The Myth of Cosmopolitanism
Sunday Review / International New York Times | 2 July 2016
Ross Douthat |
NOW
that populist rebellions are taking Britain out of the European Union
and the Republican Party out of contention for the presidency, perhaps
we should speak no more of left and right, liberals and conservatives.
From now on the great political battles will be fought between
nationalists and internationalists, nativists and globalists. From now
on the loyalties that matter will be narrowly tribal — Make America
Great Again, this blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England — or multicultural and cosmopolitan.
Well,
maybe. But describing the division this way has one great flaw. It
gives the elite side of the debate (the side that does most of the
describing) too much credit for being truly cosmopolitan.
Genuine
cosmopolitanism is a rare thing. It requires comfort with real
difference, with forms of life that are truly exotic relative to one’s
own. It takes its cue from a Roman playwright’s line that “nothing human
is alien to me,” and goes outward ready to be transformed by what it
finds.
The people who consider themselves “cosmopolitan” in today’s West, by contrast, are part of a meritocratic order
that transforms difference into similarity, by plucking the best and
brightest from everywhere and homogenizing them into the peculiar
species that we call “global citizens.”
This
species is racially diverse (within limits) and eager to assimilate the
fun-seeming bits of foreign cultures — food, a touch of exotic
spirituality. But no less than Brexit-voting Cornish villagers, our
global citizens think and act as members of a tribe.
They
have their own distinctive worldview (basically liberal Christianity
without Christ), their own common educational experience, their own
shared values and assumptions (social psychologists call these WEIRD — for Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich and Democratic), and of course their own outgroups
(evangelicals, Little Englanders) to fear, pity and despise. And like
any tribal cohort they seek comfort and familiarity: From London to
Paris to New York, each Western “global city” (like each “global
university”) is increasingly interchangeable, so that wherever the
citizen of the world travels he already feels at home.
It
is still possible to disappear into someone else’s culture, to leave
the global-citizen bubble behind. But in my experience the people who do
are exceptional or eccentric or natural outsiders to begin with — like a
young writer I knew who had traveled Africa and Asia more or less on
foot for years, not for a book but just because, or the daughter of
evangelical missionaries who grew up in South Asia and lived in
Washington, D.C., as a way station before moving her own family to the
Middle East. They are not the people who ascend to power, who become the
insiders against whom populists revolt.
In
my own case — to speak as an insider for a moment — my cosmopolitanism
probably peaked when I was about 11 years old, when I was simultaneously
attending tongues-speaking Pentecostalist worship services, playing
Little League in a working-class neighborhood, eating alongside aging
hippies in macrobiotic restaurants on weekends, all the while attending a
liberal Episcopalian parochial school. (It’s a long story.)
Whereas
once I began attending a global university, living in global cities,
working and traveling and socializing with my fellow global citizens, my
experience of genuine cultural difference became far more superficial.
Not that there’s necessarily anything wrong with this. Human beings seek community, and permanent openness is hard to sustain.
But it’s a problem that our tribe of self-styled cosmopolitans doesn’t see itself clearly as
a tribe: because that means our leaders can’t see themselves the way
the Brexiteers and Trumpistas and Marine Le Pen voters see them.
They
can’t see that what feels diverse on the inside can still seem like an
aristocracy to the excluded, who look at cities like London and see, as Peter Mandler wrote
for Dissent after the Brexit vote, “a nearly hereditary professional
caste of lawyers, journalists, publicists, and intellectuals, an
increasingly hereditary caste of politicians, tight coteries of cultural
movers-and-shakers richly sponsored by multinational corporations.”
They
can’t see that paeans to multicultural openness can sound like
self-serving cant coming from open-borders Londoners who love Afghan
restaurants but would never live near an immigrant housing project, or
American liberals who hail the end of whiteness while doing everything
possible to keep their kids out of majority-minority schools.
They
can’t see that their vision of history’s arc bending inexorably away
from tribe and creed and nation-state looks to outsiders like something
familiar from eras past: A powerful caste’s self-serving explanation for
why it alone deserves to rule the world.
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