There is no end to the illusions of patriotism. In the first century of our era, Plutarch mocked those who declared that the Athenian moon is better than the Corinthian moon; Milton, in the seventeenth, observed that God is in the habit of revealing Himself first to His Englishmen; Fichte, at the beginning of the nineteenth, declared that to have character and to be German are obviously one and the same thing. Here in Argentina we are teeming with nationalists, driven, they claim, by the worthy or innocent resolve of the Argentine people. Yet they ignore the Argentine people; in their polemics they prefer to define them as a function of some external fact, the Spanish conquistadors, say, or an imaginary Catholic tradition, or "Saxon imperialism."In the essay that follows, Borges explores Argentine individualism through other literary references, suggesting that the state is untrustworthy not only because Argentine governments are typically corrupt, but also because Argentine heroes are loners that quarrel with the group.
Jorge Luis Borges, "Our Poor Individualism," in Selected Non-Fictions, 309.
He concludes,
Nationalism seeks to captivate us with the vision of an infinitely tiresome State; this utopia, once established on earth, would have the providential virtue of making everyone yearn for, and finally build, its antithesis.
Borges, 310.
3 comments:
I saw Borges in '74, and The Beatles in '64. That pretty much exhausts my reasons for being thankful I'm this old.
Is there an online English translation of the story or do you possibly have one that you could email me? I'd greatly appreciate that. Thanks.
Christopher,
When I Googled "Our Poor Individualism" and Borges, I turned up Other inquisitions, 1937-1952 by Borges at Google Books. It's only a book preview, but all three pages of this essay are viewable.
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