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Christopher Chantrill's avatar

"Mangerial Wokism:" I just read a commenter elsewhere who used the term "Woking Class." I like it.

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Kieran Telo's avatar

"Cultural Marxism" may well have entered common parlance due to Jordan Peterson, I've never paid enough attention to his rantings (though his writing is calmer and more reflective in my limited experience). It is certainly very widespread and used almost exlusively in the pejorative.

Another term that is wickedly abused (and has been for very much longer) is 'ideology'. The notion is that this means 'bad ideas' held by bad people. Ideas you don't agree with... and therefore to be used to shut down any discussion.

Slightly more sophisticated arguments grasp the fact that to step outside of ideology is simply not possible but accentuate how systems of thought are manipulated for the purposes of social control. There's always a puppet-master....

Ironically those on the Right (whatever that even means) will frequently cite some or other messiah who will come and fix things, and proclaim that faith, family, and community are the true sources of solace and content. They would deem me heretical for agreeing, but pointing out that these are powerful ideological forces in the sense of constituing social cement.

Citing Gramsci and more contemporary sources wins few friends and naturally to mention the notion of the Ideological State Apparatus (for example) would invite condemnation _solely_ on the grounds that Louis A. was a _bad bad man_ who murdered his dear wife.

Practically everything has become a binary now: like/unlike. Althusser: murderer; Gramsci: commie; Foucault: kiddy fiddler; Deleuze: jumped out the window - obvious nutcase.

The notion that rebellious students are symbolically murdering their elders still holds true I think, eliding quite neatly with this algorithmic process of thought and action. And how do people skirt around the manifold contradictions? Well of course as well as the like/unlike there's the 'block'... "you're on ignore" as the AOL chat rooms popularised.

It's warm and homely in our bubbles, not so?

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