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BOOK REVIEWS: Beyond the Melting Pot
By Nathan Glazer
Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny
By Amartya Sen
Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
W. W. Norton, 2006, $23.95; 196 pages.
Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny
By Amartya Sen
W. W. Norton, 2006, $24.95; 215 pages.
As reviewed by Nathan Glazer
The books reviewed here are the first to be
published in a series titled “Issues of Our Times,”
edited by the omnipresent Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr.,
whose picture, with a brief statement, prefaces each. The volumes
are by two prominent intellectuals who stand at the height of
academic life in the West, and who, because of their origins in
Africa and India, are thought of as spokesmen, in some of their
work, for the third world, a role they accept. They were both
educated at Cambridge University in England and hold major
appointments in leading American universities.
Kwame Appiah, a professor of philosophy at
Princeton, formerly at Harvard, has written books in technical
philosophy and on current issues of race and multiculturalism.
Amartya Sen, winner of the Nobel Prize in economics, is university
professor at Harvard, formerly master of Trinity College,
Cambridge, and also a philosopher, with a prodigious and
influential bibliography on technical issues in economics, welfare
economics, economic development, social philosophy, the role of the
non-Western world in world civilization, and the importance of
Indian thought and science, among other topics.
I was alerted to the idea that something of
interest to educators was going on in this series when Appiah presented the major
thesis of his book in an article in the New
York Times Magazine. It was summarized
starkly on the front cover of the publication as favoring
“individuals” against “peoples,” the
“mixed” against the “pure,”
“modernity” against “authenticity,”
“rights” against “traditions,”
“contamination” against “preservation.” And
Sen, in his title alone, is clearly taking a critical stance against
“identity.” What’s going on here? We are used to
attacks on multiculturalism (now so solidly established in social
studies in elementary and high schools) from the right, from
conservatives who are alarmed at a diminution of loyalty to the nation
as other loyalties are promoted. But criticism from these leading
intellectuals who are certainly liberal at the least?
A Sophisticated Pollution
Indeed, both authors look skeptically at
multiculturalism, which we know can mean many things, but they are
as critical of hard multiculturalism, which makes a fetish of the
notion that each major race or ethnic group or religious group
carries a distinct culture that should be preserved and promoted,
as of soft multiculturalism, which simply promotes tolerance and
understanding of one group for another. Not of course that either
is against tolerance and understanding: How could they be, as an
Indian and an African coming years ago to England to be educated,
and dependent on Western tolerance and understanding—which
from their accounts was less evident in the past than today? But in
soft multiculturalism Sen in particular sees an essentialization of
one identity, generally the religious. This raises some difficult
problems for a society based on reasoned discussion among persons who bear many
identities and privilege none. That is the society Sen would like to
see promoted in our schools.
Appiah would agree (both refer to the
other’s works favorably). What he prefers for our
increasingly “mixed” societies is
“cosmopolitanism,” which goes well beyond tolerance and
understanding to a more active interplay among groups and
individuals in which traits are generalized to the point where they
cannot be identified as being of one group or another. Yes,
“contamination”—so it would appear to the
religious or cultural purist—is a positive good for Appiah.
Sen coins the term “plural monoculturalism” for what I
have called “hard” multiculturalism and criticizes
developments in British education that are promoting such plural
monoculturalism. Britain has for a long time been among the most
“multicultural” of the European countries, offering
citizenship, voting rights, and equal access to housing, education,
and welfare to immigrants from the former empire. Sen applauds this
achievement. But recently Britain has begun providing public aid to
Muslim, Sikh, and Hindu schools. How could it not when it has long
given public support to Catholic and Protestant and Jewish schools?
Distinguishing the Ethnic from the Religious
But to Sen, Britain has been trapped by this
practice into taking religious identity as primary, and into
fostering this identity, because these schools will teach the
tenets of their distinctive religions to young minds incapable of
making mature judgments.
Sen is of course no British nationalist. (He
is a citizen of India.) It is not because of the weakening of a
common British identity that he views this development
with alarm. Lord Tebbit pronounced that the proper test of integration
for the British immigrant and his children was whether they cheered for
Britain’s cricket team when it played against a Pakistani,
Indian, Bangladeshi, or Caribbean squad. Not so for Sen. Indeed, he
tells us he has on occasion cheered the Pakistani team when it played
India. What worries him is the strengthening of an identity present at
birth, rather than chosen through free and reasoned choice, and
implanted among children before they have the opportunity to use reason
and engage in discussion. And these identities have become on occasion in the last
half century the basis of murderous violence against others. He asks
why, when Tony Blair acts to promote tolerance and understanding among
communities, he reaches out to their religious leaders, rather than to
those engaged in civil pursuits. Sen could make the same criticism of
President Bush, who in the wake of 9/11 posed with Muslim clerics at
the White House to dampen anger and hostility against Muslims. Sen
would insist a Muslim is more than just a Muslim, and this identity
should not be taken as central, all-determining.
Sen concentrates on Britain because he was
there when the issue became urgent with the publication of the
report of the “Commission on the Future of Multi-ethnic
Britain,” chaired by Lord Bhikhu Parekh. It favored for
Britain “a looser federation of cultures held together by
common bonds of affection.…” But this was more or less what Ali
Mazrui wrote 15 years ago in the report of a commission on
multiculturalism in New York State schools, and it provoked the
same counterattack from those who saw this as weakening a necessary
common loyalty to the existing state. This does not bother Sen, who
rather hopes for a widening global consciousness and concern for
others: his fear is that religion-based separate identities will be
strengthened. Fortunately, we are protected from that in the United
States, where we have such strong constitutional limits on allowing
religion into the public schools. But I think Sen (and Appiah, too)
would find the replacement of religious identity with ethnic and
racial identity, which is fostered with a heavy hand in various
parts of the curricula common in American schools, just as
limiting, binding students into one standard uniform when they
might prefer to wear others, or none.
Identity Politics
Sen often lists a catalog of possible
identities that any one individual may bear when he criticizes
taking one identity as central or determining or unchanging.
Sometimes in these catalogs of identities the trivial is listed
along with the more significant. Yet at any given time, one
identity may become central and nothing else matters: like the
identity Jewish in Nazi Europe. Or the identity Hindu or Muslim in
the murderous rages that accompanied India’s partition and
independence, which the young Sen witnessed. One understands why he
wants to resist the hypostatizing of one identity: yet for much of
the world the religious or racial or ethnic identity is
overwhelming, and becomes a matter of life and death.
For both Sen and Appiah, one senses a leaning
over backwards to weaken the identification of Muslim with an enemy
of the West and modernity, or African with the primitive. Fair
enough, but sometimes this goes too far. So Appiah, trying to make
his readers understand an African practice they will find
abhorrent, rehearses the arguments those who practice female
genital cutting will give to counter criticism, but then continues:
“I am not endorsing these claims.… But let’s recognize this simple fact:
a large part of what we do we do because it is just what we do. You get up
in the morning at eight-thirty. Why that time?” One detects the influence of
training in recent English philosophy, which often uses too trivial
examples (what time you get up, for example) to make important
points.
The larger mission of both books is to counter
narrow and simple identities, to celebrate a modern world of
contact and mixture and diversity in which no culture belongs just
to one people or religion or nation. Appiah makes a powerful and
surprising argument against the idea that the cultural artifacts of
long-gone civilizations uncovered in archaeological digs should
belong to the nation that currently occupies that ground rather
than the world. But a world consciousness as yet is found only
among a favored few. And we will have to live for a long time with
many who do privilege just one identity, even one that may well
foster violence.
Nathan Glazer is professor of education and
sociology emeritus at Harvard University, and co-author, with
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, of Beyond
the Melting Pot (1964).
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