PureX
Well-known member
I have been puzzling, lately, over the modern (mostly) American phenomenon of intertwining self-identity with ideology. I'm referring to the steady and significant increase in the number of Americans who conflate their own identity with some particular ideology, both on a personal level and in groups.
Fifty years ago, very few Americans would have thought of themselves as being republican or democrat, liberal or conservative, religious or agnostic, capitalist or socialist, pro or anti abortion, pro or anti contraception, pro or anti gay rights, pro or anti taxation, pro or anti climate change and carbon emission control, pro or anti government regulation, and so on. Certainly people had opinions about these issues, and tended to come down on one side of them or another, but people didn't consider the ideologies that led them to their opinions on these issues to be the defining factor in 'who they are'. And yet now days that seems to have become surprisingly commonplace.
I hear songs on the radio all the time about how proud the country bumpkin is to be a country bumpkin. Clearly, it's the greatest thing about the singer's life. And I hear songs about how bad the bad-boy rapper is and how he wants us all to know how bad he is. Because clearly, his anti-social, even criminal badness is paramount to his view of himself. And on the religious stations I hear songs and stories about how righteous the Bible Christians are and how we'd all better become one or we're going to hell. Or I can switch to talk radio and hear hours upon hours devoted to expressing how "our" ideology is always right, and "their" ideology is always wrong. How "we" who adhere to this ideology are the good guys, while "they" who adhere to that ideology are the bad guys. And listeners devote many hours of their lives listening to this constant ideological and personal identity reinforcement.
But why?
Why have we Americans become so caught up in identifying ourselves with ideology? We used to identify ourselves through our accomplishments. We were farmers, or ranchers, or steelworkers. We were fathers, homemakers, doctors and priests. We were athletes and cops. Why has this changed, do you think? I'm puzzled about it.
And I'm concerned about it, too. Because as we become more and more self-identified with ideology, we become less and less self-identified through our collective humanity. And as a result we are becoming more and more divided against each other by our ideological differences. Differences that we would not be tripping over if we were identifying ourselves and each other as human beings, first, rather than as ideological manifestations. Especially if we saw ourselves and each other as accomplished human beings. Human beings who have done things with their time and energy that benefit society: farmers, ranchers, industrial workers, athletes, priests, teachers, and cops, etc.,. It seems to me that we would be far more likely to respect and appreciate each other if this is how we thought of people, instead of as liberals, conservatives, gays, atheists, democrats, republicans, or whatever.
Any thoughts?
Fifty years ago, very few Americans would have thought of themselves as being republican or democrat, liberal or conservative, religious or agnostic, capitalist or socialist, pro or anti abortion, pro or anti contraception, pro or anti gay rights, pro or anti taxation, pro or anti climate change and carbon emission control, pro or anti government regulation, and so on. Certainly people had opinions about these issues, and tended to come down on one side of them or another, but people didn't consider the ideologies that led them to their opinions on these issues to be the defining factor in 'who they are'. And yet now days that seems to have become surprisingly commonplace.
I hear songs on the radio all the time about how proud the country bumpkin is to be a country bumpkin. Clearly, it's the greatest thing about the singer's life. And I hear songs about how bad the bad-boy rapper is and how he wants us all to know how bad he is. Because clearly, his anti-social, even criminal badness is paramount to his view of himself. And on the religious stations I hear songs and stories about how righteous the Bible Christians are and how we'd all better become one or we're going to hell. Or I can switch to talk radio and hear hours upon hours devoted to expressing how "our" ideology is always right, and "their" ideology is always wrong. How "we" who adhere to this ideology are the good guys, while "they" who adhere to that ideology are the bad guys. And listeners devote many hours of their lives listening to this constant ideological and personal identity reinforcement.
But why?
Why have we Americans become so caught up in identifying ourselves with ideology? We used to identify ourselves through our accomplishments. We were farmers, or ranchers, or steelworkers. We were fathers, homemakers, doctors and priests. We were athletes and cops. Why has this changed, do you think? I'm puzzled about it.
And I'm concerned about it, too. Because as we become more and more self-identified with ideology, we become less and less self-identified through our collective humanity. And as a result we are becoming more and more divided against each other by our ideological differences. Differences that we would not be tripping over if we were identifying ourselves and each other as human beings, first, rather than as ideological manifestations. Especially if we saw ourselves and each other as accomplished human beings. Human beings who have done things with their time and energy that benefit society: farmers, ranchers, industrial workers, athletes, priests, teachers, and cops, etc.,. It seems to me that we would be far more likely to respect and appreciate each other if this is how we thought of people, instead of as liberals, conservatives, gays, atheists, democrats, republicans, or whatever.
Any thoughts?