Academic Journal

Review of 'Elite Capture: How the Powerful Took Over Identity Politics (And Everything Else)' by Olúfẹmi O. Táíwò (Haymarket Books / Pluto Press)

Bibliographic Details
Title: Review of 'Elite Capture: How the Powerful Took Over Identity Politics (And Everything Else)' by Olúfẹmi O. Táíwò (Haymarket Books / Pluto Press)
Authors: Hunter Hilinski
Source: Lateral, Vol 12, Iss 1 (2023)
Subject Terms: identity politics, capitalism, democracy, materialism, activism, organizing, elites, Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology, GN301-674
Publisher Information: Cultural Studies Association, 2023.
Publication Year: 2023
Collection: LCC:Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology
Description: The discourse surrounding identity politics has become fraught with misunderstanding and co-optation by forces across the political spectrum. What was once a radical discourse initiated by the queer, Black, and Indigenous feminists of the Combahee River Collective has become a movement defined by incapacity, stigmatization, and misinterpretation. Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò sets out to clarify the nature of the identity politics movement and its relationship to the powerful institutions and individuals which have misappropriated the original radicalism of this idea to serve their own political gains. Through a materialist and narrative approach to identity politics and social critique, Táíwò argues that the problem is not with identity politics as such, but a specific power called “elite capture,” which stifles the potential latent in identity politics and genuine leftist social organizing. He concludes that, rather than deferring responsibility and accepting symbolic gestures of empty representation, we must begin to construct a new politics and a new house altogether.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
ISSN: 2469-4053
Relation: https://csalateral.org/reviews/elite-capture-how-powerful-took-over-identity-politics-taiwo-hilinski/; https://doaj.org/toc/2469-4053
DOI: 10.25158/L12.1.21
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/b970c89793774344ba50f813ddb9c78b
Accession Number: edsdoj.b970c89793774344ba50f813ddb9c78b
ISSN: 24694053
DOI: 10.25158/L12.1.21
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals