Mining character for clues
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A person鈥檚 past is the only clue most of us have to go on, especially when we take a leap of faith and put our trust in them. So we ask about their lives 鈥 where they came from, what influenced them. Employers pore over r茅sum茅s and tap references from former bosses, trying to make a right choice about a new hire. Companionship-seekers pay close attention to their date鈥檚 back story to better understand what they might be getting themselves into. Large portions of the educational-industrial complex are devoted to the study of great men and women in the hopes that only the good parts of history will repeat themselves.
Take, for example, this Monitor profile of Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell (R) of Kentucky (click here to read it). Over the past few years, the Monitor has profiled former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D) of California, Speaker John Boehner (R) of Ohio, President Obama, and world leaders such as Russia鈥檚 Vladimir Putin. A profile is a biography with news in its nose cone, an examination of what makes a prominent person tick.
The aim is to try to foretell how future policy decisions will unfold. Was there something in ancestry or childhood 鈥 a mentor, a triumph, a close shave 鈥 that can unlock the secret to what he or she might do? Did Anwar Sadat鈥檚 Sudanese grandmother influence his boldness in Egypt鈥檚 1973 war with Israel and his even bolder peacemaking afterward? Can the pivotal point in Nelson Mandela鈥檚 life be found in his Xhosa culture, his time spent in an Anglo school or Robben Island prison, or his mastery of boxing and ballroom dancing?
Most lives are erected brick by brick. Character is an edifice, not an anecdote, and even strongly defined characters can surprise us. Mr. McConnell鈥檚 Senate might find ways to make deals across the aisle and with the White House. He鈥檚 led along those lines before. Or he could see his purpose as holding the Obama administration in check while championing a party-first agenda. He鈥檚 been there, too. Francine Kiefer鈥檚 profile explores the possibilities.
In a useful profile like Francine鈥檚, showing is better than telling. A person鈥檚 words are important, but actions speak louder. If that were not the case, the great English-language wordsmith William Shakespeare wouldn鈥檛 himself be a mystery. His vivid portraits of the mighty, the foolish, and the tragic who have strutted and fretted on history鈥檚 stage constitute what many of us think we know about Roman senators, medieval kings, Renaissance merchants. But the Bard鈥檚 great deeds were most likely done locked in a room with a quill pen and 聽paper. We know virtually nothing about him.
Not so with our public figures. We鈥檒l clearly see between now and 2016 how the McConnell Senate, the Boehner House, and the Obama presidency interact 鈥 whether they are driven by party or personality or they play nice for the sake of the country. A telling moment or fateful exchange might determine what happens. Character and ideas might govern. A profile provides hints. History will tell the tale.
John Yemma is editor-at-large of the Monitor. He can be reached at yemma@csmonitor.com.