t byfield on Thu, 13 Nov 2008 07:28:02 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Obama and the dawn of the Fourth Republic |
richard@imaginaryfutures.net (Tue 11/11/08 at 10:46 PM +0000): > Here's an optimistic & McLuhanist take on the election of Barack Obama... Interesting, and a bit silly, but McLuhanist? If McLuhan is a generic technological determinist, maybe; but it seems more like your basic grand historical narrative starring the State. In that regard, this essay is very apropos of the tension we've seen on this list: for example, Ben's deep suspicion of the not very implicit Statist cheerleading surrounding Obama's election. One problem (there are many) with this kind of periodization is that the emphasis on a temporal scheme reduces the question of space to, at most, an series of items in a sort of Chinese Encyclopedia entry. In a country whose history has been so deeply shaped by expansions and migrations, this is a huge mistake. For example: In addition to crushing the South and freeing the slaves, the Republicans nationalized the banking system, promoted U.S. industry through high tariffs, carpeted the continent with federally subsidized railroads and used the sale of federal lands to pay for state colleges. True, Lind goes on to pay lip service to various regional interests, but he casts their efforts as synchronous: "they achieved some reforms, [but they] failed to modify the essential features" of the Second Republic. No doubt that's true; but last I saw the South, far from being "crushed," still existed -- and the *asynchrony* between (simplistically) Northern and Southern tendencies has played an immense role in shaping subsequent American history. The same is true in different ways for other regional dynamics: the Great Plains, the Rust Belt, the Sun Belt, etc. Each one of these creatures marks some new tension in the disparate degrees and forms of regional development, in the same sense that people talk about "third-word development." Again, Lind lays that out, but in a very monolithic way: If this analysis is right, what causes these cycles of reform and backlash in American politics? I believe they are linked indirectly to stages of technological and economic development. Lincoln's Second American Republic marked a transition from an agrarian economy to one based on the technologies of the first industrial revolution -- coal-fired steam engines and railroads. Roosevelt's Third American Republic was built with the tools of the second industrial revolution -- electricity and internal combustion engines. No mention of regional (mal)distribution. The introductions of these technologies benefited some regions or demographics at the expense of others, and one could generally argue that those who lost out tended to remain fixated *to varying degrees* on nostalgic images of ther pre- technologized pasts. Put simply, different areas and populations of the US inhabit different periods to different degrees and in different ways: technically, econonomically, culturally, socially, etc. And this phenomenon isn't only or entirely "imaginary." In some cases it is, for example, poor whites in the Appalachian and Ozark regions who see elections through the lens of Reconstruction, or underemployed Rust Belt workers who are clinging to a long-lost post-WW2 "prosperity." Those are the easy examples, and especially relevant in this election because of race issues; but in other cases -- say, Sun Belt retiree enclaves, waning independent farmers, second- and third-generation "immigrant" populations, and so on -- it's much messier. These dynamics are unbelievably complicated, which is why polling tied to political analysis has become such a crucial part of US electoral politics. Cheers, T - http://b1ff.org!!! > Obama and the dawn of the Fourth Republic > > His victory really may mark the beginning of a new era in American > history. > > By Michael Lind > > Nov. 07, 2008 | > > The election of Barack Obama to the presidency may signal more than > the end of an era of Republican presidential dominance and > conservative ideology. It may mark the beginning of a Fourth Republic > of the United States. <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org