A TWO-FACED COUNTRY
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s every human dream,
the so-called American dream is essentially oriented to the future, but
why does this country value so much its past? This
a sort of dilemma which still fascinates in America where every
one expects happy tomorrows.
When asked however about where they
come from, ordinary Americans turn to the past. Revisiting it, they
mention family roots, town, school and job background. The more
sophisticated would add elaborated details about their forefathers’
achievements , whether in European remote battlefield or the nearby soccer
field . Some, a little more committed to late loved ones, would make a kind of
family pilgrimage to pay their respects, with eyes misted and
moving memories. Past is past, but, how much past can define present or
highlight it is something a few can understand.
In a broader sense, this people
which venerates the Mayflower pilgrims and ends up tracking their route,
remains stuck to its holidays like a kind of national identity aimed at
boosting their feeling as American citizens with their beliefs and
vocation. American past is a matter of identity recognition. Going that far,
booming business rely on the way Americans are highlighting national memories
and family ones. It is even said that past has shaped the American character.
But thanks God, this past
culture doesn’t wall them up in immobility. The famous worlds of the
late president Richard Nixon: “I don’t live in the past” seem to echo a
nationwide psyche that many associate with a kind of resiliency,
the sort that even keeps America from falling where the rest of the world
has placed it. Nowadays, most Americans went back to the past just to get
the best of it. Even failures would be lived as seeds of success and moral
teachings.
This is because this country is more than any other
one a country aware of change, and believe or not, even the ones
that could shake them the most . This need of change has
nothing to do with the future shock of Alvin Toffler, to be precise. For, even
if we don’t mull over the speed of change in our every day
life, we invest essentially into the future. From this perspective,
the future is rather something near or far away we are dreaming of. Like the
Roman God, Janus, we side up with the future when it happens to ponder what
it will be with respects to our lives and our tomorrows.
( frantz bataille)
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