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By:

Shoumojit Banerjee

27 August 2024 at 9:57:52 am

Paranoid Empire, Insecure Republic: America at 250

As the United States marks its semiquincentennial, its finest histories reveal a restless nation unable to escape the foundational neurosis of its own creation. Washington Crossing the Delaware (1851), by Emanuel Leutze. No painting has done more to canonise America’s founding myth. Yet beneath its heroic certainty lies the restless republic that historians from Charles Beard to Robert Kagan would relentlessly question. Behind the fireworks and the dutiful invocations of liberty marking...

Paranoid Empire, Insecure Republic: America at 250

As the United States marks its semiquincentennial, its finest histories reveal a restless nation unable to escape the foundational neurosis of its own creation. Washington Crossing the Delaware (1851), by Emanuel Leutze. No painting has done more to canonise America’s founding myth. Yet beneath its heroic certainty lies the restless republic that historians from Charles Beard to Robert Kagan would relentlessly question. Behind the fireworks and the dutiful invocations of liberty marking America’s 250th birthday lies the shadow of a more formidable counter-tradition. For over a century, the republic’s most vital chroniclers have functioned as its most demanding interrogators, systematically dismantling the comforting stories the nation prefers to tell about itself. This internal demolition is not some recent ‘progressive’ glitch but a deep-seated intellectual inheritance. It was most famously ignited when Charles Beard published his iconoclastic An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States (1913), a work that scandalized the establishment by ruthlessly stripping the hagiography from the Constitutional Convention and America’s revered ‘Founding Fathers.’ Beard reframed these secular saints - Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and George Washington among others - not as disinterested architects of some timeless political philosophy, but as a property-owning elite property-owning elite eager to protect their personal financial investments from populist chaos. Demolishing Founding Myths In Beard’s telling, Hamilton emerged not as a romantic visionary, but as the aggressive champion of the urban merchant and banking class, eager to build a powerful central state that would guarantee public debt and protect big capital. Madison, revered as the ‘Father of the Constitution’ and its chief intellectual heavyweight, was recast from an eloquent theorist of democratic balance into a wealthy Virginia slaveholder whose primary practical anxiety was preventing a debt-ridden agrarian majority from using democracy to redistribute property. Even the first President George Washington, the towering military icon, was viewed through the cold ledger of Beard’s reality as the richest plantation magnate and land speculator in the colonies, whose vast western holdings required a powerful federal government to secure contracts and pacify the frontier. Beard’s iconoclasm laid the groundwork for a formidable intellectual tradition that would spend the next century turning over the stones of the American national myth. The works of historians belonging to this tradition essentially reveal that America has never been the coherent republic of its own imagination. It was born divided, grew through conquest, nearly destroyed itself in civil war, and emerged as a global hegemon while steadfastly insisting it had no imperial ambitions. The single thread running through this vast literature is a profound, systemic anxiety of the United States as a restless, schizoid nation, perpetually unsure of its own footing. No outsider understood the psychological consequences of this design better than Alexis de Tocqueville. Visiting the infant republic in the 1830s, the French aristocrat looked at America as a laboratory for the democratic future. In his seminal Democracy in America (published in two volumes in 1835 and 1840), Tocqueville diagnosed the foundational neurosis of the American character, catching (like none before him or since), the tragic irony of a population possessing every material advantage yet perpetually tormented by a vague dread of missing out on something better. This egalitarian equality, noted de Tocqueville, sharpened competition and magnified the smallest inequalities into existential slights for the American. In his famous chapter in Vol. 2 of his work, “Why the Americans Are So Restless in the Midst of Their Prosperity,” de Tocqueville observed that the American “clutches everything, he holds nothing fast, and he soon lets go of his prey to pursue new gratifications.” It was the earliest and most elegant diagnosis of the schizoid superpower: a nation whose unprecedented freedom bred not contentment, but a permanent and frantic melancholy. While the American superpower often appears monolithic from afar, the country that emerges from its most trenchant histories is one that is forever negotiating the chasm between lofty ideals and uncomfortable realities. Bernard Bailyn famously observed in his classic The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (1967) that the nation’s founding was not merely a matter of economic grievance over taxes and tea. Immersing himself in the pamphlets and political tracts of the 18th century, Bailyn uncovered an almost obsessive paranoia regarding power itself. To modern observers accustomed to viewing 1776 as a straightforward triumph of liberty, Bailyn’s startling conclusion was that the language of America’s founders revolved less around abstract freedom than around corruption and the organic tendency of government to expand. America’s structural paranoia found its ultimate framework in the work of historian Richard Hofstadter, who understood better than anyone else, that the country’s recurring internal crises were often less about ideology than about collective psychology. In his masterwork The Paranoid Style in American Politics (1965), Hofstadter argued that American public life has repeatedly been animated by a sense of impending catastrophe, a conviction that shadowy conspiracies are poised to destroy the republic from within. From the anti-Masonic movement of the 19th century and the nativist panics over Catholic immigrants, to McCarthyism's hunt for communist infiltrators and the tremors of Donald Trump’s MAGA era, each American generation has imagined itself living through the nation’s final reckoning. For Hofstadter, this “paranoid style” was not clinical madness but a permanent fixture of American public life - a recurrent mode of political expression marked by heated suspicion and apocalyptic dread. It remains the most enduring diagnosis of America’s perpetual state of anxiety and explains why the world’s most powerful nation has rarely behaved with the cold confidence of an established empire, but rather with the nervous intensity of a hypochondriac patient, forever convinced that the experiment is on the verge of collapse. This pervasive anxiety ceases to be a mystery when one looks at how the American experiment actually began; the nation’s anxious psychology was forged in the sheer geopolitical volatility of its birth in the 18th century. The comfortable American myth of a pristine, immaculate conception is thoroughly dismantled by Fred Anderson in his superb Crucible of War (2000). Anderson demonstrates that the struggle that produced the United States was not a localized spark, but the messy offshoot of the Seven Years’ War (1756–1763) - the global conflagration between Britain and France that was fought across Europe, the Caribbean, and fatefully - India. Great Britain’s victory over France upended the old imperial relationship, forcing colonists to shoulder the financial burden of their own defense. The resulting revolution was less an inevitable, heroic march toward human freedom than the chaotic, unintended consequence of British imperial triumph. Alan Taylor further disrupts this providential unity in American Colonies (2001) and American Revolutions (2016) by upending patriotic simplicity. In Taylor’s telling, the American Revolution was another ‘civil war’ as it meant exile for the Loyalists; diplomatic collapse for the Native Americans and for enslaved Africans, it meant the tragic deferral of emancipation. Schizoid Superpower The most devastating challenge to America’s preferred self-image of a ‘reluctant power’ comes from Robert Kagan. Ironically, Kagan, the chief architect of modern neoconservatism, has taken a prosecutorial blade to the American foundational myth in his remarkable two-volume history, Dangerous Nation (2006) and The Ghost at the Feast (2023), which brilliantly lay bare the anatomy of the American mind. Kagan demonstrates that territorial aggrandizement was a founding American instinct. The Louisiana Purchase (1803), the displacement of Native nations, the annexation of Texas, and the war with Mexico were expressions of a political culture that saw geographic enlargement as the natural companion of liberty. ‘Empire’ was recast as ‘providence’ while ‘conquest’ became ‘destiny.’ Americans genuinely believed they were spreading freedom, distinguishing themselves from European rivals by the conviction that expansion itself constituted liberty. The westward march that Americans long celebrated as the triumph of the frontier was experienced very differently by the continent’s first inhabitants. For generations, the conquest of Native America was either romanticized as the inevitable advance of civilization or reduced to a succession of isolated “Indian wars” until Dee Brown’s unforgettable Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee shattered that complacency in 1970 by retelling the 19th century through Native voices, transforming public understanding of the frontier and becoming a landmark of revisionist history. Yet half a century later, Peter Cozzens’ The Earth Is Weeping: The Epic Story of the Indian Wars for the American West (2016) offers a broader and more nuanced account. Cozzens neither romanticizes Native societies nor sanitizes American expansion. Instead, he reconstructs the collision between two civilizations, showing how diplomacy, disease, fractured tribal alliances, settler violence, military innovation, and federal policy combined to produce one of history’s most consequential dispossessions. His achievement lies in restoring historical agency to all sides without creating a false moral equivalence. The domestic cost of America’s expansionist contradiction was a catastrophic internal reckoning. For all the endless tomes written on the U.S. Civil War (1861-65), James McPherson’s Battle Cry of Freedom (1988) remains the finest analytical single-volume history of the war. Unlike popular, novelistic accounts like Shelby Foote’s massive trilogy - which treat the war as a tragic, romantic epic of battlefield manoeuvres and character studies - McPherson provides a rigorous structural autopsy. His vital analytical choice is to begin the narrative not in 1861 with the firing on Fort Sumter, but in 1848, in the immediate aftermath of the Mexican-American War. By doing so, McPherson demonstrates that the Civil War was the direct, toxic byproduct of the empire’s expansion where the massive acquisition of new western territories instantly broke the fragile political equilibrium, thereby forcing a terminal collision between two incompatible constitutional visions of the republic’s future. For decades, politicians had convinced themselves that clever congressional compromises could indefinitely postpone the debate over human bondage. Each settlement merely bought time without addressing the underlying rot – that a republic founded on universal liberty had constructed one of the most powerful slave societies in human history. The war transformed the very grammar of American politics. It settled far less than its survivors wished to believe. As Eric Foner argues in Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution, 1863–1877 (1988), the brief, extraordinary moment where the republic sought to transform four million formerly enslaved people into equal citizens was ultimately abandoned due to Northern fatigue, Southern racial terror, and partisan compromise. Foner’s great insight is that Reconstruction is not a historical interlude but an unfinished conversation and that modern disputes over voting rights and citizenship trace their lineage directly to those turbulent, post-Civil War years. As the frontier consolidated in the late 19th century, a different kind of territory was conquered. By the close of the century, a republic born out of a profound distrust of central authority found itself confronting concentrations of private wealth on an unimaginable scale. Capitalism acquired a providential character, and industrialists were canonized as self-made titans. Messianic Robber Barons Ron Chernow’s hefty biographies - particularly The House of Morgan (1990) and Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr. (1998) - strip away the corporate hagiography of that era to reveal the architects of a modern power whose structural achievements cannot be uncoupled from the deep inequalities they engineered. Inevitably, these private and public aggregations of power began to flex their muscles globally. David McCullough’s riveting The Path Between the Seas (1977), a Conradian epic about the construction of the Panama Canal, illustrates a republic quietly assuming the mantle of a global empire and announcing that America’s destiny would no longer be contained by its own shores. The global mechanics of this imperial overreach find their most devastating chronicler in Fredrik Logevall, whose Embers of War (2012) lays bare the tragic architecture of the Vietnam conflict. Logevall reveals how intelligent policymakers repeatedly convinced themselves that one more escalation would preserve credibility and avert disaster, proving that history advances less through grand conspiracies than through accumulations of small certainties. His superb biography, JFK: Coming of Age in the American Century (2020), doesn’t treat Kennedy merely as an individual icon but as a lens for the entire post-war elite. Logevall shows that this generation was hyper-aware that they were inheriting “The American Century” (a phrase coined by Henry Luce in 1941), yet they were simultaneously terrified of losing it to the spread of communism. Taking Kennedy’s life as his scaffolding, Logevall expands his work into a portrait of a generation born into unmatched economic and military reach, where beneath outward American confidence lurked a paralyzing insecurity. The ultimate tragedy of America’s restless expansion is that the geography has finally run out. In The End of the Myth (2019), Greg Grandin revisits Frederick Jackson Turner’s famous 1893 “frontier thesis,” arguing that the endless western horizon long protected American democracy by absorbing its systemic economic and social shocks. Throughout the 20th century, America searched for synthetic frontiers overseas through military alliances and market dominance. As those external horizons close or become fiercely contested in the 21st century, the country’s unresolved traumas have violently turned inward. Immigration, race, identity, and historical memory have become the principal battlegrounds. At 250, the schizoid superpower finds itself trapped in a room with its original inheritance, learning the hard truth first glimpsed by Tocqueville: that a frontier can delay a reckoning, but it can never cure it.

Why is Mamata Seeing Ghost of Bangladesh?

Updated: Oct 21, 2024

Why is Mamata Seeing Ghost of Bangladesh?

Mamata is seeing a ghost of Bangladesh behind the massive outrage and waves of protest over rape and murder of the trainee doctor. And the reasons are many.

It’s been over a fortnight. Yet with each passing day the voice of protest is getting louder and stronger. From the streets of Kolkata it’s pouring into roads of hinterland. The cry for justice for a rape victim has consolidated into a wail of demands to set a lot of wrongdoings right. Here in lies the fear and trepidation. Wasn’t the issue that brought the youth of Bangladesh out on the thoroughfares a simple, innocent one of quota reform?

The chief minister of Bengal, known for understanding the pulse of people better than many, was quick to read the signages floating in the political horizon.

The most obvious reason for her to be tensed is that both the regime change in Bangladesh and the mass protest in Bengal, were student-driven to begin with. The two incidents---end of 15 year old Sheikh Hasina government and turbulence in West Bengal, over the heinous crime, falling back to back, the first on August 5th and the latter from August 9th onwards, give natural scope for comparisons. More so, because in both the cases the movement strayed beyond an affected constituency to include aggrieved people at large, cutting across socio-economic demography. If the quota reform protest started by students in Bangladesh became a mass uprising against an autocratic regime, the campaign demanding justice for the rape victim and overall safety and security of women in Mamata Banerjee’s Bengal soon snowballed into a movement of no-confidence against the government. Slogans--”Mamata must resign” also got floated in social media much in line with the call for ouster of Sheikh Hasina. In fact “Resignation of Hasina” became the single point agenda into which all other fringe demands coalesced.

Incidentally, even before people started drawing parallels, that there could be a thread of commonality in the way the upheaval in Bangladesh and Bengal played out, Mamata was quick to point out that the Opposition were trying to pull off a Bangladesh by politicizing the tragic incident: “A coordinated approach has been executed by the BJP and the CPIM with support from the Centre to defame Bengal and exploit the situation....They want to make a Bangladesh here. They are taking cues from student unrest in Bangladesh and are attempting to capture similarly. I have no longing for the chair. I came here to serve people.”

Not only Mamata, her political lieutenants are consistently equating the turmoil in Bengal with the mayhem in Bangladesh. Cabinet minister for North Bengal development Udayan Guha threatened to take stern action against those, who would be trying to exploit the situation by emulating a Bangladesh like movement. “ Even after the hospital was vandalised, the police did not open fire on anyone. The police will not allow a Bangladesh type situation. We will not allow Bengal to turn into Bangladesh, Guha thundered.

Is the government’s fear unfounded?

Apart from the similarities on ground zero, as to how and where the future course of events are heading to, there are ample reasons for Bengal to mull on-- as to what led to a Bangladesh like boiling point. To begin with, it’ll be appropriate to talk of Bangladesh and the prevailing situation, that made the students’ protest become big in magnitude. The students were out on the streets because of a high reservation in public jobs. Unemployment and stagnant job market in private sector coupled with a high rate of inflation drove the educated youth to rebel against the government.

But soon the students found enormous number of sympathisers, who were equally at the receiving end. According to Bangladesh citizens, the last two terms of the Sheikh Hasina government were a mockery of democracy. Even elections would be compromised. As Hasina grew from strength to strength, she politicized institutions. The rank and file of police owed allegiance to the ruling dispensation. Extortion, harrassment and raids by police and people in power became rampant. An atmosphere of fear and repression reigned and people got restless to overthrow the government.

Politicization of institutions has been happening in Mamata government too. Allegations are quite strong that police in Bengal functions at the beck and call of political bosses. The lapses and alleged loopholes on the part of police in handling the rape and murder of the young doctor have yet again revealed a sense of confused or misplaced loyalty.

But above everything else both Hasina and Mamata governments allegedly seem to have twined in accepting corruption as a way of life. In Bangladesh jobs of primary and secondary teachers got sold at premium, Rs 10-12 lakh in the Hasina regime. Even police had to pay up for prized postings and transfers. In Bengal busting of the teacher’s recruitment scam has revealed how unsuccessful and ineligible candidates got government jobs in schools in exchange of bribes.

Similarities are multiple and inescapable. Mamata has good reasons to be apprehensive. It’s not only she, who can see and connect the dots. People, out on the streets, clamoring for justice, can see a providential pattern somewhere in the unfolding of future events in these two places-- Bangladesh and Bengal. True, they share more than 2,217 odd km of border. They share the same umbilical cord, other than language, culture, ethos, icons. Even emotions are the same. So she cannot take any risk.

(The writer is a senior jounalist based in Kolkata. Views personal)

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