Tuesday, December 8, 2020

American Myths in Black and White

 From American Greatness:

“Myth,” the folk memories of a people, are more real, indeed, and more important than history. This is not to say myths are entirely untrue. The most powerful myths are the ones with some truth to them. Myths codify the symbols, icons, and legends of a people. Thus a people’s myths tell them who they are and where they come from, giving them a sense of identity, purpose, and destiny. In 1925, for example, Mexican philosopher José Vasconcelos articulated the ideology of “La raza cósmica.” He wove an elaborate theory of a “fifth” and universal race sprung from the ethnically and racially sundry soil of Latin America in a deliberate effort to boost the morale of what he saw as a “depressed race.”

But mythmaking is a double-edged sword. The stories we tell can build a people up or deconstruct them. Whites, in America and elsewhere in the West, are privileged only with the latter. (Read more.)
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