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American Without Tears
BY JOHN PALATTELLA
"Here, There, and Everywhere": The Foreign Politics of American Popular Culture
• Edited by Reinhold Wagnleitner and Elaine Tyler May • University Press of New
England • 400 pp • $24.95

In November 1991, the German film director Wim Wenders warned the people of
Berlin that "we are all still foreigners and are trying to settle an unfamiliar
land called Germany." Oddly enough, he was referring not to the internal
troubles of his newly reunified nation but to the menace of "American images
that more and more exclusively nourish the imaginations of the peoples of this
world." Two years later, a similar fear of American cultural imperialism
inspired the efforts of French president Jacques Chirac to shelter his
country's film industry from competition. "A society that abandons to others
its means of representation," declared Chirac, "is an enslaved society."

It's undeniable that parts of Europe, if not the world, are saturated with
American mass culture: If Michael Jackson isn't the most famous person in the
world, Madonna probably is, and even the worst Hollywood sequels crowd the
video shops of Peshawar. But that hardly means that the complaints of Wenders,
Chirac, and countless European intellectuals are justified. Such laments tend
to presume that America's cultural exports lead ineluctably to the colonization
of foreign minds and, conversely, that the protection of markets by quotas,
tariffs, and subsidies nurtures native talents. Challenging these assumptions
is the aim of "Here, There, and Everywhere": The Foreign Politics of American
Popular Culture, a collection of essays edited by Reinhold Wagnleitner and
Elaine Tyler May.

"Who was in charge of all of this, anyway?" Wagnleitner and May ask, regarding
American cultural exports, in their introduction. "Was it Wall Street, Madison
Avenue, the Pentagon, the CIA, or Hollywood? ... Or was it simply 'the people,'
nationalities be damned?" Most of the twenty-one contributors to "Here, There,
and Everywhere" maintain that American culture abroad neither ushers in a
nightmare of alienation nor serves as the fifth column that various U.S.
government agencies wanted to establish in Europe as a bulwark against the
Soviet Union. The reason, Wagnleitner and May contend, is that American mass
culture changes meaning when it crosses national borders. In the argot of
cultural studies, it becomes an ingredient in a "cultural mélange created by
creolization or hybridization." Woody Allen's Alvy Singer may be a whiny jerk
in Manhattan, but he comes off as a veritable philosophe on the Champs-Elysées.

"Here, There, and Everywhere" is a fitting vehicle for the editors' efforts to
put the very idea of Americanization to rest (even if the title is taken from
the Beatles, courtesy of the UK). The volume began as a seminar held at the
Schloss Leopoldskron, a castle perched on a mountain near Salzburg, Austria.
Most Americans know the Schloss as the setting for the film version of The
Sound of Music. But since 1947, the Schloss has also been the home of the
Salzburg Seminar, founded by three Harvard students as a forum where European
intellectuals could gather to discuss American culture. "From the very
beginning, European students had invited their American colleagues to organize
an exchange forum," Oliver Schmidt explains in his essay on the Salzburg
Seminar's early years. "Letters, applications, and evaluation reports indicate
over and over young Europeans' dual interest in, and suspicion of, the emerging
formula of the ëAmerican way of life.'"

Much of "Here, There, and Everywhere" dwells on the vexed reactions to American
culture during the Cold War era. Thomas Fuchs, for instance, argues that a
profound hatred for American rock 'n' roll was perhaps the only thing that West
German capitalists shared with East German communists. Elsewhere, American mass
culture was embraced so fully that it was no longer treated as an import, let
alone a threat. Michael May's profile of Oleg Lundstrem, an octogenarian
Russian jazz musician, opens with Lundstrem scolding May for mischaracterizing
his passion. "Jazz belongs to the whole world," Lundstrem insists. "You know--
at one time the waltz was Viennese music, but now it is international. It is
the same way with jazz. Once it is international--you can do nothing to stop
it." Indeed, at the end of the piece, after hinting at the variety of bleats
and blasts seeping out of basement bars in contemporary Moscow, the American
leaves no doubt that Lundstrem has won him over. May confesses he is amazed
that jazz, treated by Soviet-era Stalinists as the epitome of capitalist
decadence, has become "an oasis of Russian virtues--intensity, dedication, and
soul--in a country drowning in American commercialism."

May's piece is by far the collection's sunniest, but most of the contributors
are comfortable with the idea that Europeans can admire American popular
culture without necessarily absorbing America's dreaded free-market politics.
Some essays, however, do raise difficult questions. Nosa Owens-Ibie's
"Programmed for Domination" portrays the fierce economic and cultural pressure
that American broadcasters have exerted on the Nigerian television industry.
When the Nigerian government sought to launch a state-controlled public
broadcasting system more than forty years ago, the country lacked both its own
hardware and its own programming. Consequently it ended up securing them from
NBC, but only after agreeing to allot nearly half of the government station's
airtime to the American network.

The commercialization of Nigerian public broadcasting over the last decade has
hardly stemmed the tide of imports; CNN and Pat Robertson's Christian
Broadcasting Network have become standard programming fare, further
consolidating the place of American television in Nigeria. One doesn't need to
believe in the inviolability of traditional cultures to wonder if this is quite
what the champions of hybridization have been hoping for.

John Palattella is associate editor of University Business and the editor of
LF's Breakthrough Books column. Home | Book Reviews | Editorial Content | Where
to get it | Ordering Information | Advertising

Copyright © 2000 Lingua Franca,Inc. All rights reserved.

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A<>E<>R

Integrity has no need of rules. -Albert Camus (1913-1960)
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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