Chronicles of American Culture
No political phenomenon can be so creative and so destructive as
nationalism. Nationalism can be a metaphor for the supreme truth but
also
an allegory for the nostalgia of death. No exotic country, no gold, no
woman can trigger such an outpouring of passion as the sacred homeland,
and contrary to all Freudians more people have died defending their
homelands
than the honor of their women. If we assume that political power is the
supreme aphrodisiac, then nationalism must be its ultimate thrill.
To
talk about nationalism in Anglo-Saxon countries usually evokes
the specter of tribalism, violence, heavy politics, and something that
runs counter to the idea of progress. For an American liberal,
nationalism
is traditionally associated with irrational impulses, with something
incalculable
that has a nasty habit of messing up a mercantile mind-set. A merchant
does not like borders and national emblems; his badge of honor is his
goods,
and his friends are those who make the best offer on
the global market. It is no coincidence that during World War II
the Merchant preferred the alliance with the Commissar, despite the
fact
that the Commissar's violence often eclipsed that of the Nationalist.
Daniel
Bell once wrote that American liberals find it difficult to grasp
ethnic
infatuation because the American way of thinking is "spatially and
temporally
suspended." Indeed, to an insular maritime mind, it must appear
absolutely
idiotic to observe two people quarreling over a small
creek or a stretch of land when little economic yield lies in the
balance. A politician in America, unlike his rooted European
counterpart,
is essentially a realtor, and his attitude towards politics amounts to
a real estate transaction. It is hard to deny that a person on the
move,
reared on Jack Kerouac or Dos Passos, is frightened by the ethnic
exclusiveness
that is today rocking the part of Europe from the Balkans to the
Baltics.
The mystique of the territorial imperative, with its unpredictable
ethnic
cauldron, must be a paramount insult to the ideology of the melting
pot.
Contrary to widespread beliefs, nationalism is not an ideology, because
it lacks programmatic dimension and defies categorization. At best,
nationalism
can be described as a type of earthbound behavior with residues of
paganism.
Whereas liberalism operates in the rational singular, nationalism
always
prefers the irrational plural. For the liberal, the individual is the
epicenter
of politics; for the nationalist, the
individual is only a particle in historical community. To visualize
different brands of nationalism one could observe a European family
camping
on the rocky beaches of the French Riviera and contrast it to an
American
family on the sandy beaches of Santa Barbara. The former meticulously
stakes
out its turf, keeps its children in fold; the latter nomadically fans
out
the moment it comes to the beach, with each family member in search of
privacy. Incidentally, the word "privacy" does not even exist in
continental European languages.
Following
World War II, for a European to declare himself a nationalist
was tantamount to espousing neofascism. On the ossuary of Auschwitz,
few
indeed were willing to rave publicly about the romantic ideas of 19th
century
poets and princes, whose idyllic escapades gave birth, a century later,
to an unidyllic slaughterhouse. At Yalta, the idea of a Europe
frolicking
with the liturgy of blood and soil was considered too dangerous, and
both
superpowers held high this reminder in the form of their respective
strategy
of "double containment." After their excursion into the largest civil
war
in history, Europeans decided not to talk about nationalism or
self-determination
any longer. Many European intellectuals, and particularly German
pundits,
preferred instead to recommit their suppressed nationalist energy to
far-flung
Palestinians, Sandinistas, Cubans, or Congolese instead of to their own
ethnic soil. Third World nationalism became for the European
mandarins
both the
esoteric catharsis and the exotic superego; and to theorize about
the plight of Xhosa in South Africa, or Ibo in Nigeria, or to stage
treks
to Cashmere or Katmandu became an elegant way of wallowing in new
political
romanticism. This vicarious type of meta-nationalism continued to play
a role of psychological repository for the dormant and domesticated
Europeans
who needed time to heal wounds and wait for yet another renaissance.
Has
this renaissance already occurred? The liberal parenthesis that
lasted for 45 years, and which received its major boost after the
recent
collapse of its communist alter ego, may indeed be coming to an end.
From
Iberia to Irkutsk, from Kazakhstan to Croatia, hundreds of different
peoples are once again clamoring for their place under the sun.
To assume that they are raising their ethnic voices for economic
reasons
alone is misleading, and liberals are committing a serious mistake when
they try to explain away nationalism by virtue of
structuralist-functionalist
paradigms, or when they shrug it off as a vestige of a traditional
ascriptive society. Contrary to popular assumptions, the collapse of
communism
in Europe and the Soviet Union is a direct spin-off of ethnic
frustrations
that have for decades laid dormant, but have refused to die away. The
paradox
apparent at the end of the 20th century is this: while everybody is
talking
about integration, multiculturalism, ecumenism, and cosmic fraternity,
fractures, fissures, and cleavages are appearing
everywhere. Paradoxes abound as little Luxembourg preaches sermons
to a much larger Slovenia on the utility of staying in the Yugoslav
fold;
or when Bush, after failing to rescue the Balts, comes to the aid of
artificial
satrapy in the name of the "self-determination" of its handful of
petrocrats;
or when Soviet apparatchiks fake concern for the plight of Palestinians
only to further crack down against their Bashkirs and Meshkets.
Nationalism is entering today the third phase of its history, and similar to a heady Hydra and howling Hecuba it is again displaying its unpredictable character. Must it be creative in violence only? Ethnic wars are already raging in Northern Ireland, in the land of Basques, in Corsica, let alone in Yugoslavia, where two opposing nationalisms are tearing Versailles Europe apart and showering the treaty successors with embarrassing and revisionist questions.
There
are different nationalisms in different countries and they
all have a different meaning. Nationalism can appear on the right; it
does,
however, appear on the left. It can be reactionary and progressive, but
in all cases it cannot exist unless it has its dialectical Other.
German
nationalism of
the 19th century could not have flourished had Germany not been
confronted by the aggressive French Jacobinism; modern English
nationalism
could not have taken off had it not been haunted by assertive Prussia.
Each nationalism must have its 'Feindbild,' its image of the evil,
because
nationalism is by definition the locus of political polarity in which
the
distinction between the foe and friend, between hostis and amicus, is
brought
to its deadly paroxysm. Consequently, it is no small
wonder that intra-ethnic, let alone inter-ethnic, wars (like the
one raging today between Croats and Serbs) are also the most savage
ones,
with each side vilifying, demonizing, and praying for the total
destruction
of the other.
In
addition, side by side with its positive founding myths, each
nationalism must resort to its negative mythology, which in times of
pending
national disasters sustains its people in the fight with the
enemy. In order to energize younger generations Polish nationalists
will resurrect their dead from the Katyn, the Germans their buried from
Silesia and Sudetenland; Croats will create their iconography on their
postwar mass graveyards, Serbs their hagiography out of their war-camp
victims. Body counts, aided by modern statistics and abetted by
high-tech
earth excavators, will be completed by mundane metaphors that usually
tend
to inflate one's own victimology and deflate that of the
enemy. German nationalists call Poles "Polacks," and French
chauvinists
call Germans "boches." Who can deny that racial and ethnic slurs are
among
the most common and picturesque of weapons used by nationalists world
wide?
Nationalism
is not a generic concept, and liberal ideologues are
often wrong when they reduce European nationalism to one conceptual
category.
What needs to be underlined is that there are exclusive and inclusive
nationalisms,
just as there are exclusive and inclusive racisms. Central Europeans,
generally,
make a very fine distinction between inclusive Jacobin state-determined
('staatsgebunden') unitary nationalism vis-a-vis the soil-culture-blood
determined ('volksgebunden') nationalism of Central and Eastern Europe.
Jacobin nationalism is by nature centralistic; it aims at global
democracy,
and it has found today its valiant, albeit unwitting, standard-bearer
in
George
Bush's ecumenical one-worldism. Ironically, a drive towards unitary
French nationalism existed before the Jacobins were even born, and it
was
the product of a peculiar geopolitical location that subsequently gave
birth to the modern French state. Richelieu, or Louis XIV, were as much
Jacobins in this sense as their secular successors Saint-Just,
Gambetta,
or De Gaulle. In France, today, whichever side one looks -- left,
right,
center -- the answer is always Jacobinism. In a similar vein,
in England, the Tudors and Cromwell acted as unitary nationalists
in their liquidations and genocides -- ad majorem Dei gloriam -- of the
Cornish and Irish and a host of other ethnic groups. Churchill and
other
20th-century English leaders successfully saved Great Britain in 1940 by
appealing to unitary nationalism, although their words would have
found little appeal today among Scots and Irish.
Contrary to widespread beliefs, the word "nationalism," ('Nazionalismus') was rarely used in National Socialist Germany. German nationalists in the 1920's and 30's popularized, instead, such derivatives as 'Volkstum,' 'Volksheit,' or 'Voelkisch,' words that are etymologically affiliated with the word 'Deutsch' and which were, during the Nazi rule, synonymously used with the word 'rassisch' ("racial"). The word 'Volk' came into German usage with J.G. Fichte in the early 19th century, when Germany belatedly began to consolidate its state consciousness. The word 'Volk' must not be lightly equated with the Latin or English 'populus' ("people"). As an irony of history, even the meaning of the word "people" in the English language is further blurred by its polymorphous significance. People can mean an organic whole, similar to 'Volk,' although it has increasingly come to be associated with an aggregate of atomized individuals. Ironically, the German idea of the Volk and the Slavic idea of 'narodi' have much in common; and indeed, each group can perfectly well understand, often with deadly consequences, each other's national aspirations. It is no small wonder that in the German and Slavic political vocabulary the concept of federalism and democracy will acquire a radically different meaning than in linguistically homogeneous England, France, or America.
By ostensibly putting aside its racist past, yet by pushing its universalist message to the extreme, the West paradoxically shows that it is no less racist today than it was yesterday.
French
and English nationalisms lack a solid territorial dimension,
and their founding myths lie elsewhere. Over the course of their
history,
due to their colonial holdings, these countries have acted both as
European
and non-European nations -- which explains, particularly in the light
of
massive non-European immigration -- why their elites find it difficult
to argue for their strong ethnic identity. Continental European
nationalism,
and specifically the German idea of 'Volksheit,' is by contrast the
product of a set of geographic circumstances unparalleled in France
or England. In France and England, the people were created out of the
existence
of the state. In Germany and Continental Europe, nationalism has
manifested
itself primarily as a cultural phenomenon of frequently stateless
peoples.
In Germany, Poland, Romania, etc., poets and writers created the
national
consciousness of their peoples; in France, princes created state
consciousness.
Popular figures in Central Europe -- like Herder or Father Jahn in
Germany,
Sandor Petofy in Hungary, Ljudevit Gaj in Croatia, Vuk Karadzic in
Serbia,
or Taras Shevchenko in the Ukraine -- played a crucial role in laying
the
foundation of the modern state for their respective peoples. Quite
different
was the story of nationalism in France where 'legists' created the
unitary
French state by suppressing regionalism in the French Hexagon.
Similarly,
in England, the role of nation-state builders fell to merchants and to
maritime companies, which, aided by buccaneers, brought wealth for the
English crown.
Interestingly, during the Battle of Britain, Churchill even toyed
with the idea of transferring Downing Street and the Westminster Palace
to the heartland of America -- a gesture which in Central Europe would
have amounted to national suicide.
Like
America, France first became a state, and in turn set the stage
for the molding of the French people of different tribes; by contrast,
Germans have always been a stateless yet compact people. The history of
France is essentially the history of genocide, in which French rulers
from
the
Capetians to the Bourbons, all the way down to modern Jacobins,
meticulously carried out destruction of Occitans, Vendeans, Bretons,
Franche-Comte,
etc. Suppression of regionalism and nativism has been one of the major
hallmarks of French acculturation, with the latest attempt being to
frenchify
Arabs from the Maghrib countries. Today, France is paying the price for
its egalitarian and universalist dreams. On the one hand, it is trying
to impose universal values and laws on the
masses of Third World immigrants; on the other, it must daily
proclaim
the principle of self-determination for its multiracial social layers.
If one puts things in historical perspective, everything presages that
France has become a prime candidate for sparking off racial warfare all
over Europe.
Looking
at Germany and its East European glacis, a sharp eye immediately
discovers a fluid area of levitating borders, "seasonal states," yet
strong
culturally and historically minded peoples. Central
and Eastern European have a long ethnic and historical memory, but
their borders fall short of clean-cut ethnographic lines. Germany, for
instance, offers a view of an open and poorly defined stage yet at the
same time it is a closed community. By contrast, Jacobin France,
functionalist-minded
England, and America are geographically closed states, but open
societies.
Nationalism in these countries has always been inclusive and has
invariably
displayed globalist and imperialistic pretensions, notably by spreading
its unitary message to disparate peoples worldwide.
Geographic
location has also affected the ethnopsychology of European
peoples. An average German is essentially a peasant; his psychologic
cast
and conduct are corporal and telluric. A German displays great courtesy
but lacks politeness, and like most peasants he usually exhibits
heavy-handed ("schwerfaellig"), and frequently an awkward approach
to social relations. By contrast, a Frenchman, irrespective of his
ideological
stripe and social background, is always a petty bourgeois; he is full
of
manners and stylishness but also full of pretensions. Unlike a German
nationalist, a Frenchman displays a surfeit of manners but lacks
courtesy. Even the most ignorant foreign tourist who goes to Germany
and
France will notice something foggy and unpredictable about Germans,
while
at the same time he will be gratified by the German sense of
professional
correctness and absolute honesty. By contrast, the body language and
mannerisms
of the French, as appealing as they may be, frequently leave one
perplexed
and disappointed.
In
the course of their ethnogeneses, languages gave final veneer
to their respective peoples. The German language is an organic language
that branches off into eternity; it is also the richest European
language.
The French language, similar to a great extent to English, is an opaque
language spun more by context than by flexion. As idiomatic
languages,
French and English are ideal for maritime and seaport activities. Over
the course of history the French sabir and 'pidgin' English proved to
be
astounding homogenizing agents as well as handy acculturative vectors
for
the English and French drives toward universalism. Subsequently,
English
and French became universal languages, in contrast to German, which
never
spread out beyond the East European marshlands.
The German idea of the 'Reich' was for centuries perfectly adapted to the open plains of Europe, which housed diverse and closely knit communities. Neither the Habsburgs nor the Brandenburgs ever attempted to assimilate or annihilate the non-Germanic peoples within their jurisdiction as the French and English did within theirs. The Danube monarchy, despite its shortcomings, was a stable society, proven by its five hundred years of existence. During the First and Second Reich, principalities, towns, and villages within the bounds of the Austrian and Prussian lands had a large amount of self-government that frequently made them vulnerable to French, Swedish, and English imperial ambitions.
German
'Volksheit' is an aristocratic as well as a democratic notion,
since traditionally the relations between domestic aristocracy and the
German people have been organic. Unlike France or England, Germany
never
experimented with foreign slavery. In Germany, ethnic differences
between
the local aristocracy and the German people are minimal; by contrast,
in
France, Spain, and England the aristocracy has usually recruited from
the
Northern European leadership class and not the
masses at large. Incidentally, even now, despite the exactions of
the French Revolution, one can see more racial differences between a
French
aristocrat and an average Frenchman than between a German aristocrat
and
a German peasant. In Germany the relationship between the elites and
the
commoners has always been rooted in the holistic environment, and as a
result Germany has remained a society barely in need of an elaborate
social
contract; it has based social relationships on horizontal hierarchy and
corporate structure, buttressed in addition by the idea of "equality
among
the equals." By contrast, French and English society can be defined as
vertically hierarchical and highly stratified; consequently, it should
not be surprising that French and English racisms
were among the most virulent in the world. It is also worth
recalling
that the first eugenic and racial laws in this century were not passed
in Germany, but in liberal America and England.
Political
scientists will one day ponder why the most glaring egalitarian
impulses appear in France and America, two countries which, until
recently,
practiced the most glaring forms of racism. Are we witnessing today a
peculiar
form of remorse or national-masochism, or simply an
egalitarian form of inclusive racism? Inclusive nationalism and
racism, that manifest themselves in universalism and globalism, attempt
to delete the difference between the foreigner and the native, although
in reality the foreigner is always forced to accept the legal
superstructure
of his now "repented" white masters. By ostensibly putting aside its
racist
past, yet by pushing its universalist message to the extreme, the West
paradoxically shows that it is no less racist today than it was
yesterday.
An elitist like Vilfredo Pareto wrote that liberal systems in decline
seem
to worry more about the pedigree of their dogs than the pedigree of
their
offspring. And a leftist, Serge Latouche, has recently written how
liberal
racists, while brandishing their ethnic national masochism, force
liberal
values and liberal legal provisions upon their "decorative coloreds."
Peoples
and ethnic groups are like boughs and petals; they grow and
decay, but seldom resurrect. France and England may evoke their
glorious
past, but this past will invariably have to be adjusted to their new
ethnically
fractured reality. Lithuania was, several centuries ago, a gigantic
continental
empire; today it is a speck on the map. The obscure Moscow in the 15th
century became the center of the future Russian steamroller because
other
principalities, such as Suzdal or Novgorod,
fantasized more about aesthetics than power politics. Great
calamities,
such as wars and famines, may be harbingers of a nation's collapse, but
license and demographic suicide can also determine the outcome of human
drama. Post-ideological Europe will soon discover that it cannot
forever
depend on the whims of technocratic elites who are in search of the
chimera
of the "common European market." As always, the meaning of carnal soil
and precious blood will spring forth from those who best know how to
impose
their destiny on those who have already decided to
relinquish theirs. Or to paraphrase Carl Schmitt, when a people
abandons politics, this does not mean the end of politics; it simply
means
the end of a weaker people.
The author is a writer and former political
science
professor in the USA.
He is also a former Croatian diplomat. Mr. Sunic
writes from Croatia.