Cowboys and Immigrants
Two dueling archetypes dominated 20th-century American politics. Is it time for them to be reconciled?
- By Lance Morrow
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2009, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
George W. Bush put himself in the Reagan mold. Barack Obama's victory represented, among other things, a repudiation of the Frontier style of Bush and Dick Cheney, in favor of an agenda arising from the Ellis Island point of view, with its emphasis on collective social interests, such as health care and the environment. A civic paradigm seemed to have shifted, and a generational paradigm as well.
And yet the future (Obama's hopeful young constituency) found itself boomeranged back to the Great Depression. The simultaneous arrival of Obama and bad financial times elicited perhaps too many articles about Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal. Implicitly, George W. Bush and the Frontier way of doing things seem as discredited today as Herbert Hoover seemed in 1933.
Newsweek's proclamation notwithstanding, my guess is that the categories of Ellis Island and the Frontier persist—but now, like so much else, have been globalized.
In the 21st century, the division between the two mind-sets projects itself into McLuhan's misnamed "global village," which, more accurately, has become a planetary megacity with some wealthy neighborhoods (now not as wealthy as they thought they were) and vast slum districts—a megacity without police force or sanitation department. The messy municipal planet remains in many ways a frontier, a multicultural Dodge City or Tombstone (lawless, with shooting in the streets, dangerous with terrorism and nuclear possibilities, not a fit place for women and children) that has an Ellis Island aspiration to survive and prosper as the family of man.
The Frontier and Ellis Island analyze problems in different ways and arrive at different decisions. The Frontier assumes the drunken soldier is a rapist or murderer and shoots him between the eyes. Ellis Island may see him as a confused fool and hope to talk him into a cup of coffee and a 12-step program. Roughly the same choices present themselves to a president: the planet is the Frontier; the planet is Ellis Island. Genius is the ability to hold two contradictory truths in the mind at the same time without going crazy.
Obama might reflect upon the transition of Harry Hopkins, FDR's inside man and chief federal relief dispenser during the New Deal. Hopkins was the most abundantly generous of Keynes-ian do-something-now bleeding hearts, with a heart as big as Charles Dickens'. After Hitler took Poland and France and started bombing London, Hopkins became one of Roosevelt's most aggressive and efficient war facilitators, organizing lend-lease and acting as FDR's emissary to Churchill and Stalin. Hopkins abandoned Ellis Island for the Frontier. He complained that his New Deal friends—during the Battle of Britain, before Pearl Harbor—did not understand the change that had come over him.
Hopkins was, of course, the implementing instrument and executive echo of Franklin Roosevelt, an Ellis Island president who, after December 7, 1941, found himself confronting history's wildest frontier.
Lance Morrow, author of The Best Year of Their Lives (2005), is writing a biography of Henry Luce.
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Comments (5)
i had heard about your museum and thought that some information you had up could help me on this project for texas history. do you have any information for a 7th grader on: life on the frontier era?
Posted by jewelia veale on February 14,2011 | 12:43 PM
Dear Mr. Morrow,
Your article is required reading for my graduate program in Educational Leadership through the University of Houston. As a leader-in-training, your thoughts add another dimension to my ever-growing perspective on how our changing society trickles down to affect my elementary school students. Recognizing the diverse philosophies that cycle into power and how public education struggles to keep up with each new frontiersman or ellis islander makes me wonder how we'll be able to do what's best for students. Thanks for your wonderful words.
Posted by Renee' DeShazer on November 9,2009 | 09:42 PM
Finding a new L.M. essay rewards many fruitless googles since Second Drafts (which has taken up residence on my driver's seat floor). And a new biog on Luce on the way - wow! Stay well and get it done before one of us succumbs to the medical wolves. Continuing to cheer for the mice.
Posted by John Stranne on October 8,2009 | 08:37 PM
Mr. Morrow - Marvelous piece. Miss you in TIME.
Your essays are wide-ranging, thought-provoking and contribute plenty to the National Debate. Interesting how you chose the Frontier and Ellis Island as the dialetectical myths that swing this country into such a pendulum.
I very much enjoyed the read.
All best,
John Jeter
http://theplunderroom.blogspot.com
Posted by John Jeter on August 13,2009 | 02:42 PM
Smartly done piece. Morrow makes us fill in some of our own blanks but he does so with wit and insight. His analogies are fun for an old coot who studies this nation and its characters in our national mythologies. Hollywood AND Broadway AND booksellers (and readers) have cashed in on both these themes. No Frontier on 42nd St? How about a slew of musicals that turned the theater stages into all of Oklahoma? The author might have mentioned that we are hard on our myth-made frauds. The latter Twentieth Century was brutal to cherished heroes like George Armstrong Custer. And the new century chirps as it chips at icons so luminous as Jefferson ... and with good reason.
Tom Sloss
Fountain Valley, CA
Posted by tom sloss on May 13,2009 | 08:50 PM