
Recent
months have seen a dramatic increase in the number of Americans proudly
displaying the Stars and Stripes on their cars, homes, businesses, T-shirts,
caps, lapel pins and even tattoos. This outpouring of flag-waving signifies
a variety of sentiments--from identification with the victims of the
September 11 attacks to support for the military's invasion of Afghanistan.
But in our popular culture, displays of the American flag are--along
with the very idea of "patriotism"--typically viewed as expressions
of "conservative" politics. The patriotic fervor since September
11 has revitalized that belief and, as in other times, has given conservative
politicos and pundits a handy means to undermine dissent and progressive
initiatives.

" . .A case in point: In Santa Barbara, California, progressive
County Supervisor Gail Marshall is facing the possibility of a recall
election fueled by right-wing forces opposed to her support for environmental
regulation, affordable housing and labor unions.."
Because Marshall occupies the key swing seat on the five-member county
board, Santa Barbara's conservative activists--funded by oil interests,
agribusiness and land developers--have been trying to unseat her for
years. They launched a recall campaign after Marshall refused to rubber-stamp
a proposal to require the Pledge of Allegiance at meetings of one of
her community advisory boards. Marshall said she wanted the board to
discuss the idea, but her opponents--who made sure that TV camera crews
were present at the meeting where the issue first surfaced--have turned
her civil libertarian instincts into proof that she's hostile to public
expressions of patriotism.
In TV ads and newsletters, Marshall's opponents--who are gathering signatures
for a recall petition that, if successful, will go before the voters
this fall--claim that her alleged reluctance to have the pledge recited
was clear confirmation of their suspicion that she is a "socialist."
Ironically, the Pledge of Allegiance was written in 1892 by a leading
Christian socialist, Francis Bellamy, who was fired from his Boston
ministry for his sermons depicting Jesus as a socialist. Bellamy penned
the Pledge of Allegiance for Youth's Companion, a magazine for young
people published in Boston with a circulation of about 500,000.
A few years earlier, the magazine had sponsored a largely successful
campaign to sell American flags to public schools. In 1891 the magazine
hired Bellamy--whose first cousin Edward Bellamy was the famous socialist
author of the utopian novel Looking Backward--to organize a public relations
campaign to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus's
discovery of America by promoting use of the flag in public schools.
Bellamy gained the support of the National Education Association, along
with President Benjamin Harrison and Congress, for a national ritual
observance in the schools, and he wrote the Pledge of Allegiance as
part of the program's flag salute ceremony.
Bellamy thought such an event would be a powerful expression on behalf
of free public education. Moreover, he wanted all the schoolchildren
of America to recite the pledge at the same moment. He hoped the pledge
would promote a moral vision to counter the individualism embodied in
capitalism and expressed in the climate of the Gilded Age, with its
robber barons and exploitation of workers. Bellamy intended the line
"One nation indivisible with liberty and justice for all"
to express a more collective and egalitarian vision of America .Bellamy's
view that unbridled capitalism, materialism and individualism betrayed
America's promise was widely shared in the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. Many American radicals and progressive reformers proudly
asserted their patriotism. To them, America stood for basic democratic
values--economic and social equality, mass participation in politics,
free speech and civil liberties, elimination of the second-class citizenship
of women and racial minorities, a welcome mat for the world's oppressed
people. The reality of corporate power, right-wing xenophobia and social
injustice only fueled progressives' allegiance to these principles and
the struggle to achieve them.
Most Americans are unaware that much of our patriotic culture--including
many of the leading icons and symbols of American identity--was created
by artists and writers of decidedly left-wing and even socialist sympathies.
A look at the songs sung at post-9/11 patriotic tribute events and that
appear on the various patriotic compilation albums, or the clips incorporated
into film shorts celebrating the "American spirit," reveals
that the preponderance of these originated in the forgotten tradition
of left-wing patriotism.
Begin with the lines inscribed on the Statue of Liberty: "Give
me your tired, your poor/Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free."
Emma Lazarus was a poet of considerable reputation in her day, a well-known
figure in literary circles. She was a strong supporter of Henry George
and his "socialistic" single-tax program, and a friend of
William Morris, a leading British socialist. Her welcome to the "wretched
refuse" of the earth, written in 1883, was an effort to project
an inclusive and egalitarian definition of the American dream.
The words to "America the Beautiful" were written in 1893
by Katharine Lee Bates, a professor of English at Wellesley College.
Bates was an accomplished and published poet, whose book America the
Beautiful and Other Poems includes a sequence of poems expressing outrage
at US imperialism in the Philippines. Indeed, Bates identified with
the anti-imperialist movement of her day and was part of progressive
reform circles in the Boston area concerned about labor rights, urban
slums and women's suffrage. She was also an ardent feminist, and for
decades lived with and loved her Wellesley colleague Katharine Coman,
an economist and social activist. "America the Beautiful"
not only speaks to the beauty of the American continent but also reflects
her view that US imperialism undermines the nation's core values of
freedom and liberty. The poem's final words--"and crown thy good
with brotherhood, from sea to shining sea"--are an appeal for social
justice rather than the pursuit of wealth. Many Americans consider Woody
Guthrie's song "This Land Is Your Land," penned in 1940, to
be our unofficial national anthem. Guthrie was a radical with strong
ties to the Communist Party. He was inspired to write the song as an
answer to Irving Berlin's popular "God Bless America," which
he thought failed to recognize that it was the "people" to
whom America belonged. The words to "This Land Is Your Land"
reflect Guthrie's fusion of patriotism, support for the underdog and
class struggle. In this song Guthrie celebrates America's natural beauty
and bounty but criticizes the country for its failure to share its riches,
reflected in the song's last and least-known verse: One bright sunny
morning in the shadow of the steeple By the relief office I saw my people.
As they stood hungry I stood there wondering If this land was made for
you and me.
Guthrie was
not alone in combining patriotism and radicalism during the Depression
and World War II. In this period, many American composers, novelists,
artists and playwrights engaged in similar projects. In the early 1930s,
for example, a group of young composers and musicians--including Marc
Blitzstein (author of the musical "The Cradle Will Rock"), Charles
Seeger (a well-known composer and musicologist, and father of folk singer
Pete Seeger) and Aaron Copland--formed the "composers' collective"
to write music that would serve the cause of the working class. They turned
to American roots and folk music for inspiration. Many of their compositions--including
Copland's "Fanfare for the Common Man" and "Lincoln Portrait"--are
now patriotic musical standards, regularly performed at major civic events.
Earl Robinson was a member of the composers' collective who pioneered
the effort to combine patriotism and progressivism. In 1939 he teamed
with lyricist John La Touche to write "Ballad for Americans,"
which was performed on the CBS radio network by Paul Robeson, accompanied
by chorus and orchestra. This eleven-minute cantata provided a musical
review of American history, depicted as a struggle between the "nobodies
who are everybody" and an elite that fails to understand the real,
democratic essence of America.
Robeson, at the time one of the best-known performers on the world stage,
became, through this work, a voice of America. Broadcasts and recordings
of "Ballad for Americans" (by Bing Crosby as well as Robeson)
were immensely popular. In the summer of 1940, it was performed at the
national conventions of both the Republican and Communist parties. The
work soon became a staple in school choral performances, but it was literally
ripped out of many public school songbooks after Robinson and Robeson
were identified with the radical left and blacklisted during the McCarthy
period. Since then, however, "Ballad for Americans" has been
periodically revived, notably during the bicentennial celebration in 1976,
when a number of pop and country singers performed it in concerts and
on TV.
During World War II, with lyricist Lewis Allen, Robinson co-wrote another
patriotic hit, "The House I Live In." Its lyrics asked, and
then answered, the question posed in the first line of the song, "What
is America to me?" The song evokes America as a place where all races
can live freely, where one can speak one's mind, where the cities as well
as the natural landscapes are beautiful. The song was made a hit by Frank
Sinatra in 1945. Sinatra also starred in an Oscar-winning movie short--written
by Albert Maltz, later one of the Hollywood Ten--in which he sang "The
House I Live In" to challenge bigotry, represented in the movie by
a gang of kids who rough up a Jewish boy.
"The House I Live In," like "Ballad for Americans,"
was exceedingly popular for several years but became controversial during
the McCarthy period and has largely disappeared from public consciousness.
Its co-author, Lewis Allen, was actually Abel Meeropol, a high school
teacher who also penned "Strange Fruit," the anti-lynching song
made famous by Billie Holiday. In the 1950s Meeropol and his wife adopted
the sons of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg after their parents were executed
as atom spies.
Despite this, Sinatra kept the song in his repertoire. Perhaps the most
astonishing performance of "The House I Live In" was at the
nationally televised commemoration of the centenary of the Statue of Liberty
in 1986, when Sinatra sang it as the finale to the program, with President
Ronald Reagan and his wife, Nancy Reagan, sitting directly in front of
him.
Only a handful of Americans could have grasped the political irony of
that moment: Sinatra performing a patriotic anthem written by blacklisted
writers to a President who, as head of the Screen Actors Guild in the
1950s, helped create Hollywood's purge of radicals. Sinatra's own left-wing
(and nearly blacklisted) past, and the history of the song itself, have
been obliterated from public memory.
Even during the 1960s, American progressives continued to seek ways to
fuse their love of country with their opposition to the national government's
policies. The March on Washington in 1963 gathered at the Lincoln Memorial,
where Martin Luther King Jr. famously quoted the words to "My Country
'Tis of Thee."
Phil Ochs, then part of a new generation of politically conscious singer-songwriters
who emerged during the 1960s, wrote an anthem in the Guthrie vein, "Power
and Glory," which coupled love of country with a strong plea for
justice and equality. Interestingly, this song later became part of the
repertoire of the US Army band. And in 1968, in a famous antiwar speech
on the steps of the Capitol, Norman Thomas, the aging leader of the Socialist
Party, proclaimed, "I come to cleanse the American flag, not burn
it."
In recent decades, Bruce Springsteen has most closely followed in the
Guthrie tradition. From "Born in the USA," to his songs about
Tom Joad (the militant protagonist in John Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath),
to his recent anthem for the victims of the September 11 tragedy ("My
City of Ruins"), whom he urges to "come on rise up!" Springsteen
has championed the downtrodden while challenging America to live up to
its ideals.
Indeed, by performing both "Born in the USA" and "Land
of Hope and Dreams" at benefits for the families of World Trade Center
casualties, Springsteen has coupled his anger at injustice with his belief
in the nation's promise.
In each major peri
od of twentieth-century history--the Progressive era, the Depression,
World War II and the postwar era--American radicals and progressives expressed
a patriotism rooted in democratic values and consciously aimed at challenging
jingoism and "my country, right or wrong" thinking. Every day,
millions of Americans pledge allegiance to the flag, sing "America
the Beautiful" and "This Land Is Your Land," and memorize
the words on the Statue of Liberty without knowing the names of their
authors, their political inspiration or the historical context in which
they were written.
The progressive authors of much of America's patriotic iconography rejected
blind nationalism, militaristic drumbeating and sheeplike conformism.
So it would be a dire mistake to allow, by default, jingoism to become
synonymous with patriotism and the American spirit. Throughout our nation's
history, radicals and reformers have viewed their movements as profoundly
patriotic. They have believed that America's core claims--fairness, equality,
freedom, justice--were their own. In the midst of current patriotic exuberance
both authentic and manipulated, then, it is useful to recall the forgotten
cultural legacy of the left. We need to ask, once again, "What is
America to us?"
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