by Andrew Burt

The United States themselves are the essentially the greatest poem -- Walt Whitman
United States themselves are essentially the greatest poem (Walt Whitman)

Author Woden Teachout talks about her book Capture the Flag

The history of the American flag is the story of a nation struggling to find its identity, Woden Teachout argues in her book, Capture the Flag: A Political History of American Patriotism.

Teachout, a professor of graduate studies in history and culture at the online Union Institute and University, spoke about the evolving meaning of the flag in American culture.

What led you to write this book?

After 9/11, there was the buildup to the Iraq war.

I went to one of those demonstrations in February of 2003, which were some of the largest demonstrations in world history, and I took an American flag to one of these demonstrations. People couldn't believe that I was there.

When they saw the flag, they saw it as a pro-war symbol. I saw it as a symbol of democracy and people telling their government what policies to pursue. It was this really startling moment for me.

What does the history of the flag tell us about the United States?

It tells a lot. This is not about Betsy Ross.

It's about using the flag as a lens into understanding the traditions of American patriotism, what those traditions have been, and how they function politically. One of the interesting things that has come out of this is that there are two real traditions of patriotism.

There's this nationalist tradition, which many people think of when they think of patriotism. It emphasizes subscription to government policies. It has a lot of ritual involved. It's really about loyalty -- that's the key thing. Loyalty to a group of people and to a government.

And at the same time, there's this other tradition, which is the humanitarian tradition. And that is more focused on ideals, and the government becomes a means of realizing those ideals, rather than the subject of loyalty itself. So that humanitarian tradition has been around. It hasn't been tapped into too much in the last generation, but it's there.

When did the flag first become the symbol of patriotism we know it to be?

The 1890s. The Civil War is the moment where you begin to see it all over the country. But the 1890s is the first moment in peacetime when people would actually fly flags over their houses.

What does the flag stand for today?

There are so many things. I think that it's undergoing a real transformation right now. The way that we think about the flag now has really been shaped from the Vietnam era. And the ways in which it was used as a pro-Nixon and pro-war symbol and it continued to have a fairly strong pro-war meaning during the last 40 years. I think what we see now is that Obama tried to take that back quite a bit. He really works the rhetoric of patriotism.

Is the history of the flag the history of a symbol being co-opted for political use?

That's, I think, the cynical version. The flag becomes a symbol -- I say in the book that the story of the flag is a story of a country in search of itself. The flag and the rhetoric of patriotism become a way to legitimize different visions of what this country might look like and to attach those visions to this whole broader history. So, obviously, sometimes people use it cynically, and they're very clever about it. But I don't think you can say that most people are using it in that way.

Is the flag unique in that manner? Are there other symbols that play that role?

It's the most powerful one.

How does patriotism in the 21st century differ from patriotism in the 20th century?

Obviously, there was that really extraordinary moment after 9/11--I think it was one of the few moments in my lifetime -- when there was this sense of national unity that was so strong. And then, of course, we had the war, and that's been quite divisive in terms of the flag. I don't see a change. It has been the nationalist tradition predominating quite strongly in the first eight years of this century. I see a humanitarian element coming out, but I don't think it's a moment of total transformation.

Does the American flag have a different history from other nations' flags?

Nationalism came into full flower in a lot of countries right around the same time -- in that 1890s period. In other countries, it tended to be the government promoting these ideas of nationhood. Here the people promoting things like Flag Day and the Pledge of Allegiance were not government functionaries. They were these independent patriotic groups like the Daughters of the American Revolution, Sons of the American Revolution, the Grand Army of the Republic. And so, they were citizens.

Citizens have always felt the ability to take ownership of the flag and to really clearly distinguish between the country and the government.

Is patriotism harmful?

There are so many dangers in patriotism. And we see governments, including our own, committing terrible things in the name of patriotism. However, there's something very redemptive within it that we can tap into. It provides a common conversation, a common culture, a way to talk about what our values are, that's critically, critically important.

How about the history of the flag pin?

They were used initially in the election of 1896 by Mark Hanna as a way to consolidate this sense that to be a Republican in that election was to be a patriot. He used it very, very effectively. They emerged again at various moments--World War I and then, obviously, quite recently.

Why do car dealerships always have the biggest flags?

I do not know. There must be a special factory for car dealerships.

 

Available at Amazon.com: Capture the Flag: A Political History of American Patriotism

 

 

NEWS & CURRENT EVENTS ...

WORLD | AFRICA | ASIA | EUROPE | LATIN AMERICA | MIDDLE EAST | UNITED STATES | ECONOMICS | EDUCATION | ENVIRONMENT | FOREIGN POLICY | POLITICS

 

Capture the Flag: Political History of the Stars & Stripes