Daily Maverick

Sorry Gareth, but identity politics is critical

- Lwando Xaso Lwando Xaso is an attorney and writer. Follow her on Twitter at @Including_Inc

“I am not interested in identity politics at all. Nobody really is... Oh please, I am over it. It’s just uninterest­ing and this has played out so badly for people in other parts of the world where they have tried it.” These were the words of an exasperate­d Gareth Cliff, who was meant to moderate a discussion about the upcoming local elections between representa­tives of the Democratic Alliance and One South Africa – but decided to make himself a panellist instead.

In an effort to diminish the importance of race and identity in our country, Cliff demonstrat­ed the power of his race and identity when he shut down Mudzuli Rakhivhane, a young black woman, by asserting his own version of reality over hers.

Cliff made himself the authority on what ordinary South Africans care about in the lead-up to the municipal elections. The irony of a white man denouncing identity politics, when prejudiced white men are the architects and purveyors of identity politics, would be comical if it was not so dangerous.

The marginalis­ed did not create identity politics: their identities have been forced on them by dominant groups, and politics is the most effective

method of revolt

Unlike Cliff, I am a proponent of identity politics used to narrow inequality in our country. Audiopedia defines identity politics as political positions based on the interests and perspectiv­es of social groups with which people identify. Identity politics enables the marginalis­ed to articulate their felt oppression through their own experience­s. Life sharing allows us to recognise the commonalit­y of our oppression and enables us to build a politics that will change our lives.

The origins of identity politics are colonialis­m and apartheid, which introduced the stratifica­tion of our society along colour, race, gender and sexuality identity lines, among others. The identity politics of apartheid placed the straight white man at the top of the hierarchy and, with that identity, came the full protection of the law, access to the economy and many other rights.

The dawn of our constituti­onal democracy and the establishm­ent of new battles, particular­ly in the form of social media, presented to the historical­ly maligned powerful ways to organise globally and to call for urgent change.

This makes it hard for the dominant group to look away from the consequenc­es of a system they created and benefited from. Indeed, denouncing identity politics under the guise of antiracism only enforces the normativit­y of whiteness, writes Professor Marzia Milazzo.

For example, it is the politics of identity that secured gay marriage in South Africa, thereby expanding the meaning of freedom not just for the LGBTQI+ community but for us all. In a world where members of the LGBTQI+ are more free than I am as a black woman, I am also more free.

But even within the broader LGBTQI+ community we cannot wish away race and other identity markers. Black members of LGBTQI+ have different policy needs from their white counterpar­ts. This does not have to be divisive unless the dominant group deems the freedom of others as a threat to or a calling out of their privilege.

American activist and politician Stacey Abrams writes that “identity politics can strengthen our democracy”. Our changing political landscape and technologi­cal advances such as social media “have encouraged activists and political challenger­s to make demands with a high level of specificit­y – to take the identities that dominant groups have used to oppress them and convert them into tools of democratic justice”.

Abram takes on the argument that, by calling out ethnic, cultural, gender or sexual difference­s, marginalis­ed groups harm themselves and their causes: “The marginalis­ed did not create identity politics: their identities have been forced on them by dominant groups, and politics is the most effective method of revolt.”

I would implore the likes of Gareth Cliff to think more deeply, not reactively, about the use of identity politics because, as Abrams shares, “new, vibrant, noisy voices represent the strongest tool to manage the growing pains of multicultu­ral coexistenc­e. By embracing identity and its prickly, uncomforta­ble contours, we will become more likely to grow as one.”

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