Location: The Heritage Foundation's Van Andel Center
Following September 11, politicians of both major parties
resolutely asserted America's national unity. Today, the rhetorical
illusions of unity have given way to divisive oversimplifications
of Red vs. Blue electoral maps. In Divided We Fall: Family Discord
and the Fracturing of America, Bryce Christensen offers a more
nuanced yet more disturbing picture of American disunity - a
disunity both social and political, both public and personal.
Deeper than the disagreements that separate voter from voter, this
disunity increasingly separates man from woman, husband from wife,
parent from child, grandparent from grandchild, and sibling from
sibling.
Christensen explores the cross-cutting tensions surrounding these
fissures. Finding ways to bridge such fissures, he argues, takes on
particular urgency because of the mounting costs of family
disintegration - social and legal, cultural and psychological.
Additionally, pragmatic government responses to pressing social
needs are no substitute for deeper probing into the cultural causes
of these needs. Continued reliance on government to compensate for
family failure will make matters worse in the long run. While
family failure puts ever more burdens on government, his analysis
shows how such failure withers the selfless civic impulses that
sustain any healthy government.
BRYCE J. CHRISTENSEN is Assistant Professor of Composition in
the English Department of Southern Utah University. He is also the
author of Utopia Against the Family and many articles on
cultural and literary issues in various scholarly
journals.
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Bryce J. Christensen
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