The Catholic Thing

Redeeming the Teeny-Weeny Self


Listen Later

By Francis X. Maier
This year marks the 30th anniversary of Christopher Lasch's final book. Published just a few months after his death, The Revolt of the Elites (1995) capped a series of five extraordinary works starting with his Haven in a Heartless World: The Family Besieged (1977). An accomplished historian, Lasch was also a penetrating social critic. He was never religious and always a man of the old, democratic left. But he saw the world clearly and wrote about it honestly. As a result, he had many Christian admirers. And much of his work aligns, if imperfectly, with Catholic concerns. Reading him today is like paging through the diary of a fiercely astute prophet.
Simply put, Lasch argues that the appearance of modern life masks its real nature. We're swamped with material comforts and choices, but they have no higher meaning. Our personal autonomy is celebrated in marketing hype. Then it's promptly undermined in practice, because an economy organized around consumption needs a steady pool of dependent consumers. The Industrial Revolution created new wealth and eased the hardships of life for many. But it also removed work from the home, centralized it, and collectivized the labor force under "scientific" management.
This, in turn, fed the rise of the social sciences, which - in Lasch's view - presume the inability of most people to understand and manage their own lives, and who thus need guidance from a phalanx of expert "helping professions." As he relentlessly documents, the early leaders of American social science viewed religion as a form of mystification and the traditional family as "the last stand of amateurs"; a breeding ground for authoritarianism, neuroses, and social disorders needing therapeutic intervention from properly educated specialists.
That attitude subtly endures and infects the wider culture. It bleeds over into our politics.
The American Founders presumed a citizenry of reasonably intelligent and productive adults; in other words, people capable of self-governance, engaging the community while managing their own affairs.
Today, the nation is a very different creature. As early as 1962, John F. Kennedy claimed that "most of the problems, or at least many of them that we now face, are technical problems, are administrative problems. . .they deal with questions which are beyond the comprehension of most men." [emphasis added] Let that sink in. For Lasch, who quoted that line in his work, Kennedy simply - and inadvertently - expressed the spirit of America's increasingly elitist leadership class, a class too often suspicious of the very people it claims to represent.
Since Lasch's death, the nation's "technical" and administrative problems have only increased. So has the thicket of complex professional bureaucracies meant to handle them. So has the army of therapists dealing with the inevitable social and psychic costs. And so has the gulf between America's expert class and the mass of citizens they manage. For Lasch, this pattern of governance creates new forms of character weakness and illiteracy in everyday life:
People increasingly find themselves unable to use language with ease and precision, to recall the basic facts of their country's history, to make logical deductions, to understand any but the most rudimentary texts, or even to grasp their constitutional rights. The conversion of popular traditions of self-reliance into esoteric knowledge administered by experts encourages a belief that ordinary competence in almost any field, even the art of self-government, lies beyond the reach of the layman.

For the individual, the result is a cocktail of anxieties, appetites, resentments, and a sense of being manipulated. A leader like Donald Trump is almost unavoidable, the product of populist blowback.
Ironically, as Lasch writes in The Minimal Self (1984):
A culture organized around mass consumption encourages narcissism. . .not because it makes people grasping and self-assertive but because it...
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

The Catholic ThingBy The Catholic Thing

  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6

4.6

31 ratings


More shows like The Catholic Thing

View all
Dr Taylor Marshall Podcast by Dr. Taylor Marshall

Dr Taylor Marshall Podcast

4,022 Listeners

The Thomistic Institute by The Thomistic Institute

The Thomistic Institute

789 Listeners

First Things Podcast by First Things

First Things Podcast

717 Listeners

Pints With Aquinas by Matt Fradd

Pints With Aquinas

6,754 Listeners

The Catholic Current by The Station of the Cross

The Catholic Current

402 Listeners

The Counsel of Trent by Catholic Answers

The Counsel of Trent

2,609 Listeners

The Road to Emmaus with Scott Hahn by Scott Hahn

The Road to Emmaus with Scott Hahn

967 Listeners

American Catholic History by Noelle & Tom Crowe

American Catholic History

913 Listeners

Godsplaining by Dominican Friars Province of St. Joseph

Godsplaining

1,277 Listeners

U.S. Grace Force with Fr. Richard Heilman and Doug Barry by U.S. Grace Force

U.S. Grace Force with Fr. Richard Heilman and Doug Barry

566 Listeners

The Liturgy of the Hours: Sing the Hours by Paul Rose

The Liturgy of the Hours: Sing the Hours

816 Listeners

The Pillar Podcast by The Pillar Podcast

The Pillar Podcast

654 Listeners

Catholic Saints by Augustine Institute

Catholic Saints

1,186 Listeners

The LOOPcast by CatholicVote

The LOOPcast

742 Listeners

Arroyo Grande with Raymond Arroyo by iHeartPodcasts

Arroyo Grande with Raymond Arroyo

149 Listeners