Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

It’s nativism all over again

No matter whether Trump or Clinton win, this forceful fear of the other will remain a threat to the open and embracing ethos of the US

- KANISHK THAROOR Kanishk Tharoor is the author of Swimmer Among the Stars: Stories The views expressed are personal

In the late 19th century, a set of ideas known together as the “Teutonic germ theory” held sway over academic circles in Britain and the United States. It laid out a racial explanatio­n for the evolution of democracy. According to the theory, the origin (or “germ”) of democratic institutio­ns lay in the ancient Teutonic forests of Germany, from where it migrated with the AngloSaxon­s to Britain and then to America. Only Anglo-Saxons, the reasoning went, were properly able to extend democracy and freedom around the world.

Proponents of the theory venerated the Battle of Teutoburge­r Wald (which took place in 9 AD) as a pivotal moment in world history, when rugged, individual­istic Germanic tribes defeated the legions of despotic Rome. The British historian EA Freeman believed so strongly in the superiorit­y of his primordial Germanic heritage that he insisted on speaking a distilled English, shorn of its many borrowings from Latin and Romance languages.

This interest in the past wasn’t simply historical obscuranti­sm. It coloured the way scholars and policy-makers looked at the peoples around them. Herbert Baxter Adams, the chief American advocate of the theory, tutored future US president Woodrow Wilson. Coupled with other faddish concepts of the time like social Darwinism and eugenics, the belief in the innate virtue of the “Anglo-Saxon stock” deeply affected how Americans perceived newcomers.

Unsurprisi­ngly, this period in American history was a time of tremendous migration. Waves of people from southern and eastern Europe arrived in the US during the latter half of the 19th century. They were often met with disdain as “beaten men from beaten races; representi­ng the worst failures in the struggle for existence.” Italians were described as “the refuse of the murder breeds of Southern Europe,” while Jews were an aberration of the evolutiona­ry process, like vermin “capable of living under conditions that would exterminat­e men whom centuries of natural selection had not adapted to endure squalor.” American nativists viewed the new arrivals as a fundamenta­l threat to the Anglo-Saxon spirit of the nation.

The nativists lost, and the Teutonic germ theory fell out of vogue in the 20th century as Germany became an enemy of both Britain and the United States. Social Darwinism, eugenics and the belief in the superiorit­y of the Teutonic or Aryan race were all perfected with cosmic ferocity in Nazi Germany, resulting in the Holocaust. Thereafter, American scholars found it difficult to invoke the virtues of Germanic identity.

But the nativism inherent to the theory didn’t disappear. It mutated and adapted to changing conditions in the United States. Where once Irish, blacks, Italians, and Jews were the subjects of its scorn, Latinos, Asians, and now Muslims became the targets. Nobody (except for seriously fringe white supremacis­ts) talks any more about guarding the purity of Anglo-Saxon Protestant America, but people do fret about the future of the Christian, English-speaking, white or European civilisati­onal character of the country.

Former presidenti­al candidate and right-wing ideologue Pat Buchanan was the most prominent critic of immigratio­n at the end of the 20th century. “The whites may dis- cover what it is like to ride in the back of the bus,” he wrote recently, suggesting that only non-whites should ever sit in the back. “We have only sought to preserve the country we grew up in.” Harvard political scientist Samuel P. Huntington (he of the controvers­ial “Clash of Civilizati­ons” thesis) gave anti-Hispanic xenophobia a scholarly gloss, echoing his 19th century forebears in lamenting the poverty, fertility rates, and cultural difference of Mexican immigrants.

For decades, this kind of anti-immigrant thinking enjoyed some currency in American politics, but it was usually kept at arms-length from the centre. The rise of Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump has changed that. Trump has fomented and courted nativism, making it the central animating force of his campaign. “I feel like he’s the last chance we have to establish law and order and preserve the culture I grew up in,” a white Trump supporter told the New York Times. “Immigrants from Africa, South America, some parts of Asia and the Middle East come from failed cultures,” another commented, worrying that a United States with more of such people “will fail,” too.

It doesn’t matter that their concerns are unfounded (growing numbers of Spanish-speakers don’t tear the fabric of the nation; immigratio­n from Mexico has tailed off in recent years; Muslims form a wealthy, well-assimilate­d, infinitesi­mally small percentage of the population; white people retain the vast majority of positions of political, economic, and cultural power). Nativism is the product of emotions, not facts. But it is damning that the language of the 19th century has resurfaced in this electoral season. No matter whether Trump or Clinton win in November, this snarling energy, this forceful fear of the other will remain a threat to the open and embracing ethos of the United States.

THE TEUTONIC GERM THEORY FELL OUT OF VOGUE IN THE 20TH CENTURY AS GERMANY BECAME AN ENEMY OF BOTH BRITAIN AND THE US. SOCIAL DARWINISM, EUGENICS AND THE BELIEF IN THE SUPERIORIT­Y OF THE TEUTONIC OR ARYAN RACE WERE PERFECTED WITH COSMIC FEROCITY IN NAZI GERMANY

 ?? NYT ?? Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump has fomented and courted nativism, making it the central animating force of his campaign
NYT Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump has fomented and courted nativism, making it the central animating force of his campaign
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