The Dumbing Of
America
Call Me a Snob, but Really, We're a
Nation of Dunces
By Susan Jacoby
17/02/08 "Washington
Post" --
"The mind of this country, taught to aim at low
objects, eats upon itself." Ralph Waldo Emerson offered
that observation in 1837, but his words echo with
painful prescience in today's very different United
States. Americans are in serious intellectual trouble --
in danger of losing our hard-won cultural capital to a
virulent mixture of anti-intellectualism,
anti-rationalism and low expectations.
This is the last subject
that any candidate would dare raise on the long and
winding road to the
White House. It is almost impossible to talk about
the manner in which public ignorance contributes to
grave national problems without being labeled an
"elitist," one of the most powerful pejoratives that can
be applied to anyone aspiring to high office. Instead,
our politicians repeatedly assure Americans that they
are just "folks," a patronizing term that you will
search for in vain in important presidential speeches
before 1980. (Just imagine: "We here highly resolve that
these dead shall not have died in vain . . . and that
government of the folks, by the folks, for the folks,
shall not perish from the earth.") Such exaltations of
ordinariness are among the distinguishing traits of
anti-intellectualism in any era.
The classic work on this
subject by
Columbia University historian Richard Hofstadter,
"Anti-Intellectualism in American Life," was published
in early 1963, between the anti-communist crusades of
the McCarthy era and the social convulsions of the late
1960s. Hofstadter saw American anti-intellectualism as a
basically cyclical phenomenon that often manifested
itself as the dark side of the country's democratic
impulses in religion and education. But today's brand of
anti-intellectualism is less a cycle than a flood. If
Hofstadter (who died of leukemia in 1970 at age 54) had
lived long enough to write a modern-day sequel, he would
have found that our era of 24/7 infotainment has
outstripped his most apocalyptic predictions about the
future of American culture.
Dumbness, to paraphrase
the late senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, has been
steadily defined downward for several decades, by a
combination of heretofore irresistible forces. These
include the triumph of video culture over print culture
(and by video, I mean every form of digital media, as
well as older electronic ones); a disjunction between
Americans' rising level of formal education and their
shaky grasp of basic geography, science and history; and
the fusion of anti-rationalism with
anti-intellectualism.
First and foremost among
the vectors of the new anti-intellectualism is video.
The decline of book, newspaper and magazine reading is
by now an old story. The drop-off is most pronounced
among the young, but it continues to accelerate and
afflict Americans of all ages and education levels.
Reading has declined not
only among the poorly educated, according to a report
last year by the
National Endowment for the Arts. In 1982, 82 percent
of college graduates read novels or poems for pleasure;
two decades later, only 67 percent did. And more than 40
percent of Americans under 44 did not read a single book
-- fiction or nonfiction -- over the course of a year.
The proportion of 17-year-olds who read nothing (unless
required to do so for school) more than doubled between
1984 and 2004. This time period, of course, encompasses
the rise of personal computers, Web surfing and video
games.
Does all this matter?
Technophiles pooh-pooh jeremiads about the end of print
culture as the navel-gazing of (what else?) elitists. In
his book "Everything Bad Is Good for You: How Today's
Popular Culture Is Actually Making Us Smarter," the
science writer Steven Johnson assures us that we have
nothing to worry about. Sure, parents may see their
"vibrant and active children gazing silently, mouths
agape, at the screen." But these zombie-like
characteristics "are not signs of mental atrophy.
They're signs of focus." Balderdash. The real question
is what toddlers are screening out, not what they are
focusing on, while they sit mesmerized by videos they
have seen dozens of times.
Despite an aggressive
marketing campaign aimed at encouraging babies as young
as 6 months to watch videos, there is no evidence that
focusing on a screen is anything but bad for infants and
toddlers. In a study released last August,
University of Washington researchers found that
babies between 8 and 16 months recognized an average of
six to eight fewer words for every hour spent watching
videos.
I cannot prove that
reading for hours in a treehouse (which is what I was
doing when I was 13) creates more informed citizens than
hammering away at a
Microsoft Xbox or obsessing about
Facebook profiles. But the inability to concentrate
for long periods of time -- as distinct from brief
reading hits for information on the Web -- seems to me
intimately related to the inability of the public to
remember even recent news events. It is not surprising,
for example, that less has been heard from the
presidential candidates about the
Iraq war in the later stages of the primary campaign
than in the earlier ones, simply because there have been
fewer video reports of violence in Iraq. Candidates,
like voters, emphasize the latest news, not necessarily
the most important news.
No wonder negative
political ads work. "With text, it is even easy to keep
track of differing levels of authority behind different
pieces of information," the cultural critic Caleb Crain
noted recently in the New Yorker. "A comparison of two
video reports, on the other hand, is cumbersome. Forced
to choose between conflicting stories on television, the
viewer falls back on hunches, or on what he believed
before he started watching."
As video consumers
become progressively more impatient with the process of
acquiring information through written language, all
politicians find themselves under great pressure to
deliver their messages as quickly as possible -- and
quickness today is much quicker than it used to be.
Harvard University's Kiku Adatto found that between
1968 and 1988, the average sound bite on the news for a
presidential candidate -- featuring the candidate's own
voice -- dropped from 42.3 seconds to 9.8 seconds. By
2000, according to another Harvard study, the daily
candidate bite was down to just 7.8 seconds.
The shrinking public
attention span fostered by video is closely tied to the
second important anti-intellectual force in American
culture: the erosion of general knowledge.
People accustomed to
hearing their president explain complicated policy
choices by snapping "I'm the decider" may find it almost
impossible to imagine the pains that
Franklin D. Roosevelt took, in the grim months after
Pearl Harbor, to explain why U.S. armed forces were
suffering one defeat after another in the Pacific. In
February 1942, Roosevelt urged Americans to spread out a
map during his radio "fireside chat" so that they might
better understand the geography of battle. In stores
throughout the country, maps sold out; about 80 percent
of American adults tuned in to hear the president. FDR
had told his speechwriters that he was certain that if
Americans understood the immensity of the distances over
which supplies had to travel to the armed forces, "they
can take any kind of bad news right on the chin."
This is a portrait not
only of a different presidency and president but also of
a different country and citizenry, one that lacked
access to satellite-enhanced
Google maps but was far more receptive to learning
and complexity than today's public. According to a 2006
survey by
National Geographic-Roper, nearly half of Americans
between ages 18 and 24 do not think it necessary to know
the location of other countries in which important news
is being made. More than a third consider it "not at all
important" to know a foreign language, and only 14
percent consider it "very important."
That leads us to the
third and final factor behind the new American dumbness:
not lack of knowledge per se but arrogance about that
lack of knowledge. The problem is not just the things we
do not know (consider the one in five American adults
who, according to the
National Science Foundation, thinks the sun revolves
around the Earth); it's the alarming number of Americans
who have smugly concluded that they do not need to know
such things in the first place. Call this
anti-rationalism -- a syndrome that is particularly
dangerous to our public institutions and discourse. Not
knowing a foreign language or the location of an
important country is a manifestation of ignorance;
denying that such knowledge matters is pure
anti-rationalism. The toxic brew of anti-rationalism and
ignorance hurts discussions of U.S. public policy on
topics from health care to taxation.
There is no quick cure
for this epidemic of arrogant anti-rationalism and
anti-intellectualism; rote efforts to raise standardized
test scores by stuffing students with specific answers
to specific questions on specific tests will not do the
job. Moreover, the people who exemplify the problem are
usually oblivious to it. ("Hardly anyone believes
himself to be against thought and culture," Hofstadter
noted.) It is past time for a serious national
discussion about whether, as a nation, we truly value
intellect and rationality. If this indeed turns out to
be a "change election," the low level of discourse in a
country with a mind taught to aim at low objects ought
to be the first item on the change agenda.
info@susanjacoby.com
Susan Jacoby's latest
book is "The Age of American Unreason."