Reaganism in Literary Theory. Jeremiah Bowen
it corresponds to the teacher’s ideal. So if the students’ ideal differs from that of the teacher’s—as it inevitably does, for example, when the teacher and students have been shaped by different cultural or subcultural contexts—the student cannot see their aims and aspirations reflected in the teacher’s regard. In that situation, students must choose between themselves and the confirmation promised by their teachers, and whichever they choose, they suffer an untenable loss.
Nonconformists reject orthopedagogy because its procedures are indifferent to their singularity. The wisdom of narcissism, its necessity as the basis for the formation of the I, is its irrationally uncompromising defense of the value of singularity, without which the human organism would quickly perish of self-sacrifice or neglect. This is also the wisdom and necessity of the individualist rebellion that defines the tenor of so much American popular culture. Without this rebellious insistence on the singular worth of the self, there can be no revolution, even though there can be no revolution that does not go beyond this individualist rebellion.
In the Freudian notion of ego splitting, externalizing internal contradictions and differences allow one to maintain the whole worth and goodness of the self and the whole worthlessness and evil of the other, obviating and therefore avoiding any inquiry that might challenge such beliefs. This suppression of differences illustrates how intrasubjective narrative strategies can be homologous with intersubjective ones, insofar as it agrees with Hayden White’s cautionary definition of the politicization of interpretation. While for Mitchell the phrase designates the political implications of interpretive practices, for White it designates the application of political power to decide the outcome of “interpretive conflicts.”68 Rather than allowing contradictions to function as the motor of inquiry, driving the resolution of disputes by reasoned debate, such differences are suppressed when “political power or authority is invoked to resolve them.” For those using interpretation as a pretext or rationalization, rather than as part of an inquiry, the exposure of insufficiently convincing reasons is not an educative feature of interpretive conflicts, but a threat to be avoided. White’s definition highlights this distinction between rationalization and reason, pointing to the use of reason as a weapon against authority and power: Because the capacity to reason is distributed democratically as a structural feature of human embodiment, regardless of the disproportionate distribution of power in oppressive systems, the powerful can never completely eliminate the threat posed by reasoned arguments by those they exploit, exclude or demean.
Again, the Trump administration has supplied my argument with a late-breaking illustration of White’s definition. After Trump’s incorrect announcement that Alabama “will most likely be hit (much) harder than anticipated” by Hurricane Dorian, the National Weather Service in Birmingham corrected the president, assuring that “Alabama will NOT see any impacts from #Dorian.”69 After media attention to this rebuttal, Trump’s commerce secretary reportedly threatened firings in order to force a rebuke from the Weather Service’s parent agency NOAA, which issued an unsigned statement claiming the Birmingham office’s tweet was “inconsistent with probabilities from the best forecast products available at the time.” Trump then continued to claim vindication, even apparently using a black marker to alter the forecasted path of the hurricane on a weather map he displayed in the Oval Office, and then pretending when asked that he knew nothing about it. While there is a silliness to this blatant demonstration of narcissistic pettiness from the president that makes it all too easy to dismiss, that pettiness itself emphasizes the level at which state power is now being used to deny the most obvious realities and the most rigorously demonstrable facts.
This pattern of avoidance, denial and disavowal has reached heights—or depths, depending on one’s preferred metaphor—from which we can foresee existential threats to the rule of law, the conduct of scientific inquiry and the habitability of regions of the planet. After all, opposition to education in evolutionary biology had long ago politicized scientific consensus, and climate change has now brought us to the point at which the weather is politicized. The Trump administration’s pressure on NOAA staff is an example of trying to decide a dispute about facts by the application of force, here in the form of threats against employees’ careers. COINTELPRO is an example of the application of lethal institutional force to win arguments. And Reagan’s accusation of divisiveness against Carter is an example of rhetorical force deployed to neutralize inquiry. All these illustrate White’s definition of politicization, in which force silences reasoned debate.
Spiro Agnew pioneered the tactic of defining the opposition in the way Reagan did with Carter, famously calling reporters, who dared to expose the truth of Nixon’s secret military adventures and failures in Vietnam, “nattering nabobs of negativity.” Agnew was also a pioneer in the adaptation of George Wallace’s racist appeals to the expansion of Republican Party support, efforts that won him a spot on the Nixon ticket as part of the Southern Strategy, which in turn paved the way for Reagan’s Neshoba County campaign debut. Agnew’s “nattering nabobs” charge encapsulated a persistent national strategy by the right, in which media professionals have been shamed for partisanship when reporting facts the right found objectionable. Journalist Will Bunch noted this enduring influence in his 2009 obituary for William Safire, author of Agnew’s famous phrase.
The words that William Safire penned and that Spiro Agnew mouthed actually had enormous impact that has lasted until this day. They helped foster among conservatives and the folks that Nixon called “the silent majority” a growing mistrust of the mainstream media, a mistrust that grew over two generations into a form of hatred. It also started a dangerous spiral of events—journalists started bending backwards to kowtow to their conservative critics, beginning in the time of Reagan, an ill-advised shift that did not win back a single reader or viewer on the right.70
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