Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T08:09:03.915Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Consenting Adults? Amish Rumspringa and the Quandary of Exit in Liberalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2005

Steven V. Mazie
Affiliation:
Bard High School Early College in Manhattan ([email protected])

Abstract

The Amish are often cited as a paradigm illiberal group, mistrustful of and separated from the modern world. But the Amish practice of rumspringa complicates this common image. At age 16, Amish children are released from church strictures and given a year or more to “run around” in violation of Amish norms. Only after the opportunity to taste life with cars, electricity, alcohol, and rock and roll do Amish-raised teens decide whether to be baptized and enter the church. Consent must be express, never tacit: to paraphrase Locke, an Amish youth is born a member of no church. But is rumspringa a meaningful exit option? Are there plausible ways to make it more meaningful? What does this practice suggest about the debate between “toleration” and “autonomy” liberals, who divide over whether illiberal minority cultures ought to be accepted or somehow reformed? This paper brings a potent case study to the cultural rights debate and argues that both sides fundamentally err. While tolerance liberals tend to vastly underestimate what is required of a meaningful right of exit, autonomy liberals fail to appreciate how much intervention would be necessary to provide such a right. The Amish case suggests that the exit option is deeply flawed as the litmus test for whether and how minorities should be accommodated in a liberal polity.Steven V. Mazie is assistant professor of politics at Bard High School Early College in Manhattan and has taught previously at Bard College, New York University, and the University of Michigan ([email protected]). His articles have appeared recently in Polity, Field Methods, and The Brandywine Review of Faith and International Affairs. His first book, Israel's Higher Law: Religion and Liberal Democracy in the Jewish State, is forthcoming in early 2006. Earlier versions of this article were delivered at annual meetings of the Western Political Science Association (2003) and the Midwestern Political Science Association (2004) and in a Bard High School Early College Faculty Seminar (2005). The author would like to thank anonymous reviewers, the editors of Perspectives on Politics, and particularly Jennifer Hochschild for their valuable suggestions and criticisms. In addition, he is grateful to Herman Bontrager, Harry Chotiner, Andrey Falko, John Hagan, JoAnne Jensen, Donald Kraybill, Chandran Kukathas, Emile Lester, Carol Levy, Renanit Levy, Marc Olshan, Marek Steedman, Conrad Stern-Ascher, Jennifer Sutton, Lucy Walker, David Wiacek, Ed Wingenbach, Joe Wittmer, and Lee Zook.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2005 American Political Science Association

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

21C Magazine. 2002. Devil's playground: A film by Lucy Walker. http://www.21cmagazine.com/devils_playground.html.
Barry, Brian. 2001. Culture and equality: an egalitarian critique of multiculturalism. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Buchanan, Allen. 2002. Political legitimacy and democracy. Ethics 112 (4): 689719.Google Scholar
CNN News. 1998. Amish men plead guilty to dealing drugs. October 6. http://www.cnn.com/US/9810/06/briefs.am/crime.amish/.
Ferrara, Peter J. 2003. Social security and taxes. In The Amish and the state. 2nd ed. Ed. Donald B. Kraybill. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Frey, J. William. 1945. Amish “triple-talk.” American Speech 20 (2): 8598.Google Scholar
Fried, Barbara. 2003. “If you don't like it, leave it”: The problem of exit in social contractarian arguments. Philosophy and Public Affairs 31 (1): 4070.Google Scholar
Galston, William A. 2002. Liberal pluralism: the implications of value pluralism for political theory and practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Greksa, Lawrence P., and Jill E. Korbin. 2002. Key decisions in the lives of the old order Amish: joining the church and migrating to another settlement. Mennonite Quarterly Review 78 (4).Google Scholar
Herzog, Don. 1988. Happy slaves: A critique of consent theory. Chicago: Chicago University Press.
Hobbes, Thomas. 1994. Leviathan. Ed. Edwin Curley. Indianapolis: Hackett.
Hostetler, John A. 1993. Amish society. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Kant, Immanuel. 1983. On the proverb: that may be true in theory, but is of no practical use. In Perpetual peace and other essays, 6192. Indianapolis: Hackett.
Kraybill, Donald B. 2001. The riddle of Amish culture. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Kukathas, Chandran. 1992. Are there any cultural rights? Political Theory 20 (1): 10539.Google Scholar
Kukathas, Chandran. 2003. The liberal archipelago: a theory of diversity and freedom. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Kymlicka, Will. 1989. Liberalism, community and culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Levy, Jacob T. 2004. Liberal Jacobinism. Ethics 114 (2): 31836.Google Scholar
Locke, John. 1983. A letter concerning toleration. Indianapolis: Hackett.
Locke, John. 1988. Second treatise of government. In Two treatises of government, ed. Peter Laslett. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Mill, John Stuart. 1987. Utilitarianism. In Utilitarianism and other essays, ed. Alan Ryan. London: Penguin Books.
Nosson [pseud.] 2000. Interview by author. 30 May 2000. Givat Ze'ev, Israel (West Bank). Transcript of tape recording [Hebrew].
Okin, Susan Moller. 2002. “Mistresses of their own destiny”: group rights, gender and realistic rights of exit. Ethics 112 (2): 20530.Google Scholar
Pierce v. Society of Sisters. 268 U.S. 510 (1925).
Rawls, John. 2001. Justice as fairness: a restatement. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Raz, Joseph. 1986. The morality of freedom. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Scanlon, T.M. 1999. What we owe to each other. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Spinner-Halev, Jeff. 2000. Surviving diversity: religion and democratic citizenship. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Stevens, Jacqueline. 1999. Reproducing the state. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
U.S. Immigration Bureau. U.S. citizenship frequently asked questions. http://www.usimmigrationbureau.org/citizenship_faq.html
Walker, Lucy. 2002. Devil's Playground (documentary film).
Wasaq, Samson W., and Joseph Donnermeyer. 1996. An analysis of factors related to parity among the Amish in northeast Ohio. Population Studies 50 (2): 23546.Google Scholar
Wellman, Christopher Heath. 2001. Toward a liberal theory of political obligation. Ethics 111 (4): 73559.Google Scholar
Wisconsin v. Yoder. 406 US 208 (1972).
Yehuda [pseud.] 2000. Interview by author. 1 May 2000. Jerusalem, Israel. Transcript of tape recording [Hebrew].