Exporting the First Freedom

Abstract
Rightly or wrongly, Americans continue to bear the glad tidings of our ideals, our way of life, and our religion to the 95 percent of humanity who are not American.Ā Despite the parlous state of our countryās reputation, it is widely agreed that the best form of public diplomacy is what President Eisenhower called āpeople-to-peopleā contacts.Ā Globalization has greatly increased the quantity of such contacts, but has it increased their quality?Ā This talk will focus on some of the pitfalls encountered by Americans who seek to share with others our distinctive understanding of religious freedom and tolerance.
Speaker Bio

Martha BaylesĀ writes and lectures frequently about the arts, music, media, and cultural policy. She is a regular contributor to theĀ Wall Street JournalĀ (where she was arts and television critic),Ā Wilson QuarterlyĀ (where she was Literary Editor),Ā Weekly Standard, andĀ Claremont Review of Books. She blogs at World Affairs (āHearts and Mindsā) and at ArtsJournal.com (āSerious Popcornā).
Bayles is the author of two books,Ā Hole in Our Soul: The Loss of Beauty and Meaning in American Popular MusicĀ (University of Chicago) andĀ Aināt It a Shame? Censorship and the Culture of TransgressionĀ (Center for U.S. Studies, University of London). Her new book,Ā Americaās Cultural Footprint, will be published in 2011 by Yale University Press.
In May 2006, Bayles was a Fulbright lecturer at Marie Curie Sklodowska University and the Catholic University in Lublin, Poland, as well as at Warsaw University and the Warsaw School of Social Psychology. Currently she serves as a Senior Academic Advisor to Business for Diplomatic Action. In 1998 she was a Visiting Scholar at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles, and during the 1990s she was arts correspondent for PBSās āReligion & Ethics News Weeklyā and writer-producer for New River Media in Washington, DC.
Baylesās essays and reviews have appeared in theĀ New York Times;ĢżWashington Post;ĢżAtlantic Monthly;ĢżTimes Literary Supplement;ĢżNew Republic;Ģż±į²¹°ł±č±š°łās;ĢżChronicle of Higher Education;ĢżMichigan Quarterly;ĢżBrookings Review;ĢżPublic Interest;ĢżNational Review; and many other publications. An excerpt from her memoir,Ā Off White, appeared in the fall 2006 issue of theĀ Antioch Review.
A native of Boston, Bayles is a graduate of Harvard University and a former teacher in the public schools of Philadelphia, Boston, and Cambridge, Massachusetts. Between 1997 and 2003 she taught humanities at Claremont McKenna College in Claremont, California. Since 2003 she has been a Lecturer in the Arts & Sciences Honors Program at Boston College.
Event Photos

Martha Bayles at the Boisi Center



Photos by Christopher Soldt, Boston College MTS Photography
Event Recap
According to Martha Bayles, cultural critic and lecturer in the Boston College Honors Program, Americaās image abroad has suffered mightily in recent decades. Speaking at the Boisi Center on March 10, Bayles discussed past and present trends in American cultural exportation. Although the quantity of contacts between the United States and the rest of the world has increased, the quality of these contacts has not. In fact, In fact, she said, foreignersā esteem of the U.S. has diminished as a result of three major kinds of interaction: religious missionary work, study abroad programs, and American media.
While the number of American missionaries has increased, these trips are frequently being taken for short-term work, rather than life-long vocations. American missionaries are increasingly perceived as āgospel touristsā who bring paternalistic attitudes to local communities, said Bayles. Additionally, by sharing material affluence, such short term missionaries may actually subterfuge values of self-sustainment that long-term missionaries have built in underdeveloped countries.
Studying abroad has been another way Americans increasingly come into contact with the rest of the world. Unfortunately, Bayles noted, for some students such experiences have become an excuse for reckless behavior, as young Americans in foreign countries feel exempt from responsibility for their actions. Such behavior inevitably leaves negative impressions abroad.
Finally, Bayles pointed to the growing exportation of American popular culture since the end of the Cold War. Foreign box offices provide American film studios with twice the revenue of domestic box offices. While Americans usually recognize when films reflect or distort American popular culture, foreigners who know little of the U.S. cannot make that distinction. Pop culture frequently misrepresents religion in the U.S., for example, by omitting it entirely or portraying it as overly puritanical. As a result, Bayles, said, religious freedom and tolerance are given a bad name, and American credibility suffers even as we seek to engage in religious dialogue abroad.
Overall, Bayles said, Americans need to be more mindful of the United Statesā image abroad. Failure to do so will have destructive consequences for dialogue and cooperation with other countries.
Read More
Further Reading
Goodwill HuntingĀ by Martha Bayles
The Return of Cultural DiplomacyĀ by Martha Bayles forĀ Newsweek
External Links
by Martha Bayles for the Washington Post
Report by the Heritage Foundation
Report by World Public Opinion.org
publication by the Pew Research Center