From July 3-6, 1986, Americans hailed the 4th of July and the
centennial of the Statue of Liberty in a celebration that became
officially known as Liberty Weekend. In this study, David Procter
analyzes the process of enacting political culture by examining how
various political, religious, and ethnic groups transformed the
experience of Liberty Weekend into a validation of their own
individual social and political agendas. Broader in scope than any
previous published work on political culture and the political
ideal of liberty, Procter's work vividly demonstrates the
rhetorical process by which American politicians, pundits, and
community spokespersons convert political celebration into
motivation for sociopolitical goals.
Following an introductory chapter on the relationship between
symbols and culture, Procter provides an overview of the analysis
of political culture as well as general comments on Liberty Weekend
itself. Subsequent chapters analyze how specific groups used the
weekend to further their own sociopolitical goals. Procter explains
how blacks transformed the celebration into competing statements of
community identity, explores how Ronald Reagan converted the event
into a celebration of his Revolution, and examines how a
nationalist group cast the event into a motive for an involved or
confrontational American foreign policy. He then synthesizes the
significant themes and symbolic clusters from these three chapters
to determine what these webs of discourse can tell us about
American political culture. Procter concludes that each group
called on the ideograph Liberty to justify their specific, yet
diverse, political agendas and that these disparate groups were
able to use this common symbol because fundamentally Liberty
represents America's cultural persona of pursuing a dream of
success and achievement. Ideal as supplemental reading for courses
in political communication and rhetorical criticism, this book
represents a major contribution to our understanding of the complex
nature of American political culture.
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