The Commercial Appeal

In virus times, Americans find they have shared experience­s

Ted Anthony

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

As an uneasy March unspooled, as coronaviru­s dread descended upon the United States, it became commonplac­e – and, for public figures, quite practical – to point out how, unlike most major events in the 21st century, this was an unusually communal moment.

There is power and authority in invoking shared experience, whether it comes from the president (“We are all in this together”), the governor of New York (“Nobody’s alone. We are all in the same situation”) or a random Pittsburgh disc jockey (“Everybody’s in the same boat”).

Even while at odds, Americans crave shared experience­s – an understand­able yearning for a nation quilted together from an unlikely patchwork of background­s, traditions and beliefs. And shared adversity can unite people.

But as it unfolds before us, is this period actually that increasing­ly rare of things – a genuinely shared American experience, a touchpoint that touches all? In an age of fragmentat­ion, what might that mean?

It’s hardly news that many facets of American life have splintered in recent years – not only politicall­y, but in an ondemand culture swimming in socialmedi­a echo chambers, endless news sources and confirmation biases around every corner.

Tens of millions of Americans are facing the same thing, yet in entirely different ways, and deliberate­ly avoiding each other in the process.

The unity that comes in the togetherne­ss part of shared experience – as when so many people congregate­d in their own communitie­s after 9/11 to mourn – is, for many, entirely absent. It’s a paradox: We, if a “we” is even possible in such a diverse republic, are experienci­ng this together – separately.

“What we’ve got is a situation where we’re supposed to physically isolate, but we’re socially, electronic­ally connected in dramatical­ly new ways,” said Daniel F. Chambliss, a sociologis­t at Hamilton College in upstate New York. “The trick is, are they actually thinking of things in the same way?”

Almost certainly not, at least not yet. There is evidence so far – philosophi­cal and practical – that these disruptive times are not a mass uniter.

As of this weekend, cars with New York plates were being stopped in Rhode Island and their occupants directed into quarantine – hardly a we’reall-just-americans moment. Some Midwestern­ers are upset that the coasts aren’t isolating enough.

In Pennsylvan­ia, the less-affected west looks at the turnpike that crosses the state and wonders what’s headed its way.

And that’s only geography. Economic

stress, too, dictates whether an experience is shared: Those isolating on a 1acre suburban property are facing different days than their fellow Americans in low-income housing or 40-story apartment buildings. For the homeless, living out a “quarantine” on the street is hardly a unifying moment.

The shared experience is not on the same timeline, either. The saga is unfolding in different stages in New York City than in Middlesbor­o, Kentucky, or Coeur d’alene, Idaho, which interrupts shared experience even if self-isolation connects them.

At its heart, all this is supposed to be a feature of the United States, not a bug. There has always been a push-pull between regional and national. The notion of local and state identity coexisting with overall Americanne­ss was explicitly baked into the country’s founding documents.

But big events have injected national experience everywhere. During World War II, stories delivered to Americans in newsreels, movies, network radio updates and news agency dispatches in local papers shaped an “American” view that saturated local ones.

That endured for decades as TV carried the nation through the Kennedy assassinat­ion, the Vietnam War and the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979-81. Dominant voices like Walter Cronkite’s gave Americans a “that’s the way it is” sensibilit­y even as many were having vastly different experience­s.

Today, though, a media illusion of togetherne­ss – while comforting and useful in many instances – tends to group Americans more by specific experience­s and political outlooks than by geography or an overall sense of national purpose.

“You’re seeing local experience­s where this is affecting `my community,’ but nationally my impression is that this is not something that is bringing us together as Americans living through this. Maybe in two weeks,” said Jennifer

Talarico, a psychology professor at Lafayette College in Easton, Pa., who studies personal experience­s of watershed public events.

“To identify a shared experience, there needs to be a community that shares that experience,” she says. “Is it happening to `us’? Is it happening to `my’ social group, `my’ people? If it’s happening to `my’ people, I will talk about it in a certain way.”

The “my people” part of that is dicey. Americans have always been drawn to single narratives; in some ways, this nation exists only because it told the story of its existence in its founding documents. In reality, though, there are just about as many storylines as there are Americans.

Italian novelist Francesca Melandri, in isolation in Rome after her nation’s outbreak, published a letter in The Guardian on Friday aimed at fellow Europeans “from your future.” It might as well have been written to Americans, too.

“We are now where you will be in a few days,” she wrote. “That boat in which you’ll be sailing in order to defeat the epidemic will not look the same to everyone, nor is it actually the same for everyone: It never was.”

Perhaps, then, it is a paradox. For Americans, maybe the shared experience is realizing as this washes over us that although it might feel we’re in similar straits, in fact this is a moment that is experience­d differently depending on the eyes that see it.

The question, though, is whether that’s useful in a moment that is a strange and surreal collection of fragments that resist real understand­ing.

Consider the words of Edna Register Boone of Mobile, Ala., who was 11 when the influenza pandemic hit as World War I was ending. She remembered those days in an oral history given to Alabama Public Health before she died in 2011.

“It brought families closer together. It brought our little town closer together because we all suffered losses, one way or the other,” she said. “We were like a great big family, you might say.”

That was 1918, when an American mass culture was just beginning to emerge. Today, substitute “nation” for “our little town” and you’ll see one place where the United States could end up by the time autumn arrives.

“You look at communitie­s that have experience­d disasters. And they change. They change the ways that they have of communicat­ing with each other,” says Kate Yurgil, an expert on disaster and trauma at Loyola University New Orleans.

“It builds the community in ways that future disasters don’t necessaril­y have the same catastroph­ic effect on them,” she says. “This is an opportunit­y for us to connect with each other.”

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA/AP, FILE ?? With the coronaviru­s outbreak, tens of millions of Americans are facing the same thing. Yet there is evidence so far – philosophi­cal and practical – that these disruptive times are not a mass uniter.
CHARLES KRUPA/AP, FILE With the coronaviru­s outbreak, tens of millions of Americans are facing the same thing. Yet there is evidence so far – philosophi­cal and practical – that these disruptive times are not a mass uniter.

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