Sex and the Founding Fathers: The American Quest for a Relatable Past (Sexuality Studies) (3 page)

BOOK: Sex and the Founding Fathers: The American Quest for a Relatable Past (Sexuality Studies)
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Recent studies have shown that Americans today embrace history but
"reject nation-centered accounts" that do not allow them to "build bridges
between personal pasts and larger historical stories." Americans want to
"personalize the public past."" As Lois W.Banner points out, the lives of
the Founders "have become sounding boards for what the nation thinks of
itself."" The National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, just steps away
from the Liberty Bell and Independence Hall, promotes this kind of personal connection in an online eleven-question quiz titled "Which Founder
Are You?" The landing page for the website declares that the Founders had
"many different personalities" and encourages the Web surfer to "Discover
which Founding Father you're most like!" I7

Every generation likes to say that it has finally learned the truth about
the Founders and that by examining their private lives, their loves, and their
desires, it has exposed the real men. With few exceptions, revelations do
not come from the discovery of new documents. The "breaking news" that
authors like to assert is most often based on (sometimes) novel interpretations of familiar sources, the diaries and letters that we have regarding the
Founders' loves, families, and marriages. More often, new interpretations
are possible because of gaps in the record that conveniently have lent themselves to readings that suit generation after generation of Americans seeking
themselves in their Founders. In general, academic historians are rigidly tied
to the rule that claims must be directly supported by existing documentation that is analyzed by understanding the historical context in which it was
produced. Academic historians are more accepting of the fact that history is
full of unanswerable questions, of nuanced and contradictory settings, and of holes in the record. In contrast, popular biographers and filmmakers are
often compelled by their respective media to fill in those gaps.

By proffering new readings of old men, popular biographers are, of
course, able to create straw men that allow them to sell their books as something fresh-but more than just this strategy is at work here. By claiming to
lift the veil for the first time on the private life of a Founder, they enable us
to feel that we are getting closer to the perceived truth about ourselves and
the nation. And by believing that the private man is being revealed for the
first time, readers can see themselves as modern, having made a true break
from the past. Sex is central to this understanding of modernity, as is evidenced by our understanding of modern sexuality as being somehow more
liberated than the sexuality of previous times."

Museums and popular biographers, if pressed, might concede that they
use sex opportunistically; a titillating message draws in a wider public for
the real history that they want to teach. In my view, the role of sex in history
should not be so easily dismissed. The element of sex heightens interest in
the histories of the Founders because learning about their intimate lives also
personalizes abstract notions of political citizenship and connects Americans
to their nation and their own identity as Americans. Current stories increasingly use sexual personalizing of the Founders not simply because sex is more
openly displayed in the media but because Americans increasingly need to
know what is American and see themselves in that definition. Many Americans get that reassurance from the Founders.

To understand how popular memory takes shape, this book makes use of
a wide range of materials, including print sources, such as books, magazines,
newspapers, poetry, published songs, eulogies, cartoons, and caricatures, as
well as portraits, statues, memorials, popular films, musicals, websites, and
museum exhibits." Because of their immense popularity in the past and
today, popular biographies are also an ideal source for looking at changing
ideas about sex and the Founding Fathers, and they make up the core of the
book. Throughout American history, biographies have remained the most
important source for communicating to Americans information about the
personal lives of the Founding Fathers. "Phenomenally popular" in nineteenth-century America, biographies were "regarded as a method of moral
teaching."20 Today, exposure to biographies is still one of the main ways that
most Americans learn about history.21 In contrast to academic histories written to shed light on the past on its own terms, popular biographies are usually written with an eye toward showing how a life story can resonate with
present concerns. These "life stories" can tell us a great deal about the cul rural moments that produce them. Together, all these sources, through their
circulation and as products of the thinking of their time, both popularize
and reflect understandings of sex and masculinity.

We can recognize the contours of the history of sexuality in America
in the chapters that follow.22 Each chapter begins with an examination of
public discussion of the personal lives of the Founders while they lived. The
Founders often cultivated their own public reputations around sexuality in
response to cultural norms of the day. In the personally charged political
climate of the early Republic, the press operated in what today would be
considered a tabloid style, making hefty use of rumor and innuendo and
relying on the public's thirst for sordid details and voyeuristic thrills. This
approach meshed well with political standards of the day, which, as Nancy
Isenberg reminds us, indicated that "political figures were expected to virtually embody the well-defined traits of republican virtue in their personal
and public demeanor, speech, and lifestyle."23 The sexually charged, scandalmongering political climate of the American Revolution and early Republic also generated public discussion about personal lives. Americans did not
exempt the Founders from this examination, discussing Jefferson as a slaveowner who indulged in intimacy with enslaved adolescent Herrings, Alexander Hamilton as a repentant adulterer, and John Adams as a prickly prude.

As the Founders passed from life into memory, their public reputations
lay entirely in the hands of Americans. The sexualized political climate of
the early Republic waned. By the nineteenth century, public memory of the
Founders struggled to reconcile Victorian modes of sexual morality with the
elite sexual cultures from which the Founders came. The earliest biographies
written about the Founders seek to establish a permanent respectability for
the individual political leaders of the Revolution and nation's founding. In
the hands of biographers, many of the Founders serve as role models for
American boys and men. To accomplish this goal, of course, life details are
handled carefully, because many of today's most revered Founders suffered
from early scandalous reputations: Franklin was branded as immoral, abolitionists labeled Jefferson a child rapist, and Gouverneur Morris's private life
had to be whitewashed for Victorian audiences.

The sexual revolutions of the 1920s and 1960s breathed new life into
sexual and romantic details of the Founders' lives. Throughout the twentieth century, sexual desires increasingly became viewed as a psychologically
healthy part of a man's life. As the writings of Sigmund Freud and his ilk
have made their mark on American culture, sexual expression has become
an important part of being "normal," and the Founders are no exception. In
addition to being ever more sexually explicit, American memory also yokes nationalist concerns about domesticity to our image of the Founders, and
writers push ever harder to depict the Founders as exceptionally happy in their
marriages and homes, despite the lack of evidence to support such claims.

In the twenty-first century, we have seen best-selling books about the
Founders and a renewed interest in the moral and virtuous exceptionalism
of the Founding generation. A changing political and demographic world has
increasingly made the Founders-slave-owning, elite white men-seem irrelevant, but Americans have used sex to relate to them and connect in a way
that parades itself as universal. From museums to political stump speeches,
the Founding Fathers are as publicly prominent now as they have ever been.
American memory in this moment uses sex to connect eighteenth-century
men with contemporary concerns. Jefferson, for example, has emerged as
a multicultural hero, Washington is seen as a virile father, and Morris and
Franklin are considered as delightfully modern in their approach to sexuality.

The book is organized into this introduction, six numbered chapters,
and a conclusion. Chapters focus on specific political leaders of the American Revolution and Founding of the nation. Although the term "Founding
Father" was coined in the early twentieth century, even in his own lifetime,
Washington was called the "father" of the nation.24 Different generations
have quibbled over who belongs in the pantheon, but few would dispute
that the men featured in this book-Washington, Jefferson, Adams, Hamilton, and Franklin-are some of the most significant of the group. Morris, although less well-known, operates in the book as a prime example of
how the connections between sex and manliness in cultural memory of the
Founders are not limited to the top tier. Indeed, many others will come to
mind for readers as a good fit for this study-Benjamin Rush wrote about
masturbation; James Madison, hardly considered an ideal model of masculinity, fathered no children with Dolley yet is remembered as the father of
the Constitution; and Aaron Burr, who shot and killed Hamilton in that
famous duel, was early vilified as a libertine and seducer, only to be recently
recast as an early feminist. The list goes on.

Structuring the book along biographical lines rather than topically allows
it to engage with the construction of public memory of these individuals as
well as to consider the ways that biography itself participates in defining
manliness and appropriate sexualities more generally. We can see how over
time reputations shift, as the public emphasizes aspects of a Founder's biography that have been ignored and dismisses others that have loomed large in
earlier tellings. We can see too how one generation's portrayal is no more or
less "true" than another's and how each shapes the narrative to fit its cultural
moment. Chapter 1 examines how Americans have remembered Washing ton's virility. As the "father of the nation," Washington invokes a masculine
ideal and has done so for as long as Americans have been remembering him.
That he fathered no children of his own puts particular pressure on cultural memory to shore up his image as a model of heroic manhood. Chapter
2 examines Jefferson's legacy, which today is most notably associated with
his intimacy with Herrings. By examining how his portrayal morphs from
that of a chaste widow to that of a man with passionate relationships, we
can see just how important the sexualizing of his image has been for laying
the groundwork for today's understanding of him as a man with two families, black and white. Chapter 3 examines how Americans have remembered
Adams. In his own lifetime, he wore his moral code on his sleeve and did
not hesitate to castigate his fellow Founders for their sexual immorality. The
extraordinary number of surviving letters between him and his wife, Abigail, has led many to cast them as uniquely matched and "modern" in their
loving bond. Today, Adams is also uncomfortably embraced as a prickly,
cranky, prude-a man who embodies the Puritan core of American national
morality. The avuncular elder statesman, Franklin, is the focus of Chapter 4.
Franklin is today remembered as the nation's "foxy grandpa," and his sexual
appetites have become celebrated in a way that puts the lie to a line between
sex and political life.15 Chapter 5 focuses on Hamilton, the man on the tendollar bill, who is most famously remembered for being killed while in office
as secretary of the Treasury in a duel with then-Vice President Burr. Less
often recalled is Hamilton's extramarital affair and the very public pamphlet
that he authored to fully explain the circumstances. Chapter 6 examines the
least-known of the men in this book, Morris, who has recently been called
the "rake who wrote the Constitution."26 A bachelor for most of his life,
Morris is the only Founder for whom extraordinarily revealing sources came
to light long after his death. His detailed diaries remark on sexual intimacies
with married and unmarried women, providing a treasure trove for some
biographers and an embarrassment for others.

The Founders lived in a world that fit neither the stereotyped image of
a Puritanical past nor a more modern sexual culture that makes them "just
like us." The problem with using sex to make the Founders relatable is that
sex is not transhistorical: It can't be used in this manner any more than
medical or racial understandings of the day can be used to connect readers
from early America to today.

Remembering the intimate lives of the Founding Fathers with simple
tropes, hyperbolic superficialities, and meaningless romanticized generalizations prevents us from meaningfully engaging with eighteenth-century sexual variance. Doing so also trivializes sex, perpetuating our own discomfort with the topic, a discomfort with a long history. Superficial glosses relegate
the subject of sex to the status it held in previous generations-one of titillation, shame, and humor-all of which rely on a certain assertion of the
transhistorical or human understanding of sexuality. But the ways in which
Americans have ordered their sexual lives and their sexual identities have
changed greatly over the centuries. Viewing the Founders' intimate lives and
identities as somehow accessible to us through surface descriptions, such as
"love at first sight" or "healthy sexual appetites," prevents us from taking
historical sexual identities and sexual expressiveness seriously. By focusing in a sustained way on the manner in which Americans have asked and
answered their own questions about sexual intimacy and the Founders of the
nation, we can examine how Americans have both broached and obscured
sexual realities and the cultural connections between sex and nationalized
masculinity in the public memory of these men.

BOOK: Sex and the Founding Fathers: The American Quest for a Relatable Past (Sexuality Studies)
4.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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