One book that almost ended up on the Long Reading
List was Sir Thomas More's Utopia. So many teens are looking for the
place where they will fit in, and so often that perfect place is no place, that
it felt like it could be relevant. I decided that More's ideal would probably
be different enough from a modern teen's ideal that it wouldn't be a huge help.
Having now read Utopia, I can see some
correlations, but it fits in better with the context of my current reading. (I
really believe I have a good book sense of what to read when.)
The first thing I noticed was the enforced lack of
individuality. Everyone is happy in Utopia because their needs are met, but
they only play one of two games, they eat all of their meals together, they all
dress alike, and they regularly move homes so that nothing is really theirs.
Knowing that More really loved the monastic lifestyle and only refrained from
choosing it because of his desire for a family makes it all understandable, but
still not desirable for someone who values choice. I had to wonder whether that
sort of conformity was even necessary for a tranquil society.
That became more interesting in reading Why We
Lost the ERA, when this came up:
"Rosabeth Moss Kanter's study of
nineteenth-century communes found that when communes institutionalized
exclusivity they were more likely to survive. The most successful communes
discouraged relationships outside the group through geographic isolation,
economic self-sufficiency, a special language and style of dress, and rules that
controlled the members' and outsiders' movements across the boundaries of the
community. Three-quarters of Kanter's successful communes did not recognize the
traditional American patriotic holidays. Half read no outside newspapers. More
than a quarter specifically characterized the outside world as wicked."
I had some thoughts about limiting news sources
anyway, and that was the part that stuck out when I first read it. Reading it
again, the same manner of dress becomes not only a matter of conformity within
the community but a marker of opposition to the world outside the community. No
wonder the outsiders start to look wicked.
Then I moved into my Native American Heritage Month
reading, and also felt compelled to start The Invention of the White Race,
which has been fitting in well. Here we keep finding colonial societies needed
to eradicate more communal societies, not just in the Americas but also in
the British Isles. Here the more communal societies are welcoming to outsiders, and build
strength by marriage, adoption, and foster relationships. This time it is the
capitalistic society feeling the need to eradicate perceived threats. There may
be specific roles that are necessary, and I have been surprised by some of the
strong Yurok class distinctions, but still, there are things that seem to work
better without turning the entire society into a cloister.
I mention that because it seems like whether your
revolution was socialist or fascist it often ends up with the same results.
That includes putting a lot of people on the trash pile. There does seem to be
a deep-rooted belief that rooting out differences is necessary, but I don't
believe it.
Someone who is actively hurting people, or
destroying crops, or burning things down - there may be necessary actions
there. Wanting to wear black instead of grey, or purple stripes that clash with
green checks - that is not a threat. Listening to punk rock instead of
classical is not a threat. Collecting coins instead of playing video games is
not a threat. Not unless you are really insecure, and then it's not about them.
I admit I don't fully understand the need to have
other people be like you and do like you. I get that it's awesome to find
people who like the same things, but part of what makes that awesome is because
not everyone does. Then finding your matches is a treat.
I do have some thoughts about cultural expectations
for tomorrow, but for now I suspect the most perfect place for teenagers is
that place where they can be accepted.
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