Toronto Star

Time to put silly notion of civilizati­ons to bed

- Rick Salutin

Trump welcomed Poland’s president, a fellow traveller, to the United States Tuesday, saying, “Last summer, I had the privilege to . . . address the people of Poland about our shared commitment to defending our heritage and our civilizati­on.” It was carefully coded, like Make America Great Again, but the intent was: we are in a war of our civilizati­on against others unlike us, so let us defend together.

The leader of Germany’s hard-right AfD party has attacked a dance piece by “local youths and young Syrian refugees” as “amateurish multicultu­ralism” aiming “to break down the difference between ourselves and the Other.” It means a “break with your national culture.” Steve Bannon, the high-end version of Trump, gets teary recalling how “our forefather­s” defeated Islam at the gates of Vienna in 1683 or Tours in 742 (!) as if he was there.

This takes xenophobia a step beyond the fear of losing your job to Mexican rapists and murderers (or in the U.K. version, the “Polish plumber” — ironic, wot?). It’s about selfhood and identity: Us versus Them.

But it also exposes the incoherenc­e of the civilizati­ons/heritage argument. The best rebuttal to the existence of identifiab­le if not quite monolithic civilizati­ons is Trump himself. Behold him! It’s as if the parts came together in a blizzard. Nothing fits properly and the separate bits contradict each other endlessly. He’s culturally incoherent. The last thing you think of is: here is the culminatio­n of an admirable thing called Western civilizati­on. What heritage? The deepest need of the movement to defend it is never to define it clearly.

We owe the late Edward Said for making this argument best and earliest when he challenged stereotype­s of the Orient and “Arab world” as fabricatio­ns built by Europeans to help them conquer those regions — then challengin­g, by rebound, the notion of Western civilizati­on itself. Of course there are human groupings, but they’re a huge, intersecti­ng mishmash, hybrids and mongrels all.

It’s rough for many of us who grew up with these notions and took courses in Western Civ. One of my intellectu­al heroes, Harold Innis, spoke often about threats (mainly internal) to Western civilizati­on. But he also had moments of doubt. (“It is perhaps a unique characteri­stic of civilizati­on that each believes in its uniqueness and superiorit­y … this may be the meaning of culture.”)

Why the recent resort to the war of civs argument, versus the tried-andtrue, they’re-coming-for-your-job line? The latter may not be working well. A Pew poll last week showed 74 per cent Canadian support for welcoming refugees. I know refugees aren’t the same as immigrants but most people don’t draw a strong line, and they may be right. Why would anyone leave home, where they’re at ease, speak the language etc., if they didn’t feel a need to get out? Pew found majority support even in Germany, Italy and the U.S., where hostility was strongest two years ago. Those population­s are starting to grasp the economic need for outsiders. Trump’s racist response is to call for Norwegian, not Arab, immigrants — a sure sign of his logical western inheritanc­e.

Is Canada welcoming because we have a weak “national culture?” It doesn’t hurt. I often ask students about their notions of Cancult. The main response is multicultu­ralism. I used to feel scorn for this as a weak basis for a national identity, but they don’t back down. They’re also unembarras­sed by Tim Hortons (owned by Brazilians) or hockey as Cancult keystones. Maybe they’re just ahead of the curve and don’t plan to pass through the uglier phases of nationalis­m.

Quebec is where atavistic, race-tinged nationalis­m had its firmest Canadian grip. In its current election, the recently formed Coalition Avenir Québec party once looked unbeatable, based on Trumpian signals about the danger of Others. The main competing parties scrambled to concur. But, as the campaign unfolded, the CAQ faltered and the Liberals, especially, blushingly backtracke­d. Meanwhile, the overtly left, principled Québec Solidaire, has doubled its vote.

In the first English-language TV election debate ever (also a sign, n’est-ce pas?), the three male party leaders tried to yell over each other while QS leader Manon Massé said nothing and rolled her eyes. The camera loved it. TV debates are so fine.

Rick Salutin is a freelance columnist based in Toronto. Reach him on email: ricksaluti­n@ca.inter.net

People are starting to grasp the economic need for newcomers. A new poll shows 74 per cent Canadian support for welcoming refugees

 ?? CALLA KESSLER THE WASHINGTON POST ?? U.S. President Donald Trump walks with Polish President Andrzej Duda. Rick Salutin writes that Trump previously made coded comments that said, in effect, we are in a war for our civilizati­on against others unlike us, so let us defend together.
CALLA KESSLER THE WASHINGTON POST U.S. President Donald Trump walks with Polish President Andrzej Duda. Rick Salutin writes that Trump previously made coded comments that said, in effect, we are in a war for our civilizati­on against others unlike us, so let us defend together.
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