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The American Cultural Hero-System

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The American Cultural Hero-System

Unread postby coberst » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 07:58:56

The American Cultural Hero-System

Who am I? Of what value is my life? The child, when asking these questions, is saying that s/he wants to be recognized as an object of value. S/he wants to know how well s/he measures up as a hero.

Freud saw that the underlying foundation for these feelings and ambitions was the “utter self-centeredness and self-preoccupation, each person’s feeling that he is the one in creation, that his life represents all life” he tallied all this up and labeled it narcissism. Nietzsche saw this healthy expression as one of the “Will to Power” and glory.

This represents the “inevitable drive to cosmic heroism by the animal who had become man.”

Culture provides the vehicle for heroic action directed toward strengthening self-esteem. The task of the ego is to navigate through the culture in such a way as to diminish anxiety, and the ego does this by learning “to chose actions that are satisfying and bring praise rather than blame…Therefore, if the function of self-esteem is to give the ego a steady buffer against anxiety, wherever and whenever it might be imagined, one crucial function of culture is to make continued self-esteem possible.

Culture’s task is “to provide the individual with the conviction that he is an object of primary value in a world of meaningful action.”


The cultural hero system whether religious, primitive, or scientific is “still a mythical hero-system in which people serve in order to earn a feeling of primary value, of cosmic specialness, of ultimate usefulness to creation, of unshakable meaning. They earn this feeling by carving out a place in nature, by building an edifice that reflects human value: a temple, a cathedral, a totem pole, a skyscraper, a family that spans three generations.”

How does the American culture perform its task?

I claim that the maximization of production and consumption is the principal means for the satisfaction of self-esteem for its citizens. It is through the active participation as a member of a community that strives constantly to maximize the production and consumption of goods that the American citizen best satisfies his or her drive for “cosmic action”.

We are all captives of our cultural systems. Whether the cultural system dictates the stoning of one’s sister for destroying family honor or a system that finds cosmic heroism through a process that maximizes the rate at which we consume our planet.


Quotes from “The Birth and Death of Meaning” Becker
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Re: The American Cultural Hero-System

Unread postby Hoops_Mckann » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 11:09:45

Interesting post. My generation (mid to late 20 somthings) seems to be the most narcisistic group of people I have ever known or read about. Maybee teenagers of the today could be worse. I remember back in the day seeing all those PA posters in the school hallways preaching how everyone was "special"
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Re: The American Cultural Hero-System

Unread postby evilgenius » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 11:43:30

I remember when the big self esteem movement thing kicked off several years ago. Doing studies they discovered that the population with the highest self esteem was the one in prison.

I think self esteem works as a moderator of anxiety until it has given us the space to find our courage.
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Re: The American Cultural Hero-System

Unread postby mos6507 » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 13:27:41

Being arrogant isn't healthy, but having too low self esteem isn't either.

I agree that everyone is too narcissistic these days, due to stuff like Myspace and reality TV.
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Re: The American Cultural Hero-System

Unread postby Hoops_Mckann » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 13:31:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', 'B')eing arrogant isn't healthy, but having too low self esteem isn't either.

I agree that everyone is too narcissistic these days, due to stuff like Myspace and reality TV.


Hit the nail on the head. "its all about me" is the attitude of most younge adults enthrawled with todays pop culture. I hate it.
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