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Jose A Rodriguez's avatar

"Until the middle of the twentieth century, no one who was asked about a person’s identity would have mentioned race, sex, class, nationality, region or religion."

A brief review of just about any book in the bible would soundly refute this statement.

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Lucy T's avatar

I found Susan Neiman’s Evil in Modern Thought a fascinating, tightly argued book. This attempt to posit a leftist alternative to the “woke” doesn’t convince me, in part because it’s built on questionable foundations, in part because it slips around among ideas of the left, sentimentalizing the internationalist left, bending over backward to accommodate victims identified by identity, and leaving a concrete idea of a leftist path forward unclear.

As others have noted, the proposition that basing identity on race, religion, ethnicity or sex is a mid-twentieth century invention is refuted by history. (It would be interesting to know the context for the quote from Kwame Anthony Appiah.)

The popular and facile claim that history is always written by the victors is also refuted by history, or historians. A few examples: The Athenian Thucydides wrote the history of the Peloponnesian war, a war ultimately won by Sparta. Tacitus, Senator of imperial Rome, quoted (or put into the mouth of) a Germanic chieftain the famous indictment of imperial peace, “Desertum faciunt pacem appellant.” [“They make a desert and call it peace.”] The Southern “Lost Cause” idea of the US Civil War predominated until the revisionist history of the Sixties. Perhaps the last example can suggest that a (self-professed) victim’s story is not the only story, and not always true.

Neiman’s argument is at its slipperiest when she critiques the politics, psychology, and moral value of victimization while bending over backward to express solidarity with any and all victims, to the point of slipping in a call not just for “empathy” but for “reparations wherever possible.” Neiman mentions several examples of people making fraudulent claims of (officially victimized) identity, presumably in search of influence or power, or just a job. How about the hope of free money as a motive to keep the wheels of grievance turning?

Neiman’s view of the internationalist left strikes me as sentimental: the left was never as united as she makes it sound. Under the stirring picture of the International Brigade, the Spanish Civil War saw fierce in-fighting between Communist and liberal opponents of fascism. The resistance movements of countries like Italy and Greece likewise saw combat between partisan groups of varying leftist allegiance, struggles for power in the post-war world. As for universalism, it is to the left of the Soviet Union and Maoist China that we owe the phrase “political correctness,” now usurped by “woke,” which seems to be following—or trying to follow—its totalitarian trajectory, universalism as a source of control rather than solidarity.

I’d like to think there is a left alternative to “woke,” one that focuses on the traditional concerns of labor (fair wages, workplace safety, the right to unionize) and seeks to expand the social safety net (quality public education, affordable healthcare, environmental protections, affordable retirement) to all, covering the cost by raising taxes those who have profited obscenely in the last 40 years. That’s one version of a nuts-and-bolts center left platform that could win popular support. If someone comes up with the language in which to frame it and pulls together a coalition big enough to deny activists, left and right, a veto. I’m not holding my breath.

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