By: Jim Ward
In
his less insightful moments, when he attempted to predict the future (a
mugs game at any stage of history), Karl Marx predicted that eventually
the awareness of class would trump that of nationalism. He was, of
course, terribly wrong in that prediction. World War 1, known in its
time as The Great War, blinded lots of good British, French, Canadian,
German, American, Australian and Turkish
working-class lads to the fact that their lives were much the same,
selling their labour on the cheap to the benefit of the few that geared
them up for war. Women too, although not major participants in the
shooting war, did their bit to ensure their male counterparts were
willing to pay the ‘ultimate sacrifice’ for their god and their
country. Young women in London where ever-ready to present young men
not in the shooting war with white feathers, branding them cowards, unwilling to fight for “their freedoms” Those British
lads strong enough to resist these forces were often packed off to the
lunatic asylum. They were obviously crazy not to want to go and shoot
people they’d never met, with whom they had no real quarrel. One of the most famous of these “conscientious objectors”
was the poet Siegfried Sassoon who refused to go back to the trenches
after being wounded. He was diagnosed as suffering from shell shock,
nowadays known as PTSD. The
notion of PTSD is, in itself, something of a problem (just as shell
shock was) in that it sees the individual as having a mental health
problem, rather than seeing the nation-state as a whole as having a
mental health problem insofar as it expects its citizens (primarily its
economically marginalized young men) to be willing to make the “ultimate
sacrifice” (more mealy-mouthed nation state nonsense), in order to
preserve the particular nation-state.
There
are obviously several reasons why nationalism seems to be so successful
in trumping allegiance to class. One of which I have already alluded
to, i.e. you have to be crazy not to go.
A
factor that often makes this possible is that young men are living
unchallenging lives and are ready to jump at the chance for adventure. One of the most powerful filmic representations of this is in the movie Gallipoli
which depicts our two ‘heroes’ as two bored young lads living in the
Australian bush. They jump at the chance for adventure and to go and
‘teach the Bosh a lesson’. And, of course, they end up being cannon
fodder for the Turkish troops. Not only is it a great lesson in the
madness of war and the nation-state, it is a great vehicle for Mel
Gibson on his road to movie stardom. One of the true ironies of Gallipoli is that Australians celebrate that ignominious defeat as the true beginning of Australia as a nation state. On each 25th of April –Anzac Day – Australian nationalists celebrate their fledgling nation’s “baptism in blood” on that day.
A
third reason seems to be that people are easily whipped up emotionally
to do silly and dangerous things in the name of their nation. National
anthems and other patriotic songs seem to be particularly effective at
doing this. It has to be something to do with words and music working
together to hit strong emotional chords in the populace of a
nation state. Some years ago, when I lived and taught sociology in
Australian Universities, a national referendum was held to update
Australia’s national anthem. At the time (early 1980s) they were still
standing up in movie theatres and at football games when God Save the Queen (the Queen of England,that is) was played. There was a feeling in the general public that it was maybe time to change the song, so the referendum was held. The three possible choices were: to retain God Save the Queen; Waltzing Matilda (a song about a sheep-stealing swagman (hobo) who commits suicide by jumping in a water hole when apprehended by the cops) and Advance Australia Fair
(a turgid ditty about what a wonderful place Australia is). The last
one won the referendum and is, to this day, the official national
anthem. Waltzing Matilda came a close second.
Most
modern nation-states have pretty turgid national anthems but even the
most turgid seem to have some mass psychological influence on the
members of the various nation states. When I was a young lad in post World War Two Britain, we used to sing – with great gusto – Rule Britannia at
the Friday school assembly and, as a ten-year old I was all fired up
and proud to be British and ready to defend my nation against all
comers. When I went to live in Australia I was quickly dissuaded from
my erstwhile British nationalism, since I was now living in “the
best bloody country in the world, mate.” But, by the time I was 14, I
was beginning to see through all this stuff and ready to agree with
Samuel Johnson’s dictum that patriotism is the last refuge of a
scoundrel. (I never have really understood the difference between nationalism and patriotism. To me they are one and the same thing.)
Among
the more sophisticated nations the songs that elicit the gut level
nationalism in modern times tend to be more in the category of popular
songs. The Toby Keith song Courtesy of the Red White and Blue is more likely to stir the feeling of nationalism than is the U.S. anthem. Perhaps the Canadian equivalent would Four Strong Winds.
A
fourth, and possibly the most powerful reason is that of the hegemony
of the ruling class, a la Gramsci. Although the argument of hegemony
often deteriorates into simplistic conspiracy theory, in the case of
willingness of young men to go to war, it seems fairly evident that
those who control the ideas, i.e. as with Marx
and his notion of the ruling ideas in any society as being the ideas of
the ruling class. We certainly saw this in evidence in the recent Iraq
war with Dick Cheney’s Halliburton
Company making a metaphorical killing, whilst the working class
Americans in uniform experienced a literal killing. Going back to World
War One, C.S. Forester’s The General
drew a sharp picture of how the British ruling class saw all those
working class lads, who died by the hundreds of thousands in that inane
conflict, as totally expendable.
The British historian, Eric Hobsbawm, points out in his book Nations and Nationalism Since 1780 that nation-states have only really existed since late in the 18th century and yet we tend to see them as always having been
there. The simple exercise of looking at a world map with its various
boundaries and colours makes us realize, with some little thought that
these entities are arbitrary and created, most often by people from
beyond those boundaries. And yet, personal identities are much tied up
with the notion of being of a particular nation state. When the average
person is asked to identify him or herself,
one of the first descriptors would be their particular nationality and
then sex (gender?) and age. Imagine identifying oneself as an Ivorian. It
means that you happen to live in that part of Africa now called the
Ivory Coast. Named by whom? By European expansionists, of course,
whose major interest was the hunting of elephants.
How then can one proud to be an Ivorian, particularly to the extent
that one would be willing to go to war with those living in a
neighbouring state, such as Mali or Burkina Faso? Such a conflict
would, as in all inter-nation conflicts, likely benefit the few elites and impose suffering on those at the marginalized levels of society.
In
April, 2014 this discussion is particularly germane as the social
elites of Russia, whip up enthusiasm among the working class to see
those folks over the border in Ukraine as the enemy. So successful is
this strategy that the current leader of Russia enjoys 80% approval from
Russian residents, in no small part is this further encouraged by a
stirring Russian anthem.
I would love to come up with a good articulation of a definition patriotism so as to challenger your notion that it is the same thing as nationalism (I have always thought so and still cling to the idea in some way) but somehow I can't aat the moment. I don't think nationalism is the only issue in explaining why class seems to be insufficient in organizing the working class (all of us who work for wages) but after perusing your post I think it is a bigger factor than I had thought. Thanks for this.
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