The multiple, varied, and multifaceted portraits of Washington are replaced entirely by a single, repeated image, because the totalitarian regime must remove any room for interpretation. Furthermore, the importance of the name of Washington himself is demonstrated by the careful attention to the ribbons which once held his name:
And on the ribbon beneath each portrait, there was no longer the name "Washington" either. Whether the ribbon curved downward as on the one-half-cent stamp and the six, or curved upward as on the four, the five, the seven, and the ten, or straight with raised ends as on the one, the one and a half, the two, the three, the eight, and the nine, the name lettered across the ribbon was "Hitler" (Roth 43).
Thus, the family's trip to Washington DC serves to secure its legacy in the same way that Philip's bringing the stamp collection on the trip protects them from contamination from Lindbergh. Even though the family's trip to DC is not ideal, the mere act of their going serves to reify the historical and sociological structures of the city, which in turn reactivates that history even if only for a little while.
In this light, Washington as represented in the stamp collection (and by extension Washington DC itself) serves to represent the history of America, idealized but nonetheless accurate, as represented by the differing portraits of Washington the man. By offering a multiplicity of interpretations, the Washington bicentennial stamps present the ideal American leader as multifaceted, changing, and far from singular or unilateral. As such, the transformation of Washington into Hitler represents the historical trauma caused by totalitarian regimes, as the past is necessarily repressed and revised to fit the organizing dogma of the ruling regime. Thus, the copies of Hitler's image demonstrate the homogenizing, sterilizing effects of a repressive ideology on historical awareness, and Washington DC, as the location for so much American political history, becomes the physical site of the conflict between ideologies played out beyond the confines of Philip's nightmares. If one reconsiders this understanding of Washington along with the previously analyzed passage regarding the placement of swastikas throughout National Parks, the extent of Philip's nightmare becomes clear, and irrefutably shows the stamp collection to be Philip's idealized America.
The threat that Lindbergh and his supporters pose to Philip's stamp collection and America is twofold. Firstly, it presents a rewriting of American history to exclude contradictory or multiple perspectives, instead homogenizing America's leaders into a singular image regardless of context. Secondly, following this historical revision, the unsullied images of America must be reappropriated, and so are stamped with the symbol of this totalitarian regime. American history is edited out, and the sprawling, pristine vistas which represent the unbridled, raw character of America are covered over with a swastika, so that the regime permeates everything that once constituted the ideal America and places this ideal out the reach of those who need it most. Thus, Philip finally loses his stamp collection only once it becomes completely clear that the America in which the Roths find themselves is so beyond any ideal that even its metaphoric representative can no longer be retained. In a sense, Hitler and Lindberg ultimately do not need to deface the metaphorical America in the form of the stamp collection, because they have succeeded in defacing the very real America it represents, and so Philip loses it without ever really realizing how it was lost. Philip loses his stamp collection just at the...
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