Explore the emerging realms of digital territory where news and information reside—or will soon. It’s a place where game playing thrives and augmented reality tugs at possibilities. It’s where video excels, while the appetite for long-form text and the experience of “deep reading” is diminished, and it’s where the allure of multitasking greets the crush of information. Learn how young people negotiate their journey, and travel inside the brain to discover its capacities in the digital realm. Dig deeper into topics covered in the magazine by clicking on the books in our digital library to reveal selected videos, articles, blogs and Web sites.
On a surprisingly summery October afternoon in 2007 at a fairground in Independence, Iowa, Barack Obama’s sleeves were rolled up against a heat wave. In this region where cornfields were turning bronze, critics were making hay with the fact that Obama did not wear a lapel pin of the American flag. This was despite the fact that few of the presidential candidates, Democrat or Republican, consistently wore a pin.
Two weeks after Barack Obama was questioned about his patriotism and failure to wear a flag pin, he beamed the brightest of smiles before a giant American flag in the famously liberal college city of Madison, Wisconsin. A century earlier, W.E.B. Du Bois wrote that African Americans simply want “to make it possible for a man to be both a Negro and an American, without being cursed or spit upon by his fellows, without having the doors of Opportunity closed roughly in his face”
In Iowa, Obama reached out to hold the hand of a moist-eyed woman whose brother, suffering from cancer, held on to his job so he could keep his health insurance. The woman said that the way Obama looked her in the eyes and held her quaking hands “meant more to me than anything”
Barack Obama’s presence on the campaign trail created scenes that looked like something out of a Norman Rockwell painting. When voters in Madison, Wisconsin reached out to shake Obama’s hand, it brought to mind the scene of the white man surrounded by generations of adoring family members in Rockwell’s 1948 “Christmas Homecoming.” By 1961 the painter had progressed from that all -white scene to a multicultural vision in “Golden Rule”
On the day before the Iowa caucuses, Obama asked the crowd in this gymnasium who among them was still undecided. One of the undecided voters was St. Ambrose University professor Bill Hitchings. The next night HItchings voted for Obama in his caucus. What was his reason? “I talked to an older black woman at the Obama event,” Hitchings said. “I helped four white women in their 70s find their place at the caucus and they all said the same thing. They said Obama is the hope for their grandsons and their grandchildren”
Obama turned his attention to this member of a future generation of voters during a campaign stop at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, Pennsylvania
A girl perched on the shoulders of her father to get a better view on Inauguration Day in Washington, D.C. might make one wonder: What will witnessing the swearing-in of the first African-American president mean for this girl when it is her turn to become a leader?
“Tricky politics here for Barack Obama,” said an anchor for ABC News.
“A breathtaking misunderstanding of the symbolism of the American flag,” said a New York Daily News editorial.
The night before, Obama told a Cedar Rapids television station that he wore the pin for a while after 9/11 but stopped wearing one because it was often misused as a “substitute for, I think, true patriotism.” Then, at this event, which I happened to be covering as a columnist for The Boston Globe, Obama spoke on the issue for the first time.
“Somebody noticed I wasn’t wearing a flag lapel pin and I told folks, well you know what? I haven’t probably worn that pin in a very long time,” Obama said. “I wore it right after 9/11. But after a while, you start noticing people wearing a lapel pin, but not acting very patriotic. Not voting to provide veterans with resources that they need. Not voting to make sure that disability payments were coming out on time.”
He continued, “My attitude is that I’m less concerned about what you’re wearing on your lapel than what’s in your heart.”
Obama spoke about flag pins with a giant American flag draped behind him. Besides my pen, pad and tape recorder, I also had my camera. Things clicked for me and I started clicking away. Here he was, negotiating the classic tortured straits of African Americans, having to go an extra measure to affirm his patriotism before a flag that historically was a blind sentinel on America’s torture of black people. Yet, if he won, this black man would represent this flag as arguably the most powerful man on earth.
For two years beginning in February 2007, I took photographs as I traveled across America covering the Obama campaign. A selection of those images, “From Iowa to the White House: Historic Photos of President Barack Obama,” was displayed at the Museum of African American History in Boston, Massachusetts earlier this year.
Many people ask me what it was like to be in Chicago’s Grant Park the night of Obama’s election. I will most remember the crowd of 125,000 people saying the Pledge of Allegiance. Like so many Americans, I grew up with highly conflicted feelings about the pledge and the flag. Now 54, I am the son of parents who fled segregated Mississippi for the factories of Milwaukee. My mother, a light-skinned African American, told me white co-workers invited her to picnics but asked her not to tell her darker co-workers. She refused those invitations.
I was too young to be part of the civil rights movement, but old enough to adorn myself with the artifacts of anger, like my “Free Angela Davis” button. Old enough to protest the exclusion of Africa from my high school world history class and to get called before the vice principal for writing a review of “The Autobiography of Malcolm X.” I was a beneficiary of a decent public school education, affirmative action, and the Kerner Commission report that said America needed more black journalists. But after getting in the door, I saw too many ceilings still placed against the aspirations of my colleagues. To this day, African-American journalists comprise only 5 percent of newsroom staff.
I wrote in the Globe that I had never in my life heard such a multicultural throng recite the pledge with such determined enunciation, expelling it from the heart in a treble soaring to the skies and a bass drumming through the soil to vibrate my feet. The treble and bass met in my spine, where “liberty and justice for all” evoked neither the clank of chains nor the cackle of cruelty, but a warm tickle of Jeffersonian slave-owning irony: Justice cannot sleep forever.
That was a long way from 1847 when Frederick Douglass said, “I have no patriotism” for a nation that does “not recognize me as a man.” Given that Douglass spoke in the Museum of African American History’s historic African Meeting House in Boston, it is the best of full circles. As the award-winning, Boston-based photographer Lou Jones wrote in 2006, “Stories are ephemeral. Memories fade. Photographs do not. Photographers bring back permanent proof of things never before seen.”
Derrick Z. Jackson, a 1984 Nieman Fellow, is a columnist at The Boston Globe.
The Digital Landscape: What's Next for News?
Explore the emerging realms of digital territory where news and information reside—or will soon. It’s a place where game playing thrives and augmented reality tugs at possibilities. It’s where video excels, while the appetite for long-form text and the experience of “deep reading” is diminished, and it’s where the allure of multitasking greets the crush of information. Learn how young people negotiate their journey, and travel inside the brain to discover its capacities in the digital realm. Dig deeper into topics covered in the magazine by clicking on the books in our digital library to reveal selected videos, articles, blogs and Web sites.