nation which finds a Washington, a Lincoln, or a
Roosevelt when it needs him,” he wrote. And then he added,
“When I write the above sentence, I believe that I draw scholarly
conclusions, although I will confess that I write as a proud
American.” No one has done as good a job at explaining America to
itself as Tocqueville did in the century before last. But few if any have
come as close as Marty Lipset did in the century just ended.
This essay appeared in the Weekly Standard on January 15,
2007.
Michael Barone is a senior writer for U.S. News & World Report, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and a political contributor to Fox News Channel. He is the principal coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics and the author of the recently published Our First Revolution: The Remarkable British Upheaval That Inspired America's Founding Fathers.
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