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Politics & Power Quote by George H. Mead

"In wartime, we identify ourselves with the nation, and its interests are the interests of our primal selves"

About this Quote

Wartime doesn’t just ask for sacrifice; it rewires identity. Mead’s line is clinical and unsettling on purpose: when the nation goes to war, people don’t merely support “the national interest” as an abstract policy preference. They fuse with it. The “we” expands until it swallows the “I,” and the state’s goals start to feel like the most intimate kind of self-preservation.

Mead, a pragmatist and a key figure in social psychology, is writing in the shadow of modern mass warfare and the rise of propaganda-driven nationalism. His larger project was to show that the self is social, built through interaction and shared symbols. That’s the context that makes the claim sting: if the self is partly manufactured in public, then wartime becomes a high-intensity factory. Flags, slogans, uniforms, enemy images, and collective rituals don’t just persuade; they reorganize the emotional map of who counts as “us” and what threats feel existential.

The phrase “primal selves” carries the subtext. Mead isn’t romanticizing national unity; he’s pointing to regression, to an older repertoire of tribal reflexes: loyalty, aggression, fear of outsiders, the comfort of moral simplification. War legitimizes these impulses by laundering them through the nobility of “country.” Personal anxieties become patriotic duty; private rage becomes public virtue.

The intent is diagnostic, not motivational: a warning that wartime patriotism is powerful precisely because it feels natural. It turns political decisions into identity commitments, making dissent feel like self-betrayal rather than disagreement.

Quote Details

TopicWar
Source
Verified source: National-Mindedness and International-Mindedness (George H. Mead, 1929)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
In wartime we identify ourselves with the nation, and its interests are the interests of our primal selves. (p. 392 (in International Journal of Ethics 39 (1929), pp. 385–407)). This sentence appears in George Herbert Mead’s article “National-Mindedness and International-Mindedness,” originally published in International Journal of Ethics, vol. 39 (1929), pp. 385–407. On the Mead Project transcription, the sentence is located at the section marked “(392)”. While the Mead Project is a secondary hosting/transcription, it identifies the primary publication venue, year, and page context; you can verify the “first published” claim by consulting the 1929 issue (vol. 39) of International Journal of Ethics and locating the passage on p. 392.
Other candidates (1)
Self, War, and Society (Mary Jo Deegan, 2011) compilation95.0%
George Herbert Mead's Macrosociology Mary Jo Deegan. a reason for the sacrifice. War on occasions makes the good ... ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Mead, George H. (2026, February 20). In wartime, we identify ourselves with the nation, and its interests are the interests of our primal selves. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-wartime-we-identify-ourselves-with-the-nation-146308/

Chicago Style
Mead, George H. "In wartime, we identify ourselves with the nation, and its interests are the interests of our primal selves." FixQuotes. February 20, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-wartime-we-identify-ourselves-with-the-nation-146308/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"In wartime, we identify ourselves with the nation, and its interests are the interests of our primal selves." FixQuotes, 20 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-wartime-we-identify-ourselves-with-the-nation-146308/. Accessed 25 Feb. 2026.

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George H. Mead (February 27, 1863 - April 26, 1931) was a Philosopher from USA.

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