“A mob
assembled in a public square or hall and welded into one compact whole is not
the same as the crowds of human beings scattered around—on city streets and
country roads, in houses and apartments. It is the dispersed crowds who really
constitute ‘society,’ but in this country there is nothing to bind them
together, since all the forms of association that arose historically have been
destroyed; at the same time the compact, howling mobs, the ‘masses,’ have no
pulse of words of their own—they are completely under the sway of their ‘leaders’
(or ‘demagogues,’ as they used to be called).”
Is a “dispersed
crowd” still a crowd? I think Mandelstam means something like regular,
non-aligned people, citizens, loose aggregates of relatives, friends, neighbors,
fellow parishioners and coworkers. Burke called such associations “little
platoons.” Nothing is more natural or less official. Such gatherings are always
watched suspiciously by busybody governments and mobs. The private realm, where
humanity flourishes, is too dangerous to be left alone.
The family I
grew up in was not notably social. We weren’t churchgoers. My parents were Democrats
of the Roosevelt sub-species and belonged to city-wide bowling leagues. They
played poker with one set of friends and canasta with another. My father was a
longtime member of Ironworkers Local No. 17 in Cleveland and, after the war, helped
organize a social club of high-school buddies who called themselves the Royal
Azures (picnic in summer, Christmas party for the kids). The thought of joining
a mob or paying serious attention to a demagogue never entered their minds. Come
to think of it, the only organizations I’ve ever joined were the Newspaper
Guild (AFL-CIO) and the American Automobile Association. I’ve never defined myself
by what I belonged to or any other superfluous demographic category. Mandelstam
writes:
“The crowd easily
loses touch with the past and does not see the future . . . [It] has a short
memory, but something human always survives in it; hence the distress it feels
whenever it is egged on to wanton violence by its leaders. The frenzied mobs at
the beginning of our era were terrifying, but they were not as hideous as the
submissive crowds who later, at public meetings, voted the death penalty for
fellow citizens.”
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