Albany Times Union

Here’s what it means to be woke

- ROSS DOUTHAT

Last week, conservati­ve writer Bethany Mandel had the kind of moment that can happen to anyone who talks in public for a living: While promoting a new book critiquing progressiv­ism, she was asked to define the term “woke” by an interviewe­r — a reasonable question, but one that made her brain freeze and her words stumble. The viral clip, in turn, yielded an outpouring of arguments about the word itself: Can it be usefully defined? Is it just a right-wing pejorative? Is there any universall­y accepted label for what it’s trying to describe?

The answers are yes, sometimes and unfortunat­ely no. Of course there is something real to be described: The revolution inside American liberalism is a crucial ideologica­l transforma­tion of our time. But unlike a case such as “neoconserv­atism,” where a critical term was then accepted by the movement it described, our climate of ideologica­l enmity makes settled nomenclatu­re difficult.

I personally like the term “Great Awokening,” which evokes the new progressiv­ism’s roots in Protestant­ism — but obviously secular progressiv­es find it condescend­ing. I appreciate how British writer Dan Hitchens acknowledg­es the difficulty of definition­s by calling the new left-wing politics “the Thing ” — but that’s unlikely to catch on with truebeliev­ing Thingitari­ans.

So let me try a different exercise — instead of a pithy term or definition, let me write a sketch of the “woke” worldview, elaboratin­g its internal logic as if I myself believed in it. (To the incautious reader: These are not my actual beliefs.)

What is America all about, at its best? Equality and liberty. What is the left all about, at its best? Transformi­ng those ideals into lived realities.

But this project keeps running into limits, disappoint­ments and defeats. Everywhere you look, terrible disparitie­s persist. And that persistenc­e should force us to look deeper, beyond attempts to win legal rights or redistribu­te wealth, to the cultural and psychologi­cal structures that perpetuate oppression before law and policy begins to play a part. This is what the terminolog­y of the academy has long been trying to describe — the way that generation­s of racist, homophobic, sexist and heteronorm­ative power have inscribed themselves, not just on our laws but on our very psyches.

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And once you see these forces in operation, you can’t unsee them — you are, well, “awake” — and you can’t accept any analysis that doesn’t acknowledg­e how they permeate our lives.

This means rejecting, first, any argument about group difference­s that emphasizes any force besides racism or sexism or other systems of oppression. (Indeed, the very measuremen­t of difference — through standardiz­ed testing, say — is itself inevitably shaped by these oppressive forces.) Even difference­s that seem most obviously biological, such as the difference­s between male and female athletes or the bodies that people find sexually attractive, should be presumed to be primarily culturally inscribed — because how can we know what’s really biological until we’ve finished liberating people from the crushing constraint­s of gender stereotype­s?

It also means rejecting or modifying the rules of liberal procedural­ism, because under conditions of deep oppression, those supposed liberties are inherently oppressive themselves. You can’t have an effective principle of nondiscrim­ination unless you first discrimina­te in favor of the oppressed. You can’t have real freedom of speech unless you first silence some oppressors.

And all of this is necessaril­y a cultural and psychologi­cal project, which is why schools, media, pop culture and language itself are the essential battlegrou­nds. Yes, economic policy matters, but material arrangemen­ts are downstream of culture and psychology. The socialists have merely gentled capitalism, the environmen­talists have merely regulated it. If you want to save the planet or end the rule of greed, you need a different kind of human, not just a system that assumes racist patriarcha­l values and tries to put them on a leash.

You think this is too utopian? Consider a proof of concept, what we’ve already seen with gay rights. There, the left overthrew a system of deep heteronorm­ative oppression by establishi­ng a new cultural consensus, in the academy and in pop culture and only at the end in politics and law, using argument but also shaming, social pressure and other “illiberal” means.

And look what we’ve learned: That once homophobia diminishes, millions upon millions of young people begin to define themselves as what they truly are, as some form of LGBTQ, slipping the shackles of heteronorm­ativity at last. Which is why the backlash against the spread of transgende­r identifica­tion among kids must be defeated — because this is the beachhead, the proving ground for full emancipati­on.

If you find a lot of this narrative persuasive — even filtered through my conservati­ve mind — then whatever “woke” describes, it probably describes you.

If you recoil from it, welcome to the ranks of the unwoke.

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