It is one of the biggest complaints about globalisation: that as market forces
sweep across the world, so does Western culture. In the end, many fret, whether
you are in New York, Rome, Beijing or Mumbai you will buy the same pair of
jeans in the same shopping mall, drink the same overpriced latte in the same
coffee shop, and watch the same dreary Hollywood blockbuster. Local culture
will be no more.
Ironically, though, the greatest Western cultural export is not Disney or
Starbucks or Tom Cruise. It is the very idea of local culture. A notion that
originated in late-eighteenth century Europe, in the Romantic backlash against
the Enlightenment, has today the whole world in its grip. Every island in
the Pacific, every tribe in the Amazon, has its own culture that it wants
to defend against the depredation of Western cultural imperialism. You do
not even have to be human to possess a culture. Primatologists tell us that
different groups of chimpanzees each has its own culture. No doubt some chimp
will soon complain that its traditions are disappearing under the steamroller
of human cultural imperialism.
We’re All Multiculturalists Now observed the American academic,
and former critic of pluralism, Nathan Glazer. And indeed we are. The celebration
of difference, respect for pluralism, avowal of identity politics - these
have come to be regarded as the hallmarks of a progressive, antiracist outlook
and as the foundation of modern liberal democracies.
At the heart of most multicultural philosophies is the belief that an individual’s
cultural background frames their identity and helps define who they are. If
we want to treat individuals with dignity and respect we must also treat with
dignity and respect the groups that furnish them with their sense of personal
being. We cannot, in other words, treat individuals equally unless groups
are also treated equally. And since, in the words of the American theorist
Iris Young, 'groups cannot be socially equal unless their specific, experience,
culture and social contributions are publicly affirmed and recognised', so
society must protect and nurture cultures, ensure their flourishing and indeed
their survival.
One expression of such equal treatment is the growing tendency in some Western
nations for religious law - such as the Jewish halakha and the Islamic sharia
- to take precedence over national secular law in civil, and occasionally
criminal, cases. Another expression can be found in Australia, where the courts
increasingly accept that Aborigines should have the right to be treated according
to their own customs rather than be judged by 'whitefella law'. According
to Colin McDonald, a Darwin barrister and expert in customary law, 'Human
rights are essentially a creation of the last hundred years. These people
have been carrying out their law for thousands of years'. Some multiculturalists
go further, requiring the state to ensure the survival of cultures not just
in the present but in perpetuity. The philosopher Charles Taylor suggests
that the Canadian and Quebec governments should take steps to ensure the survival
of the French language in Quebec 'through indefinite future generations'.
The demand that because a cultural practice has existed for a long time, so
it should be preserved, is a modern version of the naturalistic fallacy -
the belief that ought derives from is. For nineteenth century
social Darwinists, morality - how we ought to behave - derived from the facts
of nature - how humans are. This became an argument to justify capitalist
exploitation, colonial oppression, racial savagery and even genocide. Today,
virtually everyone recognises the falsity of this argument. Yet, when talking
of culture rather than of nature, many multiculturalists continue to insist
that 'is' defines 'ought'.
Part of the problem here is a constant slippage in multiculturalism talk between
the idea of humans as culture-bearing creatures and the idea that humans have
to bear a particular culture. Clearly no human can live outside of culture.
But then no human does.
To say that no human can live outside of culture, however, is not to say they
have to live inside a particular one. To view humans as culture-bearing is
to view them as social beings, and hence as transformative beings. It suggests
that humans have the capacity for change, for progress, and for the creation
of universal moral and political forms through reason and dialogue.
To view humans as having to bear specific cultures is, on the contrary, to
deny such a capacity for transformation. It implies that every human being
is so shaped by a particular culture that to change or undermine that culture
would be to undermine the very dignity of that individual. The biological
fact of Jewish or Bangladeshi ancestry, it suggests, somehow make a human
being incapable of living well except as a participant of Jewish or Bangladeshi
culture. This would only make sense if Jews or Bangladeshis were biologically
distinct - in other words if cultural identity was really about racial difference.
The relationship between cultural identity and racial difference becomes even
clearer if we look at the argument that cultures must be protected and preserved.
The political philosopher Will Kymlicka argues that since cultures are essential
to peoples' lives, so where 'the survival of a culture is not guaranteed,
and, where it is threatened with debasement or decay, we must act to protect
it'. For Charles Taylor, once 'we're concerned with identity', nothing 'is
more legitimate than one’s aspiration that it is never lost'.
But what does it mean for a culture to decay? Or for an identity to be lost?
Kymlicka draws a distinction between the 'existence of a culture' and 'its
"character" at any given moment'. The character of culture can change
but such changes are only acceptable if the existence of that culture is not
threatened. But how can a culture exist if that existence is not embodied
in its character? By 'character' Kymlicka seems to mean the actuality of a
culture: what people do, how they live their lives, the rules and regulations
and institutions that frame their existence. So, in making the distinction
between character and existence, Kymlicka seems to be suggesting that Jewish,
Navajo or French culture is not defined by what Jewish, Navajo or French people
are actually doing. For if Jewish culture is simply that which Jewish people
do or French culture is simply that which French people do, then cultures
could never decay or perish - they would always exist in the activities of
people.
If a culture is not defined by what its members are doing, what does define
it? The only answer can be that it is defined by what its members should
be doing. And what you should be doing, for cultural preservationists, is
what your ancestors were doing. Culture here has become defined by biological
descent. And biological descent is a polite way of saying 'race'. As the American
writer Walter Benn Michaels puts it, 'In order for a culture to be lost...
it must be separable from one's actual behaviour, and in order for it to be
separable from one’s actual behaviour it must be anchorable in race.'
The logic of the preservationist arguments is that every culture has a pristine
form, its original state. It decays when it is not longer in that form. There
are echoes here of the concept of 'type' that was at the heart of nineteenth
century racial science. For all the talk about culture as fluid and changing,
multiculturalism, no less than old-fashioned racism, invariably leads people
to think of human groups in fixed terms. Both sides of the race debate have
their own dialect of difference. The right has appropriated the language of
diversity to promote its message of racial exclusion. Liberals often turn
to the idiom of exclusion to articulate a pluralist idea of culture.
'Every society, every nation is unique', claimed Enoch Powell, the most vocal
opponent of black immigration in postwar Britain. 'It has its own past, its
own story, its own memories, its own languages or ways of speaking, its own
- dare I use the word - culture.' This is why, he argued, immigrants, who
belong to different cultures and different traditions, could never be fully
British. In France the far right has astutely exploited the idea of cultural
differences to promote its anti-Muslim message. 'It is a tragic mistake to
want to have communities representing different civilisations live together
in the same country', argued former Gaullist minister Michel Poniatowski.
'I love North Africans', Jean-Marie Le Pen has declared, 'but their place
is in the Mahgreb'. Through the language of diversity, racism has been transformed
into just another cultural identity.
If the right has taught itself the grammar of diversity, liberals have adopted
the idiom of racial identity. Will Kymlicka is anything but a xenophobe. Yet
his pluralism leads him to adopt the language of exclusion. 'It is right and
proper', Kymlicka believes, 'that the character of a culture changes as a
result of the choices of its members'. But, he goes on, 'while it is one thing
to learn from the larger world', it is quite another 'to be swamped by it'.
What could this mean? That a culture has the right to keep out members of
another culture? That a culture has the right to prevent its members from
speaking another language, singing non-native songs or reading non-native
books?
Kymlicka's warning about 'swamping' should make us sit up and take notice.
The right has long exploited fears of cultural swamping to promote the idea
that Western nations should pull up the drawbridge against immigrants whose
cultural difference make them unsuitable. It is an argument that Kymlicka
undoubtedly abhors. Yet once it becomes a matter of political principle that
cultures should not be swamped by outsiders, then it is difficult to know
how one could possibly resist such anti-immigration arguments.
Historically, antiracists challenged both the practice of racism and the process
of racialisation; that is, both the practice of discriminating against people
by virtue of their race and the insistence that an individual can be defined
by the group to which he or she belongs. Today's multiculturalists argue that
to fight racism one must celebrate group identity. The consequence has been
the resurrection of racial ideas and the imprisonment of people within their
cultural identities. Racial theorists and multiculturalists, the French philosopher
Alain Finkielkraut observes, have 'conflicting credos but the same vision
of the world'. Both fetishise difference. Both seek to 'confine individuals
to their group of origin'. Both undermine 'any possibility of natural or cultural
community among peoples'. Challenging such a politics of difference has become
as important today as challenging racism.