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6 - “Believing in America”: The Ideology of American Studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2023

Robert T. Tally Jr
Affiliation:
Texas State University, San Marcos
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Summary

Leo Marx recounts a story, told to him by the eminent British literary historian Richard Hoggart, of an encounter in the mid-1950s between Hoggart and a young Fulbright scholar who identified himself as a teacher of American Studies.

“And what is that ?” Hoggart had asked. “An exciting new field of interdisciplinary teaching and research.” “What is new about that?” “It combines the study of history and literature.” “In England we’ve been doing that for a long time,” Hoggart protests. “Yes,” said the eager Americanist, “but we look at American society as a whole—the entire culture, at all levels, high and low.” But Hoggart, who was about to publish his groundbreaking study of British working-class culture— The Uses of Literacy (1957)—remained unimpressed. After a moment, in a fit of exasperation, his informant blurted out: “But you don’t understand, I believe in America!”

At this point, Hoggart understood completely just what the young man meant, although he also noted that no British scholar would ever be heard saying, “I believe in Britain!”

The anecdote is representative of the degree to which American Studies, as practiced by Americans in the United States at least, developed out of the political (and personal) convictions of its adherents. Although certain aspects of its work could be tied more directly to this or that program that is explicitly in the service of national and international political aims, such as the CIA’s involvement with literary magazines or the operations of UNESCO, it is clear that American Studies as a whole was always already ideological. As a disciplinary (or interdisciplinary) field, American Studies functions not only to study America, but to promote it: it being the idea of “America” itself, something that was not coextensive with the political or geographic entity known as the United States. Contrary to the many accusations by revisionist critics or even apologias by supposed traditionalists, the early practitioners of American Studies were not blind adherents to a particular government or political policy (far from it!). Rather, they were or became something like disciples of a new religion, one whose system of belief they were in fact helping to create.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Critical Situation
Vexed Perspectives in Postmodern Literary Studies
, pp. 89 - 104
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2023

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