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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
19.03.2008
David Greenberg Reviews Obama's Speech

We reached out to several friends of the magazine to respond to Obama's big speech in Philadelphia. Here's what David Greenberg, professor of history and media studies at Rutgers, had to say.

When a speech like the one Barack Obama gave Tuesday is hailed as "epochal" and "historic," something more than a dispassionate analysis of its content is at work. I found Todd Gitlin's close reading to be stimulating, David Kusnet's search for influences to be revealing, and Bill Galston's skepticism to be refreshing. (For even more thorough skepticism, see Mickey Kaus at Slate.) But instead of offering another parsing, let me speculate about why it's getting the raves it is.

Taking nothing away from the speech, which clearly had its merits and its flaws, it was obvious in advance that the commentariat would swoon over it, almost regardless of its content. The reason is that the news media create certain familiar narratives, especially in campaign coverage, in which speeches like this play a key part. It's a melodramatic narrative of a hero, a crisis, and a comforting resolution. In these narratives, the hero--who need not be as well-liked among the pundit class as Obama seems to be--is engaged in an admirable pursuit, only to find himself caught in an unforeseen controversy or tested by an unprecedented challenge. The moment demands a new level of statesmanship. Invariably, he rises to the occasion, faces the adversity, hits the right notes, and leaves us all feeling better.

This narrative has played out time and again. Mitt Romney's speech last fall--commendable in defending Mormonism from the bigots who sought to use it to deny him the presidency, but ugly in its opportunistic denigration of secularism--garnered applause from the mainstream press, though little serious analysis of its content. Somewhat similarly, in the 2000 Florida recount fight, Al Gore deserved a trophy--and the presidency--for fighting for his rightful votes; but the speech he gave when he ultimately conceded earned the pundits' gratitude not because of any rhetorical brilliance (in truth, it was a disappointment), but because the narrative they'd constructed all but required them to cheer. Like Gore himself, they were fulfilling a part in a drama. Even Nixon's 1952 Checkers speech, though much mocked today, drew mostly praise when he delivered it.

One could see this same archetypal narrative taking shape last week when nabobs spoke of the Jeremiah Wright controversy as Obama's "greatest test yet" and a "defining moment for his campaign." A man in whom so many had invested such hopes was on the ropes. For the narrative to conclude satisfactorily, to reach its reassuringly familiar resolution, Obama had to be seen as "doing what he needed to do." And he was.

The subject of the speech, billed as a frank confrontation of taboo racial issues, also guaranteed an enthusiastic response. (The same was true for Romney and religion.) Media commentators have shown a profound skittishness whenever race and racism have come up on the campaign trail--especially the issue of differing in racial perspectives on certain issues in American society. Ironically, Obama's pledge to offer a "bold" recognition of the stubbornness of some of these differences was precisely what then allowed the pundits to stop worrying about or dwelling on them. The mere act of assuring his audience that racial divides are bridgeable, that the story will end happily, reinscribes the narrative of crisis and satisfying resolution.

During the Geraldine Ferraro pseudo-controversy, journalists squirmed when faced with having to think through the hard questions of precisely how Obama's race has hurt him and how it's helped him in the Democratic primaries. By absolving them from doing so, the speech came as a welcome relief. How could they not applaud?

--David Greenberg

Posted: Wednesday, March 19, 2008 4:31 PM with 17 comment(s)

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lymon1 said:

No offense to Mr. Greenberg and these interesting comments, but can we move on now?

March 19, 2008 4:46 PM

teplukhin2you said:

I cheered. I cried. Hearing that speech made me a person.

March 19, 2008 4:53 PM

ratnerstar said:

Right.  And just as predictable as the raves is the inevitable negative meta-analysis.  Funny how we never see these "predictions" prior to the event in question.  Oh great oracle, perhaps you can also reveal to us whether the stock market will rise or fall last week and whether the Patriots or the Giants will win Superbowl 42!

March 19, 2008 4:59 PM

blackton said:

cynical bugger are we? you could essentially recycle this posting for anytime that any politician makes a "big" speech, and just change the name of the speaker. If the reaction was predictable, then it stands to reason that we know this as well, hence even the main point of the posting, explaining the predictable is a tad pointless. And since it has offered zero insight into Obama's speech, I would have to give this posting a D-. It only passed because it was coherent and grammatical..

March 19, 2008 5:03 PM

boneill said:

To even compare Obama's speech to Romney's...in any way...is so mind-numbingly stupid my brain is actively trying to hang itself to escape.  Jesus...

March 19, 2008 5:34 PM

sabatia said:

David, While even-handed perhaps, I found your piece almost shockingly cynical--and I am a cynic.

I'm from Massachusetts and so I had been following rather closely Romney's trials and re-engineerings of himself on the campaign trail, and the religious dimension in particular. I was outraged that he blamed so-called "secularists" for the problems of our nation, since he was elected governor in if not the than one of the most secular states in the nation, where his Mormonism was barely an issue.

Though the "narrative" may read essentially the same as Obama's speech, the words mattered. Mitt did what he felt he had to do, which was to make a purely political speech, pandering to the right-wing so-called "Christian" bigots and then throwing his secularist friends under the bus, as they say. There were lots of fundamentalist and Republican bones in Mitt's speech, tossed to the people he needed and not an ounce of courage, which confronts friends with truth and criticism as well as enemies. I found it to be one of the saddest political speeches masking as greatness that I have ever heard.

Again, I am a cynic, but I truly thought that Obama's speech, while it certainly had a political angle, came very close to speaking from the heart, and speaking in a genuinely thoughtful way about one of our nation's most pernicious problems. The late psychologist Rollo May often made the connection between courage and creative power, which manifests itself as much in politics as in art and music. Just opening up the window to a discussion of race, and acknowledging the real and perceived grievances, showed so much more high political intelligence than Mitt's speech. Though the narratives may be the same, the substance and intent were the difference between greatness and spin.

We live in perilous times in far too many regards. Obama is not perfect and I and we do not know him well. But he appears to have a deeper understanding of the nature of this nation and of himself. He has shown himself to be relatively and unusually equanimous in the face of his challenges and trials. We need some one like this, with creative intelligence, good judgement, and abiding compassion to lead our nation through these times and on to a better future.

Years ago I was an Am Civ major in graduate school. I read many of the primary sources of our nation's founding and history. I'm sorry Mr. Greenberg, and I say this not because I have become an Obama supporter: Obama's speech had much of the greatness of Jefferson and Madison, Lincoln and FDR and JFK. There is that much potential there. But can we believe? We have all become so cynical and/or(and perhaps they go together) self-serving.

March 19, 2008 5:59 PM

eharder2 said:

Such above the fray omniscience!  You sir are a true intellectual.  Capable of navigating the dense foliage to see the true nature of the forest.  Gold star!  

March 19, 2008 6:00 PM

tomeg said:

Question I heard on the radio today: was Obama's real intent that his speech would elevate the conversation about race relations; or, was his primary motivation to hide the fact that he (or his campaign) had uttered a falsehood that Obama wasn't there on the Sundays when the shit rained down from the pulpit from Rev. Wright? The principled man vs. the artful dodger,  or both. (Wasn't this one of the most galling characteristics Republicans hated Bill Clinton for?

March 19, 2008 6:36 PM

ironyroad said:

Casually comparing Obama's speech to Romney's spineless and gelatinous crawl toward the Republican base as if it were the same kind of creature is really unbelieveable and destroys a large measure of Greenberg's own credibility -- or at least his theory's credibility.

Comparing Obama's speech to Kennedy's address to the Southern Baptist Conference is a lot more legitimate, and I think there JFK came off a little better -- partly because he took questions from the audience, and Obama's missed opportunity was having some people there who would pose him hard questions but who would also extend the courtesy of listening.

Romney.  For pete's sake.

March 19, 2008 6:37 PM

guyminuslife said:

"To even compare Obama's speech to Romney's...in any way...is so mind-numbingly stupid my brain is actively trying to hang itself to escape.  Jesus..."

I actually cracked up at that. Rare, for me.

But this post has nothing to do with the content of the speech, it is only a rough categorization of "speeches people give about important stuff at critical moments." Apparently, by categorizing things, we're allowed to dismiss them.

March 19, 2008 6:42 PM

ChanRobt said:

I thought it was an important speech because it wan an intelligent speech.

So incredibly rare is that from any major politician, that I was more than impressed.

That said, I did not support Obama's presidential aspirations before the speech, nor do I after.

And, in truth, he mollified but did not put to bed the essential concern of his having attended a church with such inflammatory teachings for twenty years.

The man, being extremely bright, however, did not expect this speech to change minds like mine regarding a vote for him.  What he needed to do, and I believe succeeded, was to calm the believers, and shore up his support in the media.  

That, I believe he accomplished superbly.

Meanwhile, the speech was important, and probably historic, for the quality of its content on the issue of race relations and the context in which it was presented.

It would be wise to remember, that a man is highly intelligent, charismatic, and unusually articulate, does not mean, of itself, that he ought to be president.

March 19, 2008 6:57 PM

thejauntyboulevardier said:

Per'fesser Greenberg has taught one too many graduate sections on Odysseus...

March 19, 2008 7:25 PM

vanwurs said:

ChanRobt,

".....that a man is highly inteligent, charismatic, and unusually articulate, does not mean, of itself, that he ought to president."

But it does give him at least three advantages over the other two people who are likely to become president.  And would make it the first time in eight years any of those qualities have graced the White House.

March 19, 2008 8:51 PM

Wandreycer1 said:

More tedious self-congratulatory, psuedo-intellectual speech yadda.  Prof Greenberg - thank you. *No one* will get anything over on you boy, you're on it for us mentally flabby, emotionally overwrought peons.

March 20, 2008 10:27 AM

amarkle said:

Why do Obama fans always display such excruciating sensitivity to criticism (whether real or perceived) of their candidate?

Prof Greenberg clearly doesn't compare the Obama and Romney speeches based on their respective quality or content, but merely on the media reaction to them.  The fact that the Romney speech was so bad, yet still garnered positive media attention, should further support Greenberg's point that it has more to do with advancing a narrative.

In his opening, Prof Greenberg noted the relative lack of dispassionate analysis in the media reviews of Obama's speech.  There is a similar, and depressing, lack of the same in the comments posted here.

March 20, 2008 4:23 PM

Wandreycer1 said:

You're right amarkle. I'm sorry.  I hope you and/or Prof Greenberg reads this. I was very disappointed at what I saw as endless nitpickery and cynicism, verbage upon verbage mostly designed - it seemed to me - to show how clever the writer was rather than to illuminate anything about Obama's speech.  The coverage was nothing like what I heard from friends, co-workers, family of all political, racial, class backgrounds (a white blue collar cab driver in New York in a thick Staten Island accent: "der is the next President, that one").

If there was half the appreciation for the historic nature of the speech alone, whoever becomes President, as there was endless verbage on what was missing, I'd have probably not gotten so mad. Obama was very courageous and tha is so rare in any of us. In any case, I was wrong to take it our on Prof Greenberg and subject Talkback to it - thanks for your honesty.

March 20, 2008 10:06 PM

dbarrr said:

Thank you Mr.Greenberg for this insightful and (dare I say?) brave post.

Please ignore the knee-jerk invectives of some in this comment section, for it seems that many here have fallen into the blind new faith of us vs. them. "Surely if you are invoking a spectacle that includes both Obama and Romney you are a traitor!" This simplification by inference goes hand in hand with the simplification of narrative that you point out. It has become more and more apparent to me, through the help of my own cynicism and through posts like yours, that Obama's campaign is one built using the same tools and materials of the politician which are de riguer in this post Rovian age. One of the most powerful amongst these are the overarching roles of narratives and stories; which cloud our ability for ration and comparison, and are correspondingly dangerous in the process of decision making. Descion making on the level of who and what to trust in this election as an observer, and then, on top of this, in the judgment of how a candidate will perform once in the White House. As we should know by now, a heavy reliance upon narrative should be a warning sign about a potential candidates abilities to navigate the complexities and realities that the presidency will inevitably present. (Does anyone remember TNR's great piece on how Bush relied mostly on framing narratives to make his decisions for him?) Has Mr.Obama presented enough evidence to us, the public, yet, that he can make decisions based on judgment and issue and insight as opposed to narrative? I would argue that he has the possibility for this, but has not shown enough evidence of it yet. (A few more years in the Senate might help)

All those decrying the cynicism of Mr.Greenberg are equating the constructions of the media and their fortified social realities with what they KNOW to be the soul of a caring, sensitive, intellgent fellow soul. The fact of the matter though, is that Mr.Obama is a politician, and should be treated as one. (should anyone NOT be cynical of politicians? Are you all so desperate after of the desert of the Bush years that you would drink salt water?) What you know is not the truth, not the man, not how he would act, but rather how he has been presented to you by himself, and by the media, which, as the author has pointed out, can be a flawed and shallow system.

Please take off your blinders, and if you are going to follow someone, follow him with full skepticism, or risk following him into trouble. We have done enough of this recently.

March 21, 2008 12:12 AM