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SOCIAL
SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL / AFTER SEPT. 11
Anti-Americanisms,
Thick Description, and Collective Action
Jeffrey
N. Wasserstrom, Professor of History, University of Indiana
Recent
events have shown all too clearly that one form of anti-Americanism,
the virulent and apocalyptic version that inspired the terrorists
responsible for September 11, can lead to horrors of enormous
magnitude. It would be foolish to assume, though, that every
time an individual shouts an anti-American slogan or takes
part in an anti-American protest he or she is expressing support
for these vile acts, or feels the same brand of hatred for
everything associated with the U.S. that led to them. Throughout
the 1900s, after all, many groups espoused some form of anti-Americanism,
yet did not engage in or condone violence of any sort. And
within the subset of violent anti-American actions of the
past, one finds many examples of demonstrations in which no
people were harmed, let alone killed, though a building was
defaced or a purely symbolic act of violence was committed,
such as the burning of a flag. In addition, many participants
in anti-American protests of the last century were motivated
by something more specific than a wholesale disdain for all
aspects of the culture of the U.S. and contempt for all of
its residents. Some objected to particular U.S. economic policies,
yet loved Hollywood films. Some were disturbed by what they
saw as the McDonaldization of global culture, yet were uninterested
in diplomatic issues. Still others were angered by the presence
of American troops in their country, but not bothered that
U.S. fast food chains had arrived. And so on. History shows,
then, that we should not think of a single unified anti-Americanism
but rather think in terms of widely varying anti-Americanisms.
These are decidedly plural, differing from place to place
as well as from group to group within a given place, and susceptible
to change over time. And they vary greatly as well in their
levels of intensity. Since the vast literature of the social
sciences is filled with works that provide tools to help us
distinguish between things that seem similar at first glance,
we should be able to find some guidance when trying to come
to terms with this variation.
Before focusing in on what this literature has to offer, though,
it is important to stress that making sense of anti-Americanisms
is not simply of historical interest. Why? Because differently
inflected manifestations of anti-American sentiment are likely
to continue to be part of global politics in the years to
come. This seemed a sensible prediction even before September
11, since anti-American strains of a sort had been present
in some of the first protests of the twenty-first century,
including demonstrations held in conjunction with international
summits, such as the G8 meetings convened in Genoa last summer.
And in the wake of September 11, anti-American protests have
occurred everywhere from Indonesia to Nigeria to Greece. Clearly,
then, to prepare for the future as well as to understand the
present and the past, we need effective ways to talk about,
categorize, and draw distinctions between different sorts
of anti-Americanisms.
There is, moreover, good reason to feel that, in the present
climate, if we do not try explicitly to reach a fuller understanding
of the topic, we will misinterpret events taking place around
the world. It may seem common sense to assert that anti-Americanism
is bound to continue to take varied forms in the future, since
this has been the case in the past. Yet, the rise in the political
arena of polarizing rhetoric that divides the world into just
two camps, those wholeheartedly on the side of and those completely
opposed to the U.S.-led coalition, discourages us from looking
for and appreciating distinctions among different sorts of
anti-Americanism. So, too, does a sound-bite driven media
that can all too easily lull its audience into thinking that
emotionally charged sights, such as an image of a burning
flag, always signify the exact same thing no matter where
they occur.
Where exactly should we look for social scientific insights
to help counter-act this tendency toward oversimplification?
Fifteen years ago, when I began working on the history of
Chinese protests of the early-to-mid 1900s, many of which
had anti-American dimensions, two works stood out as particularly
useful. Each still seemed valuable in 1999, as I struggled
to make sense of a new round of anti-American protests that
I happened to witness in China firsthand: those that broke
out after NATO bombs mistakenly hit the Chinese Embassy in
Belgrade, killing three citizens of the PRC. And the two works
in question seem useful to me today, as I ponder international
manifestations of anti-Americanism in this new century.
The first of the two works is anthropologist Clifford Geertz's
The Interpretation of Cultures. This book does not
focus on protest but it argues powerfully for the use of a
method called "thick description" to capture the
symbolic meaning of highly charged events such as, most famously,
Balinese cock fights.1 Geertz presents this ethnographic
approach as predicated on a vision of "man as an animal
suspended in webs of significance he himself has spun"
(p. 5), a vision that he traces back to Max Weber, one of
the founders of the discipline of sociology. Those committed
to thick description, a term Geertz attributes to philosopher
Gilbert Ryle, take for granted that even the simplest act
can mean different things depending on the cultural codes
at work. Borrowing an illustration first used by Ryle, Geertz
demonstrates what he means via reference to the many things
that a person rapidly opening and closing an eye can signify.
It can be an involuntary twitch, a conspiratorial wink, or
even a parody of such a conspiratorial wink. A "thin
description" that just says that an eye opened and closed
is not enough; assuming that every twitch is just a twitch
will lead us astray in cultural analysis; what we need is
a "thick description" that separates twitches from
winks and one sort of wink from another.
What are the implications of Geertz's argument for understanding
anti-American protests? Most basically, it suggests that we
should never be satisfied with a "thin description"
of a demonstration that tells us little more than that crowd
in a distant land chanted anti-American slogans and mocked
or destroyed symbols associated with the U.S. We need to know
many specifics before we can decide what the event means.
Were the slogans generic or did they focus on a particular
issue? Were the grievances or alleged grievances against the
U.S. of recent origin or long-term standing? Was the symbol
in question a flag, an effigy of a President, or a dollar
bill? Answers to questions such as these can make a world
of difference. And we need to remember that individual members
of the same crowd can imbue identical acts with somewhat different
meanings, while observers can attribute to them ones that
are completely different. This matters. After all, the closing
and opening of an eye that one person intends as a flirtatious
wink can be misunderstood by another as merely an involuntary
twitch. And this misunderstanding can make all the difference
in their future relationship (or lack thereof).
One question always worth asking of the imagined crowd just
described is obvious. Would individual Americans who wandered
into its midst be viewed with bemusement or disdain, and if
viewed with disdain shunned, cursed at, beaten up or killed?
I learned firsthand how complex the answer to this very basic
question can be in China in 1999 when I had very different
experiences at two anti-American gatherings. The first event
I witnessed took place in Beijing on May 9 (roughly 36 hours
after the three Chinese had died in Belgrade), the second
in Shanghai on May 11. In each case, the crowd had come together
due to their outrage at what they termed "U.S.-led NATO
Hegemonism." In other ways, though, the gatherings were
very different as even a brief account such as that provided
below will show.
In Beijing, the event took the form of evening marches near
and a chaotic rally just outside of the American and British
embassies. Some members of the crowd looked at me and spit
on the ground. And one man yelled out a question from across
the street, asking if the small group of Westerners I was
part of was made up of Americans. Before we could answer,
he said that, if we were from the U.S., he would like to kill
us. He then walked away. I did not feel that I was in great
danger, even though CNN reports apparently made it seem that
all Americans in China were at great risk just then, even
if they were far from the site of a rally. One reason I was
not very scared was that there were soldiers keeping a watchful
eye on things. They were not preventing protesters from throwing
paving stones at the embassies, since the protests had the
support of the regime. Still, their very presence discouraged
anyone from doing something like killing a foreigner that
would create an international incident. I sensed a good deal
of menace in the crowd, in other words, but felt fairly safe.
At the Shanghai gathering I witnessed two nights later, which
took the form of a meeting of some two hundred people in a
large classroom on a campus, on the other hand, the mood was
not menacing at all. This was true even though this time I
was the only Westerner in the crowd and everyone knew that
I was an American. Throughout the evening, I was treated politely.
"We are angry at what your military has done and the
policies of your government, not at individual Americans."
This was the main gist of the statements that several people
made to me.
Did this difference between my two experiences have to do
with the passage of an extra 48 hours since the Chinese Embassy
in Belgrade had been hit? Emotions can, after all, grow less
intense over time. Or was it my movement to a city that was
less politicized and more internationally minded than Beijing?
Or was it because Communist Party leaders had made it even
more abundantly clear by May 11 than they had by May 9 that,
though they supported the protests, they did not want things
to get out of hand? It is impossible to choose between these
three possible explanations. My sense, though, was that each
factor played a role in making the two experiences so different.
In addition to illustrating the varied intensities and differing
forms anti-American gatherings can take, even within a single
country in a single week, my experiences in 1999 showed how
easily an international media driven by sensationalism and
sound bites can mislead. I say this because some Western reports
dealing with protests such as those I witnessed portrayed
them as part of a late-twentieth-century throwback to the
Boxerism of 1900.2 This has always perturbed me
since the Boxers had killed a significant number of foreigners
(as well many times that number of Chinese converts to Christianity),
not just taunted or roughed up a few of them (the case in
1999). The Boxers, moreover, had completely destroyed, not
just defaced or thrown rocks at buildings. In addition, while
many of the Chinese students who shouted out anti-American
slogans in 1999 readily admitted that they found many things
about the U.S. attractive, from its rock music to its universities,
the Boxers considered everything associated with the West
with contempt. To equate the protests of 1999 to Boxerism
was a classic example of mistaking a twitch for a wink, to
borrow Geertz's imagery.
I want to leave Geertz aside now, though, and turn to sociologist
Charles Tilly's From Mobilization to Revolution, the
other social science classic I found valuable in the 1980s
and still find relevant today.3 The book is devoted
to distinguishing between various forms of contentious politics.
As a result, it provides us with clues that help give us a
clearer sense of additional things we might want know, besides
whether Americans were endangered, to ensure that descriptions
of anti-American events are thick enough.
One of the most important things Tilly proposes is a tripartite
schema that categorizes collective actions on the basis of
their goals. There are, he says, "reactive" protests
(e.g. rallies to bring a deposed King back to power) that
seek to restore a pre-existing status quo. There are "competitive"
ones (such as inter-village feuds), in which a group lays
claim to the resources of another. And there are "pro-active"
struggles (such as strikes for a shorter working day), in
which groups demand new rights or resources. Many movements
will have a mixture of reactive, competitive, and pro-active
elements. Still, his ideal types remain useful in alerting
us to things to look out for when trying to make sense of
any protest.
The first
thing to note about anti-American demonstrations, in respect
to Tilly's categories, is that some of them fall cleanly into
one or another pigeon-hole, while others combine reactive,
competitive and pro-active elements in differing proportions.
For example, there have been purely "reactive" struggles
(associated with the cry "Yankee Go Home") that
were efforts solely to get American troops withdrawn from
a country. Often, though, a "competitive" dimension
emerges in these struggles, when a political faction uses
the issue to score points against a rival group more closely
linked to Washington. This seems to be the case presently
with some post-September 11 demonstrations. In countries such
as Pakistan, anti-American protests seem related to efforts
to shift the domestic balance of power.
More than
one category also needs to be considered when thinking about
protests such as those that occurred last summer in Genoa.
Many opponents of demonstrations of this sort have portrayed
them as purely "reactive," backward-looking efforts
to stop not just globalization but progress. Yet, the protesters
typically insist that they have "pro-active" goals,
and that they do not want to stand in the way of progress,
just shape it. They want to see a future in which decisions
about the division of resources are made in a more democratic,
transparent and egalitarian fashion. This can only come about,
they claim, if the U.S. role in economic affairs is radically
altered.
Tilly's
work suggests that, whenever an anti-American demonstration
makes headlines, we should ask whether it has reactive, competitive,
or pro-active aspects to it, and if more than one element
is present how it fits into the overall picture. We also need
to know, if we are to have a sufficiently "thick description"
at our disposal, whether participants and observers have defined
the event in differing ways when it comes to these goals.
It is particularly common, for those who are criticized or
feel threatened by a protest to insist that it is merely a
reactive event, even though the participants make different
claims. We need a lot of information to decide which view
of the action gets us closer to the truth.
Rather
than continue in this abstract vein, the rest of this essay
will be devoted to a rapid survey of Chinese protests of the
first half of the twentieth century that were targeted, at
least in part, at foreigners or foreign governments. My hope
is that this will give readers a clearer sense of just how
varied anti-American protests have been and are likely to
continue to be, as well as of how Geertz and Tilly can help
us make sense of this variation. The quick historical survey
below will also reinforce other points made above, since each
of the events described below, though very different, was
dismissed by some opponents of the crowd in the same terms
as were the 1999 demonstrations: that is, as nothing more
than Boxerism revisited.
The Boxers
themselves are the natural place to start. These insurgents
were not specifically anti-American, but rather anti-Christian.
Still, missionaries and diplomats from the U.S. were among
their targets. In a sense, the actions of the Boxers were
very close to the ideal type of "reactive" contention
that Tilly describes. They wanted to return China to a situation
in which it contained no Christians. It is worth noting, however,
that recent work on the Boxers has shown that much of their
violence took the form of attacks between villagers who had
long been competitors for local resources. When members of
one of these groups converted to Christianity, foreign missionaries
would sometimes intercede on their behalf with Chinese government
officials, tipping the balance in local competitions for water
rights and things like that in the favor of the converts.
Thus anti-Christian violence often came to have a competitive
element to it.
The next
stop on our whirlwind tour of Chinese history is 1905, when
protests that were specifically anti-American took place.
The goal this time was to end immigration laws that discriminated
against Chinese who wanted to enter the U.S. The movement
was unlike the Boxer one in many ways. Most notably, it was
non-violent. The protesters went to great lengths to distance
themselves from the Boxers, stressing that they wanted to
see a policy changed, not people hurt. The main tactic they
turned to was an economic boycott. Though they did not use
these terms, they were self-consciously rejecting what they
saw as a purely reactive as well as violent movement of the
past. Their goal was not to return to the past, when China
and the West did not interact with one another, they argued,
but rather the pro-active one of making relations with the
U.S. more equal.
In 1919,
a new round of anti-imperialist protests, known as the May
4th Movement, broke out. Once again, it was primarily non-violent
and relied on a boycott. There was a difference here with
1905, though, in that it was not American products that were
boycotted. In fact, the May 4th Movement of that year was
not anti-American at all.
Why not?
Because the main grievance was terms of the Treaty of Versailles
that transferred control of Chinese territory formerly held
by Germany to Japan, rather than returning it to China, in
the wake of World War I. Since President Wilson had called
for all nations to be granted a greater degree of self-determination,
the United States was seen as one of the more admirable foreign
powers of the day. The boycott was directed at Japan alone,
though the people the crowds were angriest at were the domestic
officials they accused of being corrupt and selling out the
country's interest for personal gain.
The May
4th Movement was a generally pro-active struggle. Nevertheless,
as often happens, those who were the target of the protest
refused to see it in these terms. Japanese commentators tried
to convince people that competition and reaction defined its
true nature. They insisted that one Chinese political faction
(then out of power) was merely using the Treaty of Versailles
as a pre-text for trying to embarrass their rivals (the Warlords
currently in control of Beijing). They also accused the May
4th activists, many of whom were avid fans of Western political
ideas and some of whom were Christians, of being just like
the reactive and violent anti-Christian Boxers.
Moving forward in time to the protests that followed World
War II, we find a still different mixture of elements. The
first major anti-imperialist demonstrations of this period,
those that took place in late 1946 and early 1947, had a definite
reactive twist to them. This is because the protesters' main
demand was that American servicemen leave China. These protests
were triggered by an incident in which two American G.I.'s
raped a female Chinese student.
In 1948, a new grievance, American efforts to rebuild Japan,
led to a revival of demonstrations against the United States.
Some protesters argued then that it was grotesque that the
U.S. should be doing so much for the country that they viewed
as the arch-villain of World War II.4 Once again,
though no foreigners were killed and many of the protesters
were attracted by Western ideas, some of those criticized
muttered that here again was Boxerism.
Even though proponents and opponents of the 1947 and 1948
protests often accepted that they were reactive and just argued
over what sort of reactive events the demonstrations were,
there were both competitive and pro-active dimensions to these
struggles as well. This is because the leading faction of
the Nationalist Party was blamed for being too willing to
accommodate the Americans. This allowed competitors for power
within that party to use the protests to bolster their positions.
It also, though, strengthened the position of and was used
by the Chinese Communist Party, an opposition group that was
trying to push China in a new direction.
My main point throughout this rapid survey has been to reinforce
the basic point with which I began: when anti-American protests
break out anywhere, we need to ask a wide range of questions
about them before we can determine just what sort they are.
Some of these questions need to be historical, since every
event's meaning is derived in part by what has happened before,
and there were at least slight echoes of all of the collective
actions mentioned above in the Chinese demonstrations that
occurred in 1999 that I witnessed. Other questions we need
to ask have to do with fissures in contemporary political
alliances, which can give a competitive dimension to reactive
demonstrations and even to pro-active ones. And still other
questions should have to do with different things entirely
such as whether physical violence, symbolic violence or no
violence at all is involved.
If we fail to ask these questions, and demand that journalists
on the spot ask them (as they only sometimes do), we will
continually mistake twitches for winks and winks for twitches.
Especially now, in the wake of September 11, it is important
that we have the best tools at our disposal to prevent us
from misreading these signs.
Footnotes
1 Clifford Geertz, The Interpretation of Culture
(New York: Basic Books, 1973).
2 See, for example, the breathless commentary in "China
Stokes Anti-U.S. Fires, Recalling Blunders of the Past,"
USA Today, May 11, 1999, p. 14A. There were some reporters,
such as John Gittings of the Guardian and Susan Lawrence of
the Far Eastern Economic Review, whose coverage was
much more nuanced. Still, when I returned to the United States
and spoke to people about the sense they had gotten of the
protests by following them via television, it seems that the
USA Today report was far from atypical.
3 Charles Tilly, From Mobilization to Revolution
(New York: Random House, 1978).
4 For more details on the protests discussed here and
citations to relevant Chinese and Western language sources
on them, see Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom, Student Protests in
Twentieth-Century China: The View from Shanghai (Stanford:
Stanford University Press, 1991) and idem., "Student
Protests in Fin-de-siecle China," New Left Review,
237 (September/October 1999), pp. 52-76.
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