Contends that it was the lust for adventure that motivated the
great migrations of the 18th and 19th centuries. Martin Green's (Tufts
University) book 'The Adventurous Male: Chapters in the History of the
White Male Mind'; Green's advice to aspiring leaders.
By
PT Staff, published on January 01, 1994
ADVENTURE
Every American school kid has learned the sory of the Pilgrims, the
stern settlers who left a land of oppression for a new world, shielded
only by faith and a fragile ship. Their quest for religous freedom and
cultural tolerance are ideals Americans have claimed as their birthright
ever since.
Correction, insists Martin Green, professor of English at Tufts
University. The Pilgrims may not have actually set sail with such lofty
goals.
Most of the great accomplishments of Western society, Green
suggests, have been motivated by the pursuit of adventure. Man he
says--meaning males--has always had a need to engage in primal
activities, such as hunting and warfare. It's innate. Exploration and
discovery are just more organized and socially acceptable forms. Green
claims in The Adventurous Male: Chapters in the History of the White Male
Mind (Penn State), that the lust for adventure propelled the great
migrations of the 18th and 19th centuries. Why else would 11 million
people leave the British Isles in such awful ships?
Think of it: the Pilgrims as superheroes--a theme for Steven
Speilberg's next summer blockbuster. But Green doesn't just want to
rewrite history. His understanding of the American psyche impels him to
offer advice to aspiring leaders: "Politicians can add to their
attractiveness by having a good war record or some other insignia of
adventure." Maybe Bill Clinton could bolster his popularity by taking up
space-walking.
PHOTO: The race to the moon may have been motivated partly by men's
innate urge to hunt.
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