Walter Benn Michaels argues that narrow focus on identity politics blinds us to class inequalities

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HerrDoktor
Walter Benn Michaels argues that narrow focus on identity politics blinds us to class inequalities

An interesting London Review of Books essay[1] by Walter Benn Michaels notes that while sexism and racism are decreasing somewhat the disparities between economic groups are actually increasing:

"Thus the primacy of anti-discrimination not only performs the economic function of making markets more efficient, it also performs the therapeutic function of making those of us who have benefited from those markets sleep better at night. And, perhaps more important, it has, ‘for a long time’, as Wendy Bottero says in her contribution to the recent Runnymede Trust collection Who Cares about the White Working Class?, also performed the intellectual function of focusing social analysis on what she calls ‘questions of racial or sexual identity’ and on ‘cultural differences’ instead of on ‘the way in which capitalist economies create large numbers of low-wage, low-skill jobs with poor job security’. The message of Who Cares about the White Working Class?, however, is that class has re-emerged: ‘What we learn here’, according to the collection’s editor, Kjartan Páll Sveinsson, is that ‘life chances for today’s children are overwhelmingly linked to parental income, occupations and educational qualifications – in other words, class.’"

1. http://www.lrb.co.uk/v31/n16/mich02_.html

remind remind's picture

Mighty white, of a privileged white male to say sexism and racism is decreasing, cause he has so much direct experience to know so....

HerrDoktor

You're misconstruing the article.  He says it has decreased _somewhat_ and cites enrollment in US educational instituations as proof and rolls in the existence of e.g. a black president as further evidence.  You should give the article a chance.

bagkitty bagkitty's picture

Excellent article -- thank you for posting it.