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It is time to pluck the identity beam out of your own eye before complaining any more about left identity politics. — Mark Lilla’s new book The Once And Future Liberal: After Identity Politics ...
Identity politics—the practice of appealing to voters’ tribal instincts at the expense of weaving a more all-embracing agenda—is not a new phenomenon. In fact, it’s as American as apple pie.
“In America, institutional politics can always, at some point, undo whatever gains are made through movement politics,” said Mark Lilla during his lecture Thursday night. As part of the Reaffirming ...
Mark Lilla’s Book Criticizes Identity Politics, but Falls Short on Proposing an Alternative . The column that spawned a thousand hot takes is now a book.
Mark Lilla’s new book begins with a statement that is brutal and bracing, ... After Identity Politics” Mark Lilla. Harper: 160 pp., $24.99. More to Read . Voices. Column: Hate Trump?
The response to Lilla’s essay was fierce. Slate’s Michelle Goldberg argued his reduction of identity politics confuses the “absurd excesses of political correctness” with “race and ...
Identity politics is illiberal, argues Mark Lilla. Liberals might also do the math and note that most of the U.S. population is white and half of it male.
Mark Lilla has become the face of the anti-identity politics crusade that has roiled some liberals and progressives since last fall’s election.
You might remember that last November Mark Lilla published an article in the New York Times titled, “The End of Identity Liberalism” in which he argued for the end of so-called “identity ...
Why won’t liberals give up identity politics? Even if it doesn’t win elections, it has given them a sort of cultural hegemony. Barton Swaim reviews “The Once and Future Liberal” by Mark Lilla.
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