Tender Comrades: The Left and the Politics of Shame

Authors

  • Laura Pascoe
  • John Haffner Queen's University
  • John Rose

Abstract

Shame, it seems, has become a very prominent mechanism for political organizing. In many spaces it is, in fact, the only mechanism employed. Over the course of the 2016 presidential election season it was hard to locate any political action that did not involve a degree of shaming. This shame manifested itself in different ways, depending on the context. When directed at the political right or the opposition, the intent has been to shame in order to win the day. When directed at the political left or the emerging resistance, the intent has be to devour--to weaken our position and erode solidarities in favour of building hierarchies of activism. This article posits that shaming has failed as a political strategy. Instead, the authors argue for a different strategy: one that draws from the rich intellectual traditions of the Left - including intersectionalities - in order to move forward with a politics of reflexivity, curiosity and connection.

References

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Derrida, D. J. (2016). Of Grammatology. (A. W. M. P. of E. G. C. Spivak, Trans.) (Fortieth Anniversary ed. edition). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univ Pr.

Ferguson, S. (2016). Intersectionality and Social-Reproduction Feminisms: Toward an Integrative Ontology. Historical Materialism, 24(2), 38–60.

Lefebvre, H. (2016). Metaphilosophy. (S. Elden, Ed., D. Fernbach, Trans.). London New York: Verso.

Noah, T. (2016, December 5). Trevor Noah: Let’s Not Be Divided. Divided People Are Easier to Rule. The New York Times. Retrieved from https://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/05/opinion/trevor-noah-lets-not-be-divided-divided-people-are-easier-to-rule.html

Said, E. W. (1979). Orientalism (Vintage Books ed). New York: Vintage Books.

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Published

2017-05-01

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Section

Articles