The Decline of the West? The Fate of the Atlantic Community after the Cold War

The Decline of the West? The Fate of the Atlantic Community after the Cold War

Organisatoren
Department of History / Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures, University of Pennsylvania; American Council on Germany; Heidelberg Center for American Studies
Ort
Philadelphia
Land
United States
Vom - Bis
15.10.2009 - 17.10.2009
Url der Konferenzwebsite
Von
Katrin Schreiter / Jennifer Rodgers, University of Pennsylvania

ADAM MICHNIK (Warsaw) opened the conference with a keynote speech, “The Decline of the West Seen from Poland,” in which, drawing on his own experiences in the Polish opposition to communism, he linked the concept of the West to democracy and tolerance. Although noting the problems and doubts facing the contemporary West and the United States in particular, Michnik saw no alternative to the Western model, and concluded that critiques drawing on the West’s own intellectual and moral traditions are proof of its cultural significance, and the need to defend its basic principles. “A sinful democracy,” he declared, “is better than an innocent dictatorship.” His perspective, at the same time knowledgeable, critical, ironic, and hopeful, set the stage for the discussions to follow.

The first full day of the conference analyzed theoretical and cultural foundations of the West. The opening panel addressed the concept of the West, and the perception among intellectuals of a post-1968 crisis in Western civilization. RICCARDO BAVAJ’s (University of St. Andrews) paper “A Cultural Crisis of the West? Liberal Intellectuals and the Challenges to ‘Western Civilization’ in the 1970s” explored how the student movements of the late 1960s sparked the Left-leaning intellectuals Richard Löwenthal, David Bell, and Raymond Aron to revisit earlier hypotheses about the decline of western civilization. Western culture was closely intertwined with ideals of liberty, progress and stability as an intellectual mode of negotiating the tensions accompanying modernization and industrialization. Bavaj proposed that the notion of “western decline” originated in the existential crises of rapidly transforming societies. In ARIANE LEENDERTZ’s (University of Munich) contribution to the panel, “Complex Problems in a Complex World: America, Europe and the Postindustrial Challenge of ‘the West’ in the 1970s,” she concurred with Bavaj that the perceived decline of the West and emphasis on conflicts reflected a process of socio-cultural transformation since the late 1960s. Leendertz noted that the cultural differences between the United States and Europe were transported into the political arena, and Americans lost interest in Europe once the US fulfilled its mission of ushering Europe into the modern industrial era.

Shifting the focus from socio-cultural conceptions of the West, the second panel examined the West at the international level. SANDEEP GOPALAN’s (University of Reading) paper, “The Two ‘Wests’: International Law in the U.S. and Europe,” built upon the conference’s overarching theme of multiple “Wests.” Gopalan, like Leendertz, saw a clear line of demarcation separating the “West” of the United States and that of Europe, particularly in the application of international law. He noted that the two “Wests” instrumentalize international law and its applications for their respective needs, perhaps attributable to domestic constitutional cultures. MARY SAROTTE (University of Southern California) used an architectural framework to examine the changes in post-1989 international order in her paper “1989 and the Architecture of Order: The Competition to lead the Post-Cold War World.” She claimed that while there were various models for post-Cold War order in the aftermath of the 1989 revolutions, the rapidity of the transition favored pre-existing structures that ultimately prolonged the life of Cold-War institutions such as NATO and the European Community. Noting the stark differences between Gopalan and Sarotte’s arguments, in his commentary WILLIAM GLENN GRAY (Purdue University) asked how the continuation of Cold War institutions might be seen to impair the West.

The third panel considered how human rights discourse impacted American and Soviet societies during and after the Cold War. ELIZABETH BORGWARDT (Washington University) examined the genesis of the UN-adopted Nuremberg Principles, which held individual and state actors to international legal statutes and which the conservative American opposition attempted to block with the Bricker Amendment. Her paper, “Politics, Culture, and the Limits of Law in Generating Human Rights Norms,” suggested that Cold War fears fed concerns about international meddling in American domestic affairs. Although the amendment ultimately failed because President Eisenhower saw it as curtailing American foreign policy, Borgwardt illustrated the primacy of domestic politics in determining the acceptance of international legislation. BENJAMIN NATHANS’ (University of Pennsylvania) paper, “Soviet Rights Talk,” traced human rights discourse and practice in the Soviet Union to the “strange” emergence of Russia in the European human rights system. He used the “all people’s discussion” that accompanied each post-Stalinist version of the Soviet constitution as a lens through which to view shifting notions of rights among the Soviet public and the government. He concluded that, stretching forward to contemporary international legal precedents, Russia, in contrast to the United States, consistently embraces international human rights and legal decisions, rhetorically if not always in practice.

The day ended with a roundtable discussion on approaches for studying the evolving definition of the West. LILY GARDNER FELDMAN (Johns Hopkins University) discussed how German foreign relations repaired Western Realpolitik in its pursuit of reconciliation for the Nazi past and the Holocaust. She outlined Germany’s quadripartite model for redefining the West’s international relations as exemplified through its rehabilitative foreign policy towards France, Israel, Poland, and the Czech Republic. PHILIPP GASSERT (University of Augsburg), reflecting earlier papers by Leendertz and Bavaj, examined the West as an intellectual framework through the role of scholars, American Studies programs, and institutions such as the Ford Foundation in the shaping of the West. He noted that the “transnational project” of American studies is a clear indicator of American political sentiment. Thus, the influx of American capital to Eastern Europe after 1989 marked a shift to a more multinational model. JOHN MCCARTHY (Vanderbilt University) continued the discussion about post-1989 implications on perceptions of the West. McCarthy called for the incorporation of “European Studies” into academic programs and further noted that the reconceptualization of the national “self” as European has challenged views of the United States.

The third and final day of the conference looked at cultural bonds that bridge the Atlantic divide. The first panel approached the West as experience. STEPHEN BROCKMANN’s (Carnegie Mellon University) paper, “The Cultural Paradox of Atlanticism,” investigated popular culture as the binding element of the West that even transcends German-American political and economic disagreement. In regard to the German critique of American popular culture in the student protest movement of 1968, Brockmann suggested considering this criticism as proof of successful German democratization. Continued enthusiasm for American values such as democracy and human rights, he concluded, could prevent a decline of the cultural West. In DOROTHEA FISCHER-HORNUNG’s (University of Heidelberg) talk, “(Re) Making the East and West in Film,” which examined American Cold War movies and their less successful remakes after the end of the Cold War, she argued that Hollywood utilized American anxieties about the loss of individuality, domestic communism (The Manchurian Candidate, 1963, 2004) and internal subversion (The Invasion of the Body Snatchers, 1956, 1993, 2007) as vehicles to complicate East-West binaries. The remakes testified to the persistent fear of subversion, yet shifted their focus to North-South binaries: corporatism has replaced communism and American economic interests are linked to global issues. In his comments, FRANK TROMMLER (University of Pennsylvania) underlined that American popular culture, rather than European high culture, provided a common point of reference for Euro-American civilization: consumption. Though the discussion was marked by differing views on Americanization, Anti-Americanism, and Hollywood’s overbearing tendency to conflate the United States and the West, participants agreed that American cultural exports formulated a language of performance in imagery and narrative that has indeed become global.

During the second panel, JOHN C. TORPEY (CUNY Graduate Center) and UTA A. BALBIER (German Historical Institute, Washington, DC) agreed that the religious divergence between North America and Europe tends to be overstated; both continents are foundationally Christian, which provides common ground, even if differences have become more apparent of late. Torpey presented a sociological analysis of statistical data on European and American secularism in his paper “The Return of God and the Decline of ‘the West.’” Both continents experienced secularization during the Cold War, yet to different degrees and with different outcomes. The emerging Cold War culture of disbelief has triggered a backlash in the United States, however, which overemphasizes the role of religion in public affairs today. Balbier’s paper set a different tone with the case study “Crusading against Secularization – Billy Graham in Germany.” Balbier investigated Evangelical missionary Billy Graham’s appeal to German audiences in the 1950s and 1960s. Public viewings of Graham’s services bridged the divide across the Atlantic by making Germans part of a growing global media society. This sense of belonging to a transnational community and a Wirtschaftswunder search for values beyond materialism, Balbier argued, attracted Germans to Graham’s religious spectacle.

VOLKER BERGHAHN’s (Columbia University) public lecture on “The Fallacy of Triumphalism” that afternoon attracted a broad audience apart from the conference participants. Reflecting on the lessons American intellectuals learned from the collapse of the Soviet Union – leaving the United States as the “victor” of the Cold War – Berghahn claimed that triumphalist attitudes among American elites hurt domestic and international policy making. These sentiments found expression in post-Cold War unilateralism, which failed under the second Bush administration as the United States approached an economic and political state that is best described by Paul Kennedy’s concept of imperial overstretch. Berghahn criticized American elites for failing to learn the right lessons from the end of the Cold War, missing the opportunity to promote lower military expenditure and invest money in reforms of American social institutions as well as the economic system. The current economic crisis is both the result of that failure and an indication of the problems to come. In one of two responses to the talk, HENRY TEUNE (University of Pennsylvania) responded with his own critique of American post-Cold War policy, emphasizing the short-term strengths and long-term weaknesses of many policy decisions. RONALD GRANIERI (University of Pennsylvania) used his response to argue that only an equal partnership with the European Union and a renewed sense of shared responsibility within the transatlantic community would save the United States from collapsing under the burden of an overstretched empire.

The concluding roundtable discussion was driven by two presentations. MARTIN THUNERT (Heidelberg Center for American Studies) extracted three concepts of the West from western and non-western literature: the territorial West marked by NATO, EU, and EFTA; the material West, driven by interests rather than values; and the philosophical West based on the equality of men and anchored in modern science. Challenged by Afrocentrism, Asian values, and anti-modern radical Islam, which are all part of the “Rise of the Rest” in a post-American world, the West has lost its monopoly in interpreting the world. While today’s West is open to everybody, Thunert argued, it faces a paradox: How can a democratic minority sustain a predominantly undemocratic world while maintaining its support for democracy? Thunert’s presentation suggested that one fruitful way of thinking about “the West” is to look through the eyes of the “Other.” BRYAN VAN SWERINGEN (US Army Europe) picked up Volker Berghahn’s discussion of American imperial overstretch. With the double-involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq, the United States has made a precarious move. These operations have defined the limits of US military power, as guerilla fighters and terrorists undermine US strategic efforts. What should be essential to the West is to think more about the allocation of resources and to consider how it can defend that which it has already achieved.

The lively and spirited discussions after each panel and at the conclusion left participants with a productive uneasiness over a simplified concept of “the West.” The multiplicity of definitions – such as Western civilization, Western values, the Cold War West – confirms a need for more research on the West and its possible decline. Despite grim outlooks predicting a “decline of the West,” Thunert suggested that we should rather see this process as a normalization of relations. The postwar 1940s and 1950s had posed an exceptional situation in Europe, a vacuum that Americans were ready to fill. What we see happening in transatlantic relations today, he concluded, is a rebirth of “the West.”

Conference overview:

Adam Michnik (Warsaw): The Decline of the West Seen from Poland.

Panel I: The West as Idea
Chair: Wilfried Mausbach (Heidelberg Center for American Studies)

Riccardo Bavaj (University of St. Andrews, Scotland): A Cultural Crisis of the West? Liberal intellectuals and the challenges to “Western Civilization” in the 1970s.

Ariane Leendertz (University of Munich): American Images of Europe since the 1970s.

Commentator: Thomas W. Maulucci (American International College)

Panel II: Concepts of International Order
Chair: Ellen Kennedy (University of Pennsylvania)

Sandeep Gopalan (University of Reading School of Law): The Two “Wests”: International Law in the U.S. and Europe.

Mary Elise Sarotte (University of Southern California): 1989 & the Architecture of Order: The Competition to lead the Post-Cold War World.

Commentator: William Glenn Gray (Purdue University)

Panel III: Human Rights in Theory and Practice Since the 1970s
Chair: Ronald J. Granieri (University of Pennsylvania)

Elizabeth Borgwardt (Washington University): Politics, Culture, and the Limits of Law in Generating Human Rights Norms.

Benjamin Nathans (University of Pennsylvania): Soviet Rights-Talk.

Commentator: Samuel Moyn (Columbia University)

Afternoon Roundtable: Studying the West – Paradigms and Approaches
Chair: Eric Jarosinski (University of Pennsylvania)

Philipp Gassert (University of Augsburg)

John A. McCarthy (Vanderbilt University)

Lily Gardner Feldman (Johns Hopkins University, American Institute for Contemporary German Studies)

Panel IV: The West as Experience—High Culture and Popular Culture
Chair: Martin Klimke (German Historical Institute, Washington, DC)

Stephen Brockmann (Carnegie Mellon University): The Cultural Paradox of Atlanticism.

Dorothea Fischer-Hornung (University of Heidelberg): (Re)Making the East and West in Film.

Commentator: Frank Trommler (University of Pennsylvania)

Panel V: The Widening Atlantic?
Chair: Simon Richter (University of Pennsylvania)

John C. Torpey (CUNY Graduate Center): The Return of God and the Decline of “the West”.

Uta A. Balbier (German Historical Institute, Washington, DC): Crusading against secularization - Billy Graham in Germany.

Commentator: Thomas Banchoff (Georgetown University)

Public Lecture

Volker Berghahn, (Columbia University): The Fallacies of Triumphalism: America in the Post-1989 World.

Commentaries by Ronald J. Granieri (University of Pennsylvania)
and Henry Teune (University of Pennsylvania)

Concluding Discussion: Where is the West?
Chair: Philipp Gassert (University of Augsburg)

Bryan van Sweringen (US Army Europe, The Pentagon, Washington, DC)

Martin Thunert (Heidelberg Center for American Studies)


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