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Joe Shlabotnik

(5,604 posts)
Fri Jan 31, 2014, 12:13 AM Jan 2014

The Rise of the Post-New Left Political Vocabulary

If a handful of time-travelling activists from our own era were somehow transported into a leftist political meeting in 1970, would they even be able to make themselves understood? They might begin to talk, as present-day activists do, about challenging privilege, the importance of allyship, or the need for intersectional analysis. Or they might insist that the meeting itself should be treated as a safe space. But how would the other people at the meeting react? I’m quite sure that our displaced contemporaries would be met with uncomprehending stares.

It’s not so much that the words they use would be unfamiliar. Certainly ‘privilege’ is not a new word, for instance. But these newcomers to the 1970 Left would have a way of talking about politics and political action that would seem strange and off-kilter to the others at the meeting. If one of the time travellers told others at the meeting to “check their privilege,” it’s not that anyone would disagree, exactly. It’s that they wouldn’t understand what was meant, or why it was supposed to be important or relevant.allpowertothepeople

We can reverse the scenario, and the picture looks similar. If a group of time-travelling activists from the heyday of the New Left, members perhaps of the Black Panther Party, the Organization for Afro-American Unity, or Students for a Democratic Society, were transported to a political meeting of activists in our own time, they might quickly begin referring to the need to unite “the people” in a common struggle for “liberation,” by constructing “an alliance” based on “solidarity.” In this case, the problem would not be one of understanding, so much as credibility. They would be understood, I imagine, at least in general terms. But would they be taken seriously? The terms in which they express their politics — the people, liberation, alliances — seem like (and indeed, are) a throwback to an earlier era. It seems likely that they would be deemed hopelessly insensitive to the specificity of different struggles against privilege. They would be accused, perhaps, of glossing over key issues of “positionality” and “allyship” by referring not to “folks,” as most contemporary activists would, but to “the people,” as if it were unitary and shared a common set of experiences.

Reflecting on the chasm of mutual incomprehension that divides today’s Left from the Left of the 1960s and 70s, we should resist any rush to judgment. Instinctively, some people — whether out of nostalgia or out of deeply held political convictions or both — will recoil from the vocabulary of today’s activists. There is no shortage of (usually older) critics who complain about the focus on “privilege” and “calling out” in the contemporary activist scene. But we should not be seduced by the broad-brushed dismissal with which these critics, whose political sensibility was shaped (for better and for worse) by the 70s New Left, reject the politics that pervades today’s activist subcultures. We should remain open at least to the possibility that some aspects of the new vocabulary may offer important insights, even if we retain our reluctance to embrace it wholesale. Conversely, some partisans of the post-New Left will insist that any resistance to the new jargon must be rooted in an attempt to cling to privileges which, allegedly, the new discourse threatens. This, too, reflects a narrow-minded sensibility that renounces the very possibility of learning from engagement with perspectives that contest one’s own basic assumptions. It is this fundamentalist sensibility that has earned “the Twitter Left” and the “social justice blogging community” a sometimes well-deserved bad reputation, but it shouldn’t be allowed to insinuate itself into the real-world activist Left.
The rest at: http://publicautonomy.org/2014/01/27/the-rise-of-the-post-new-left-political-vocabulary/

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Just stumbled across this and found it thought provoking; snipping the first 4 paragraphs from this article does not do it justice. I thought I'd post here because of the multi-generational demographics of DU.

Personally, as Gen X'er I'm slightly more comfortable with the vernacular of the the old "New Left", but I can understand how we evolved to where we are now. This article examines how changes reflected in the newspeak of activists demonstrate the semantics of the changing times, for better or worse. The comments on this article are interesting too.
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The Rise of the Post-New Left Political Vocabulary (Original Post) Joe Shlabotnik Jan 2014 OP
When you realize that language is a weapon... Scootaloo Jan 2014 #1
Thats very quotable. Joe Shlabotnik Jan 2014 #2
See what I mean? Scootaloo Jan 2014 #3
I've always underestimated language BelgianMadCow Feb 2014 #8
Speaking as someone who identified as "New Left" at that very 1970 meeting... TygrBright Jan 2014 #4
Does the New New Left really refer to "folks"? starroute Jan 2014 #5
I laughed when W said "folks" Joe Shlabotnik Jan 2014 #6
I wondered where that came from. I saw so many people on the internet use sabrina 1 Jan 2014 #7
I thought I was the only one who never heard that word in RL yet it was all over the sabrina 1 Feb 2014 #9
Post removed Post removed Jun 2014 #10
 

Scootaloo

(25,699 posts)
1. When you realize that language is a weapon...
Fri Jan 31, 2014, 12:16 AM
Jan 2014

One gets the despondent feeling that we're currently marching to war armed with balloon animals.

BelgianMadCow

(5,379 posts)
8. I've always underestimated language
Tue Feb 4, 2014, 05:20 PM
Feb 2014

the way in which our very thoughts are shaped by the available language means a language reference frame = your frame of mind. So, limit language and limit thoughts or feelings.

Occupy Love.

TygrBright

(20,987 posts)
4. Speaking as someone who identified as "New Left" at that very 1970 meeting...
Fri Jan 31, 2014, 01:22 AM
Jan 2014

...I can only say "plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose."

We were the "New Left" then.

So who were the "Old Left?"

They were locked out of auto plants, shot in the streets when they tried to unionize, and witch-hunted by Senator McCarthy & Co.

They thought we were self-involved, self-interested lightweights, too dumb to listen to them, more concerned with scoring points for "sticking it to The Man" than doing the hard, dirty, longterm work of lasting change that would benefit everyone. More interested in grand standing and the grand gesture than in the unglamorous, dangerous work of organizing and building support.

And they laughed at our language, and we laughed at theirs, those antiquated, outdated, irrelevant old fogies from the "Old Left" who had no idea what it was like in Vietnam, no interest in going to the wall for affirmative action or the ERA. They thought structural economic change would bring about social equity. We thought social equity would lead to structural economic change.

We were all wrong. We were all right.

I wish I'd listened to those Old Lefties more at the time.

I wish I could hear more from today's New Lefties.

wistfully,
Bright

starroute

(12,977 posts)
5. Does the New New Left really refer to "folks"?
Fri Jan 31, 2014, 01:26 AM
Jan 2014

I thought that was George Bush-speak. Now I'm really confused.

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2008/09/28/613327/-The-Bush-Legacy-Can-we-ditch-the-word-folks-yet

Sep 28, 2008

The Bush Legacy: Can we ditch the word "folks" yet?

People, I'm tired of the word "folks." Thanks to George Bush, the Junior, this word has mercilessly crept into the daily lexicon to the point where I must call for its elimination from political discourse (at least)! The wanton application of the term is ridiculous. At work, I hear supervisors and executives refer to staff as "folks." "Staff" seems to have become a dirty word; "employee" is better than staff; and "folks" seems to have become le mot préféré. . . .

And worse yet, let's not forget that "folks" has become a malaprop for the bad guys. Who can forget W's infamous Fourth of July address: " Many of the spectacular car bombings and killings you see are as a result of al Qaeda — the very same folks that attacked us on September the 11th."

Or, back in August of '08 upon learning of foiled bombing attempts and subsequently getting "fussed at" by the Saudis after he called the bombers "Islamic Fascists": "the United States is engaged "in a war against a extremist group of folks, bound together by an ideology, willing to use terrorism to achieve their objectives."

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
7. I wondered where that came from. I saw so many people on the internet use
Fri Jan 31, 2014, 05:54 PM
Jan 2014

it but never heard anyone in RL say 'folks'. So I thought maybe the rest of the country, outside NY were more likely to use it.

Thanks for the information.

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
9. I thought I was the only one who never heard that word in RL yet it was all over the
Wed Feb 12, 2014, 01:20 AM
Feb 2014

internet, not just on the Right either. Thanks for explaining where it came from.

So much of the language has an eerie resemblance to (Godwin Alert) Nazism. 'Homeland' and 'Patriot' act. It's as if they studied the techniques of that dreadful era and decided to try them on US.

What is most astonishing to me is that ANYONE bought the 'cowboy' act. Bush was not even a good actor, he comes from a long line of Northeastern Elites, far, far from cowboys and ranches. But it's frightening to think that all he had to do was purchase a ranch, no cattle, no horses (he was afraid of horses according to reports) put on a cowboy hat and boots, and half the country never questioned the phony 'tough cowboy act'. Talk about STAGING.

After his job for the MIC was done, he sold the ranch and I haven't seen any cowboy hats or boots since he left the WH.

We are being scammed, constantly. But at least SOME of us didn't fall for it.

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