白人心理剧

IF 2.9 1区 哲学 Q1 ETHICS Journal of Political Philosophy Pub Date : 2023-03-15 DOI:10.1111/jopp.12290
Liam Kofi Bright
{"title":"白人心理剧","authors":"Liam Kofi Bright","doi":"10.1111/jopp.12290","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>One might hope that philosophy could reconcile us to our social world and each other. To entertain this as plausible is to think there is some perspective one could reach via philosophical enquiry that shows our life and society to be as they are for good reason, allows us to see it all as in some sense rational. Hegel is no doubt the great exponent of this ideal, his system promising to trace history's patterns and conceptual development, while he is so optimistic as to believe that, at its end, we would achieve the perspective whereby every agent's own actions and situation can be made intelligible to themselves and others. This was meant to be true for us the readers, so we would be able to see for ourselves how what we do makes sense, given our circumstances, and is plausibly tending towards a good end.1</p><p>Of course, the problem is that there may not be such a perspective. Perhaps to see the world aright is to recognize it as a jumbled mess, with no progressive tendency towards greater coherence, and no satisfaction to be had in achieving superior insight. Perhaps there is no good end we are collaboratively working towards, no possible reconciliation with each other; maybe we are perpetually on the brink of descending once more into a Hobbesian nightmare. Hegel hoped to reassure us that the existence of that clarificatory perspective is guaranteed; as free agents, once we achieve self-awareness we necessarily mutually recognize one another as engaged in a fundamentally cooperative project tending towards justified ends.2 But, alas, not all of us have been convinced, and a kind of existential anomie can befall a thoughtful person who surveys our present socio-cultural situation.3 What if there really just is no excuse for how things are, and no good reason for me to carry on?</p><p>We ought then to make the social world worthy of reconciliation. The guiding idea here is that the ideal of reconciliation underlying Hegelian social thought is desirable, and if it is not yet possible given present social arrangements, we are called upon to change those arrangements until the ideal can be attained. To be clear, this is not a disagreement with Hegel's system at its deepest level; he may have jumped the gun on what a rationally reconcilable social order looks like, but in some sense that is a mere detail compared to his deeper point that we proactively seek a coherence that we can be reconciled to. Social and political philosophy can then play a dual role of identifying points at which our social order will throw up obstacles to attaining a coherent and reconcilable view of one's life, and suggesting means by which these obstacles can be removed.4</p><p>I shall illustrate these rather abstract ideas by constructing and analysing a narrative of the historical situation leading up to the current culture war; especially as it plays out concerning race, and black–white relations even more especially, among the middle class of the USA. The US being a culturally dominant global hegemon, the terms and structure of its culture war tend to be exported, so they are worth understanding even for those of us who are not US citizens. The pastime of the chattering classes, the culture war can be understood as a set of symbolic and political conflicts over emotionally highly charged issues <i>du jour</i>. Even if the particular topic of discussion is fleeting, the ultimate resolution to these debates can have drastic effects on the lives of citizens. How we decide to understand and enforce norms around gender and sexuality, for instance, touch upon some of the most intimate and important aspects of our lives.</p><p>Here I am interested in how our peculiar socio-economic conditions shape the contours and possible points of resolution in the cultural debate around issues of race. We shall see that characteristic responses to our social order, which I shall describe through stylized character archetypes, make it impossible for participants in the culture war to achieve any lasting reconciliation. Instead, our responses both generate and constitute a kind of racialized psychopathology that I describe as white psychodrama. Given this analysis of the social order and its sources of psychic incoherence, I will suggest a way forward. My hope is that this will at least help people of colour caught in the midst of this to work towards a world we can live in and, by seeing ourselves as so working, to reconcile ourselves to our actual present social activities. We cannot, and ought not to, reconcile ourselves to a society wrapped up in its own contradictions, any more than we should seek to integrate into a burning house. But we can come to see ourselves as knowingly and self-consciously working to resolve those contradictions, quenching that fire, and laying the foundations for a better structure wherein we may all live comfortably.</p><p>Once upon a time the United States of America was a de jure racist society. As was much of the world beyond its borders, controlled as it was by racist European empires. There was a broadly understood and explicitly codified and enforced racial organization of who could live where, how individuals could interact, what sort of jobs were appropriate for whom, how law and order would operate—or wouldn't.5 The science,6 sport,7 and artistic culture8 of the day were largely carried out in conformity with, if not support of, racist norms. Gross or subtle as it may have been in any given instance, the colour line ran through everything and one crossed it only at great personal peril.9</p><p>But mountains crumble and rivers disappear, new roads replace the old, stones are buried and vanish in the earth. Time passes and the world changes. So it was that eventually this de jure racist system went the way of all things. The Civil War overthrew the slave regime. Racial immigration laws were repealed. The Civil Rights Act made various sorts of explicitly racist laws and practices impermissible. By the latter half of the twentieth century, it was clear an officially endorsed de jure racial caste system was no longer to hold sway in American life. Likewise abroad, the great European empires fell, and in their place sprang up a plethora of nations governed by formerly colonized peoples. All things considered, the twentieth century saw de jure racism suffer a world-historic defeat.</p><p>Along with these legal and institutional changes went cultural changes. Casual use of the most highly charged racial slurs became limited to the worst bigots, and nowadays one can hear the sentiment expressed that overt expressions of bigotry ought to disqualify someone from public office.10 Over the twentieth century, Americans steadily reported much less opposition to interracial marriage between blacks and whites.11 Careers which previously operated an absolute colour bar opened up to non-white people.12 Various of black Americans' artistic contributions came to define not just American, but much of the globe's popular culture.13 Mainstream right politicians ceased to explicitly identify as defending white dominance or white interests,14 a norm change which even President Trump made some nominal effort to respect.15 American social attitudes thus seemed to adjust in line with the twentieth century's legal changes.</p><p>But change was not total. The twentieth century kicked off with an economist lamenting the black middle class's merger access to capital.16 The twenty-first century began the same way, as the gap between total wealth and assets owned by black versus white Americans was once again increasing.17 Black assets were then hit especially hard by the 2008 crash.18 Even setting the crash aside, the fact that what black wealth exists is often tied up in housing property is its own source of racial vulnerability. Black property tends to be worth less19 amid continuing residential segregation.20 This segregation can concentrate social difficulties that further hinder black Americans' life chances.21 And the rarity of interracial contact induced is no doubt related to the persistently low rates of racial intermarriage.22 All of which compounds the fact that inheritance law allows for intergenerational wealth transfers that maintain economic segregation;23 thus intergenerational mobility from being propertyless into wealth is difficult and rare.24 What's more, finally, the backdrop for all this is a global economy where the ability to inherit wealth increasingly determines one's life chances.25 Whatever else changed, the people who have the stuff still tend to be white, and blacks must still sell our labour to them if we are to get by.</p><p>In this way American domestic politics mirrored the broader global trends of a post-imperial world.26 The European empires despoiled and depopulated nations.27 What they left in their wake were often underdeveloped economies28 and institutional structures ripe to be taken over by local elites who could simply continue the pattern of authoritarian wealth extraction.29 But the end of formal colonization did not generally lead to reparations. For the most part, agents based in the former colonial metropoles retained ownership of key resources and even infrastructure,30 and, if anything, inefficiencies in the credit market have led to a net capital flow from the former colonies to the former colonizers.31 Neither domestically nor internationally did a change in cultural attitudes and legal permissions correlate with a change in racial patterns of ownership. As such, many of the material patterns of inequality from the bad old days of de jure racist regimes have survived the demise of their former ideological superstructure.</p><p>Returning to the US, these persistent material inequalities have consequences for occupational inequality. The legacy of de jure segregation plausibly goes a long way to explaining wealth and income gaps between black and white Americans.32 And contemporary de facto segregation generates social networks that concentrate access to opportunities for work and education among the already prosperous, further disadvantaging blacks.33 What's more, fulfilling and legal employment for ‘less skilled’ workers was already drying up by the early twenty-first century.34 In so far as there has been a coherent social response to this collapse in opportunity, what has stepped in to the place of those jobs has been the prison system.35 The rapid rise in the population of incarcerated persons has, of course, disproportionately affected black people,36 and despite mass incarceration being a persistent public concern, the American political establishment has been unable to effectively react.37</p><p>Finally, even if explicit appeal to white interests withered away, race continues to be in fact a powerful predictor of how Americans vote.38 The liberalization of social attitudes has not led to the total disappearance of overtly racist stereotypes.39 And the political intelligentsia are still largely white, which has arguably affected the content and focus of their work.40</p><p>This, then, is where history has placed us. The maddening ambiguity of our position is what leads to the titular white psychodrama. One cannot reconcile oneself to this society because it constantly pulls in two directions—it presents one with an ideological narrative that speaks of equality, and a material structure that witnesses rank inequality. At some level, this society just does not make sense to itself, its own ideology out of whack with the plain facts of its own existence. There are those who are tempted to focus only on the positives, and see in this a story of triumphant progress towards racial justice or a post-racial future. And there are those who are inclined to see in it a story of eternal recurrence, racism ever reinventing itself. But both of these perspectives are too tidy to capture the phenomenon. For this story is of a world and a nation in contradiction with itself.</p><p>After much struggle, this world has publicly declared, and in some sense sincerely come to believe, that racial hatred is a social failure and a horrid character defect. We now welcome forms of love, friendship, and cooperation that were once unthinkable. And yet we carefully divide up the pie to ensure former slaves are kept poor and ashamed. The inevitable social discord generated by this immiseration are dealt with by brutality and caging. And the lingering suspicion remains that all this is the former slaves' fault. How then do people respond to the facts relayed in this historical narrative, and what does it mean for their ability to reconcile themselves to their own social order?</p><p>The character archetypes are stylized representations of typical responses to the status quo. Each of the types below is assumed to be driven by some fairly normal psychological motivations—they do not wish to feel guilty, they would prefer to have more stuff rather than less—and respond accordingly to the evidence, incentives, and institutional structures their society presents them with. To that extent one can think of these as something like publicly available social roles which facilitate intentional action,41 or as agents for whose behaviour I am giving a structural explanation.42 In either case, allowing for the overly neat appearance of any stylized picture, what follows is meant to be a descriptively plausible picture of reactions by many actual politically switched-on agents to life in a society shaped by the circumstances of the historical narrative just relayed. They are caricatures for sure, but ones which I expect many readers will see resemblances to within their own lives.</p><p>The agents we discuss are highly polarized people fighting a culture war. There is empirical evidence available which lets us situate what sort of person this would be. Partisanship has largely been a phenomenon only among wealthier and more politically engaged voters.43 These are mutually reinforcing categories; home ownership, for instance, predicts being more politically involved.44 Polarization encompasses far more than just party or policy preference.45 It includes, significantly for us, what news media and commentariat figures people listen to and engage with.46 This association with media consumption and lifestyle differences makes the polarization highly affectively charged.47 White people are more likely to be politically engaged48—if anything, black voter turnout is systematically over-reported.49 And, as already discussed, whites are also more likely to be wealthy. So all this means that the culture war categories I focus on will primarily be elite agents, and will largely (though not entirely) focus on various white responses to the status quo.</p><p>Despite culture war polarization largely being a fight between whites, issues of race still turn out to be very important to how it plays out. Measures of racist attitudes still do a good job of predicting Americans' attitudes to candidates and policies.50 Since the 2008 election of Barack Obama, measures of white Americans' level of racial antagonism have spiked.51 And voters report racial issues as some of those on which they are most divided.52 Plausibly, at least some of the cultural divides now wracking this section of elite white America arose from differing responses to the changing social meaning of whiteness following the end of de jure racist regimes.53</p><p>So I shall rationally construct character types which allow one to appreciate how the sort of elite white agent engaged in a culture war revolving around race might behave and ideologically understand themselves.54 These responses may not always strike you as plausible or fully coherent. But I think that is to be expected in a situation where people are having to make sense of a society shaped by contradictory forces.55 That, after all, is why this is a story of psychodrama. The conflict between an ideology of racial egalitarianism and a material reality of strict hierarchy generates such a tension, and it is the desire to keep one's status atop that hierarchy (or make one's way within it) while avoiding guilt which thereby drives the culture war archetypes.</p><p>We now have our narrative and our cast. America, mirroring global trends, has gone from a de jure racist state to one with a far more egalitarian ideology, but a racially stratified distribution of wealth. Inhabiting this contradictory land are Repenters, wracked with guilt about the ideology–reality mismatch and seeking to avoid making it worse themselves. Repressers, wanting to stave off rather than alleviate guilt, and worried that in all the concern over inequality we lose track of our progress, seek to instantiate a colour-blind meritocracy as the antithesis of de jure racism. And PoC intelligentsia, along for the ride, selling their ideological wares to either side as opportunity or inclination permits. I hope this is a somewhat recognizable picture of elements of our present ideological configuration in those bits of the world dominated by US culture.</p><p>But at the outset I promised that one could be reconciled to one's social role through all this. None of the above characters is entirely unsympathetic, yet in so far as one sees oneself in them it is probably with a profound sense of unease. Surely coming to recognize oneself in the characters as sketched above responding to our narrative cannot be a means of reconciling ourselves to the present situation?</p><p>Quite so, but it is not the passionate participants of the culture war among the whites that I hope to reconcile you to, nor the hustle and grind of the PoC intelligentsia. For there is another character archetype being depicted in all this—it is the ironic detachment of the narrator, in whom I hope to persuade readers, especially non-white readers, they may profitably see themselves. By analogy to the Cold War, let us call this the Non-Aligned character archetype.</p><p>The Non-Aligned person represents a kind of ideal, a character type to which one could be reconciled even amid a society as so described. The basic idea is borrowed and adapted from key ideas in Wiredu's philosophy of conceptual decolonization,71 so I will explain the big-picture strategy before giving more concrete illustrations. Broadly speaking, I have fulfilled half of the task I set for political philosophy in the introduction. I have outlined a cause which prevents people being able to reconcile themselves to their social order—the fact that the ideology they espouse and the material reality they live within fundamentally come apart, the one always generating problems for the other. And, at a high level, this immediately suggests a path to reconciliation—make the world better resemble the ideology, or the ideology better resemble the world. I will presume here that in some form or another a racially egalitarian ideology is to be maintained, and thus consider the more specific question: how can one earnestly work towards a more egalitarian social structure given the situation we now find ourselves in? As I will outline in a moment, epistemic features of the status quo make this a non-trivially difficult task to even attempt, and so it requires certain characterological virtues that I shall use to construct the Non-Aligned person's archetype.</p><p>And this is where the central idea from Wiredu comes in. The situation of the person of colour facing the contemporary culture war, recognizing it as doomed to incoherence, yet unsure of how to do better, shares certain features with the situation of any formerly colonized person trying to understand their present situation. Passing familiarity with the history leading up to now makes it clear that key concepts through which one understands the social world, the institutions charged with gathering and marshalling evidence about that world, and the bodies empowered to set the agenda in social discussion, have all been developed by powers indifferent or hostile to one's interests. And yet it would clearly be facile to simply reject whatever one inherits from this nexus.72 After all, this too lets those same forces set the agenda. It simply adds a negation sign before stating a preferred response to someone else's agenda. One must thus develop the skills and capacities to sift through the discourse space cautiously, weigh and evaluate what one finds, and synthesize what is best therein so that it serves ends one sets oneself. This is what Wiredu calls conceptual decolonization, and I shall more or less contract the Non-Aligned ideal to be an ideal practitioner of conceptual decolonization within the present culture war, working towards the end of a genuinely racially egalitarian socio-political order.</p><p>Let us then work through that abstract story as applied to our more concrete case. First, why is it that the Non-Aligned person is in a situation wherein they cannot trust their concepts, agenda-setting agencies, or evidence-gathering institutions? This follows from the way in which the culture war is sustained by a material inequality that no one is seriously trying to fix. Repenters and Repressers are both responding to discontent generated by an ideology–reality mismatch, but neither of them wishes to either ideologically justify the material inequality or give away their property and superior opportunities. But as long as such material inequalities exist, they can generate stable patterns of inegalitarian interaction in line with salient identity categories.73 These can compound one's disadvantage the more minoritized one is.74 And even if, per impossible, we could somehow persuade all the whites to adopt the right sort of inner attitude, the wrong sort of institutional structure can perpetuate racial inequality regardless.75</p><p>What's more, due attention to colonial history makes it apparent that regimes of stark and brutal racial inequality can last a long time despite a firm majority of the population thinking them entirely illegitimate.76 Participants in the culture war, organized as it is around responding to this situation, thus find themselves with endless new fodder with which to fuel their battles. The ideology–reality mismatch is forever asserting itself, ever directing their intellectual and practical attention. The Du Boisian social problem can be temporarily forgotten or the guilt from failing to solve it meliorated for a moment—but it will never stop generating new instances of itself, never stop reaffirming its own basic reality.</p><p>Hence as long as the material inequalities exist they will keep making racial hierarchy salient whatever the Repressers want, and keep generating reasons for guilt whatever the Repenters want. All of the institutions designed to respond to this culture war—which is essentially all of the epistemic institutions controlled by the white bourgeois, which is to say all of them—are thus fundamentally addressing the wrong questions from the point of view of the Non-Aligned person. They are concerned with managing the results of a tension they can never resolve, which the nature of the Repenter and Repressor conflict will not allow them to resolve. They are not arranged to produce information, or set an agenda, that will aid in resolving material inequality, and in fact will forever be supplied with more culture war flashpoints on which to focus and with which to distract.</p><p>Since that will no doubt strike many as a bleak situation, it is worth pausing here to address a temptation many have felt, which may indeed be the psychological basis of many becoming PoC intelligentsia. If this is all our society has to offer, why not give in to the overwhelming temptation for an educated person of colour and participate in the culture war, usually from a perspective much more friendly to the Repenters? Could we not win serious material change by persuading them to act as our agents? And even if we cannot, maybe pessimism is simply the proper response to this; and one may as well at least get paid for blunting the worst edges of oppression. It is easy to see why this tempts, not only for reasons of material interest mentioned above, but also in light of the sort of policies and social standing which the Repenters would seem to offer us. But earnestly trying to win the culture war in the sense of achieving victory for either Repenter or Represser is a fool's errand; if those are the teams, then the only winning move is not to play.</p><p>For one thing, it is impossible that we shall ever be so persuasive. The matters disputed are sufficiently complex, and the historical narrative sufficiently contradictory, that there will always be the possibility of reasonable disagreement. For another, many people benefit from the status quo. First, in the obvious sense in which both Represser and Repenter strategies do not involve surrendering white wealth and are thus relatively advantageous to white elites when compared to seriously redistributive policies that might actually advance the material welfare of black people. But even beyond that there are many, including both whites77 and the PoC intelligentsia outlined above, who materially benefit from the perpetuation of the culture war as it now exists. They will not be keen to let go of it without a fight. And in a highly interconnected and ideologically diverse society, everyone will always be able to find sympathetic intellectual spokespeople to bolster their faith in their preferred narrative. Under these conditions, we should not expect any coherent grand narrative to achieve consensus.78 Strategic participation on one side might seem like the pragmatic hard-nosed response of a realist, but it is doomed and in fact simply a waste of time.</p><p>Instead, we should bear in mind that some situations are simply beyond our control and can only do us harm by involving ourselves.79 As long as the material circumstances underlying the culture war remain the same, neither the Represser nor the Repenter archetype will reliably act for our good. That is not to counsel inaction, but rather to stress that our actions should be aimed at other ends. With that, let us return and ask ourselves: if the Non-Aligned person cannot trust the politico-epistemic institutions of the participants in the culture war, nor reasonably hope to turn one of their sides into an engine for change, what ought they to do instead?</p><p>Well, at a high level they ought to act in such a way that they can earnestly see themselves as sensibly working towards the eradication of the material inequalities between racial groups. While it is not the only way of advancing this goal, as a placeholder let us assume the Non-Aligned person seeks to remove the ideology–reality mismatch by securing the physical and cultural conditions necessary for non-white people to enjoy republican freedom.80 There is good reason to think that this cannot be achieved by mere change in people's attitudes or shifting interpersonal etiquette norms.81 For republican freedom to be attained, far-reaching modifications in the basic economic structure may well be required.82 The Non-Aligned character is therefore moved to seek out avenues for effective collective action that might realize the necessary changes. The question is then: what sort of attitudes and dispositions do they need to have to be effective at this?</p><p>The psychological virtues necessary to work towards this under the present situation are difficult to attain. As noted, most of the venues wherein intellectual work and cultural media are produced are controlled by either Repenters or Repressers, with whom Non-Aligned people are, well, not aligned. In so far as people of colour have found a voice there, they have been highly vulnerable to elite capture.83 Yet, at least until counter-institutions have been built which have sufficient reach, these are the spaces many of us must exist in, and persons whose work we must draw from, if we are to plan and coordinate working out how to collectively build a better world. What is more, all the while those institutions will be humming to the rhythm of the perpetual Repenter versus Represser conflict, as the world we inhabit continues inevitably to defy their preferred ideologies. We will thus be bombarded with messaging which claims that their culture war flashpoints are supremely important and worthy of our immediate attention. The Non-Aligned person must learn to tune out the culture war noise, while being attentive to what is of value given their distinctive projects. What sort of projects would these be, and what sort of psychological dispositions would aid their completion?</p><p>It is unfortunately rather difficult to say what those distinctive projects will be at this point, precisely because the present author is one subject to all the epistemic disadvantages outlined. But we can say a bit. Before we engage in the project of trying to refine and disseminate racial etiquette codes,84 Non-Aligned persons will want some evidence that improved civility norms would actually generate material redistribution. Where there is some reason to think they will not, we will simply set aside such research projects and reallocate our attention elsewhere. That is simply an example of a broader point; an immediate project for a non-aligned intellectual would be the re-evaluation of projects which are ostensibly for the good of black people and presently taking up much time, attention, and resources—such as racial etiquette training85—and see which of these projects are premised on in fact serving Repenter or Represser goals. Where examples of misallocated resources are identified, as is the case for etiquette training,86 we will siphon off resources and prevent people sympathetic to our cause from casting their pearls here.</p><p>For a more positive example of a project we could engage in that has both intellectual and more directly material elements, Olúfẹ́mi Táíwò has recently advocated for a forward-looking vision of climate reparations, concerned with what sort of world we can make together, in a fashion that very much mirrors the concerns of the Non-Aligned person.87 What is more, he argues that, due to many of the factors discussed in my narrative earlier, any hope for a decent world for the vast majority of the world's non-white population requires (among other things) the provision of resources and technology to counteract the ecological and political effects of climate change. This is a form of climate reparations. To this we would perhaps wish to add research on ways in which such people could become independent of the generosity and good behaviour of the world's wealthy, in light of our adopted republican ideals. But in any case, redirecting the conversation, practices, and ultimately resources, involved in how we deal with reparations towards specific climate ends requires powers we do not presently have, and a mixture of skills and dispositions that are rare. Indeed, even thinking about things this way is often very contentious.88 However, it is exactly the sort of shift in mindset and practice we will need if we are to carry out the Non-Aligned project of striving to actually resolve our material inequalities.</p><p>With our examples of Non-Aligned scholar-activist projects before us, we can think about what psychological virtues they require. And since both require shifting focus quite dramatically within already established areas of enquiry, we have our first characterological requirement of the Non-Aligned person. By whatever psychological means necessary we must stop granting the white bourgeoisie agenda-setting power over our own concerns. That is to say, the Non-Aligned person must cultivate mental self-determination in order to ensure we are pursuing lines of thought and action pertinent to our projects and responsive to our concerns.89 For guidance in this we can look to outsider political traditions that have also had to develop within the confines of social forms they could not control.90 This requires of us a kind of self-conscious autonomy in formulating and setting sub-goals towards our ultimate end; and a stance of reflective irony towards what is being proffered as important by institutions we cannot trust is essential to remaining Non-Aligned.</p><p>Relatedly, we must cultivate dispassion towards culture war flashpoints.91 Repenters, Repressers, and many of the PoC intelligentsia, will insist we ought to care deeply about these issues. And there are genuinely good arguments for affective engagement with political injustices.92 But, where our own agenda of securing republican freedom by changes to the material base does not independently confirm their concerns to be of interest, these affectively charged flashpoints are nothing more than a distraction. Yet, Non-Aligned people are psychologically formed in the environment of our narrative. Our ill-considered passions are hence likely to align with the spurious concerns of the Repressers and Repenters, and this can be very hard to break free from.93 Hopefully, the very act of coming to appreciate one's place in the narrative will help denaturalize its concerns and allow one to better liberate oneself from being swept along by the affective salience regime it brings with it.94 This allows one to focus on what matters to one's own project and better cooperate with others to those ends.95</p><p>Of course, this will not mean that we are always unconcerned with whatever Repressers or Repenters care about—the ability of the police to engage in extra-judicial killing certainly affects poor black people's republican freedom! And even where our indifference is maintained, this should not be understood as being simply unfeeling.96 But we must none the less strive to maintain our own inner seat of judgement apart from the concerns the dominant culture attempts to foist upon us.97 With our own assessments given primacy, the superior wealth and access to media of the Repenters and Repressers will be unable to cajole or bribe us away from our task.98 In this way, we can carry out Wireduite conceptual decolonization, having put ourselves in a position to sift through what our epistemic environment offers us and select only what we need.</p><p>Cultivating this inner space is hence no mere personal retreat from the world. It is vital to achieving the Non-Aligned person's goal. By ensuring one is able to effectively work towards real change, one may help create a political community and material circumstance where all, now properly inclusive of non-white people, may freely exercise and live according to their own considered judgements.99 This, then, is the ideal of the Non-Aligned character archetype. Someone who can see themselves as genuinely pursuing a reasoned approach to creating a better society, dispassionate enough and at enough ironic distance not to get torn away from their tasks by the raging of the Repenters and the Repressors, reconciled to a project of genuinely resolving social incoherences rather than just eternally responding anew to each successive dramatic demonstration of this incoherence.</p><p>Confusion is characteristic of a transitional society. This is a society that has undergone sufficiently rapid changes in its mode of life and ideological superstructure that the two have not yet had time to properly adjust to each other.100 The case of race relationships is especially fraught, because one effect of all these changes has been to call the concept itself into question. Since the close of the twentieth century, we have not even really agreed whether or not there is a ‘there’ there to race at all101—and this is no consequence-free metaphysical disagreement; our technological practices embody (often confused) notions of race.102 It is hence no surprise, and no reason for shame, that we as a culture have had a hard time thinking through this. The USA and the broader postcolonial world have not yet found a way of making sense of themselves after de jure racist regimes. It is natural enough that the narratives we have available are unsatisfying, and the character archetypes available are not appealing roles.</p><p>I have offered as a more attractive character archetype the Non-Aligned person. They seek to eliminate the mismatch between ideological aspiration and material reality. This they do by rendering material circumstances more akin to what one might expect given a racially egalitarian ideology. That is to say, rather than solve the Du Boisian social problem by trying to better manage its fallout, they wish to simply eliminate the circumstances that gave rise to it. Since they have to operate amid the present society with all its confusions and distractions, I argued that the Non-Aligned person needs to develop a habit of considering issues with Stoical dispassion, while maintaining ironic detachment from the concerns of the other character archetypes. In this way, they can focus on achieving their goals, rather than be distracted by the pervasive and highly affectively charged white psychodramas that constitute the mainstay of Repenters and Repressers battling it out in the culture war. I hope this also illustrates how the ideal of reconciliation can still guide political philosophers even in non-ideal societies; we can think about what sort of person and project would constitute a rationally satisfying mode of working towards the better world, and work out how to create conditions that facilitate occupying such a role.</p><p>But whether my vision of the Non-Aligned as character archetype with which one could be reconciled is appealing or not, it is imperative that we cease investing our psychic energy in the white bourgeoisie's culture war. It will never get better, and only makes us worse.</p><p>Too many people assisted in the creation of this article to offer full thanks. But you know who you are and you have my gratitude.</p><p>None relevant.</p><p>There are no potential conflicts of interest relevant to this article.</p><p>All relevant data are included in the article.</p><p>The author declares human ethics approval was not needed for this study.</p>","PeriodicalId":47624,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Political Philosophy","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":2.9000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/jopp.12290","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"White psychodrama\",\"authors\":\"Liam Kofi Bright\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/jopp.12290\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>One might hope that philosophy could reconcile us to our social world and each other. To entertain this as plausible is to think there is some perspective one could reach via philosophical enquiry that shows our life and society to be as they are for good reason, allows us to see it all as in some sense rational. Hegel is no doubt the great exponent of this ideal, his system promising to trace history's patterns and conceptual development, while he is so optimistic as to believe that, at its end, we would achieve the perspective whereby every agent's own actions and situation can be made intelligible to themselves and others. This was meant to be true for us the readers, so we would be able to see for ourselves how what we do makes sense, given our circumstances, and is plausibly tending towards a good end.1</p><p>Of course, the problem is that there may not be such a perspective. Perhaps to see the world aright is to recognize it as a jumbled mess, with no progressive tendency towards greater coherence, and no satisfaction to be had in achieving superior insight. Perhaps there is no good end we are collaboratively working towards, no possible reconciliation with each other; maybe we are perpetually on the brink of descending once more into a Hobbesian nightmare. Hegel hoped to reassure us that the existence of that clarificatory perspective is guaranteed; as free agents, once we achieve self-awareness we necessarily mutually recognize one another as engaged in a fundamentally cooperative project tending towards justified ends.2 But, alas, not all of us have been convinced, and a kind of existential anomie can befall a thoughtful person who surveys our present socio-cultural situation.3 What if there really just is no excuse for how things are, and no good reason for me to carry on?</p><p>We ought then to make the social world worthy of reconciliation. The guiding idea here is that the ideal of reconciliation underlying Hegelian social thought is desirable, and if it is not yet possible given present social arrangements, we are called upon to change those arrangements until the ideal can be attained. To be clear, this is not a disagreement with Hegel's system at its deepest level; he may have jumped the gun on what a rationally reconcilable social order looks like, but in some sense that is a mere detail compared to his deeper point that we proactively seek a coherence that we can be reconciled to. Social and political philosophy can then play a dual role of identifying points at which our social order will throw up obstacles to attaining a coherent and reconcilable view of one's life, and suggesting means by which these obstacles can be removed.4</p><p>I shall illustrate these rather abstract ideas by constructing and analysing a narrative of the historical situation leading up to the current culture war; especially as it plays out concerning race, and black–white relations even more especially, among the middle class of the USA. The US being a culturally dominant global hegemon, the terms and structure of its culture war tend to be exported, so they are worth understanding even for those of us who are not US citizens. The pastime of the chattering classes, the culture war can be understood as a set of symbolic and political conflicts over emotionally highly charged issues <i>du jour</i>. Even if the particular topic of discussion is fleeting, the ultimate resolution to these debates can have drastic effects on the lives of citizens. How we decide to understand and enforce norms around gender and sexuality, for instance, touch upon some of the most intimate and important aspects of our lives.</p><p>Here I am interested in how our peculiar socio-economic conditions shape the contours and possible points of resolution in the cultural debate around issues of race. We shall see that characteristic responses to our social order, which I shall describe through stylized character archetypes, make it impossible for participants in the culture war to achieve any lasting reconciliation. Instead, our responses both generate and constitute a kind of racialized psychopathology that I describe as white psychodrama. Given this analysis of the social order and its sources of psychic incoherence, I will suggest a way forward. My hope is that this will at least help people of colour caught in the midst of this to work towards a world we can live in and, by seeing ourselves as so working, to reconcile ourselves to our actual present social activities. We cannot, and ought not to, reconcile ourselves to a society wrapped up in its own contradictions, any more than we should seek to integrate into a burning house. But we can come to see ourselves as knowingly and self-consciously working to resolve those contradictions, quenching that fire, and laying the foundations for a better structure wherein we may all live comfortably.</p><p>Once upon a time the United States of America was a de jure racist society. As was much of the world beyond its borders, controlled as it was by racist European empires. There was a broadly understood and explicitly codified and enforced racial organization of who could live where, how individuals could interact, what sort of jobs were appropriate for whom, how law and order would operate—or wouldn't.5 The science,6 sport,7 and artistic culture8 of the day were largely carried out in conformity with, if not support of, racist norms. Gross or subtle as it may have been in any given instance, the colour line ran through everything and one crossed it only at great personal peril.9</p><p>But mountains crumble and rivers disappear, new roads replace the old, stones are buried and vanish in the earth. Time passes and the world changes. So it was that eventually this de jure racist system went the way of all things. The Civil War overthrew the slave regime. Racial immigration laws were repealed. The Civil Rights Act made various sorts of explicitly racist laws and practices impermissible. By the latter half of the twentieth century, it was clear an officially endorsed de jure racial caste system was no longer to hold sway in American life. Likewise abroad, the great European empires fell, and in their place sprang up a plethora of nations governed by formerly colonized peoples. All things considered, the twentieth century saw de jure racism suffer a world-historic defeat.</p><p>Along with these legal and institutional changes went cultural changes. Casual use of the most highly charged racial slurs became limited to the worst bigots, and nowadays one can hear the sentiment expressed that overt expressions of bigotry ought to disqualify someone from public office.10 Over the twentieth century, Americans steadily reported much less opposition to interracial marriage between blacks and whites.11 Careers which previously operated an absolute colour bar opened up to non-white people.12 Various of black Americans' artistic contributions came to define not just American, but much of the globe's popular culture.13 Mainstream right politicians ceased to explicitly identify as defending white dominance or white interests,14 a norm change which even President Trump made some nominal effort to respect.15 American social attitudes thus seemed to adjust in line with the twentieth century's legal changes.</p><p>But change was not total. The twentieth century kicked off with an economist lamenting the black middle class's merger access to capital.16 The twenty-first century began the same way, as the gap between total wealth and assets owned by black versus white Americans was once again increasing.17 Black assets were then hit especially hard by the 2008 crash.18 Even setting the crash aside, the fact that what black wealth exists is often tied up in housing property is its own source of racial vulnerability. Black property tends to be worth less19 amid continuing residential segregation.20 This segregation can concentrate social difficulties that further hinder black Americans' life chances.21 And the rarity of interracial contact induced is no doubt related to the persistently low rates of racial intermarriage.22 All of which compounds the fact that inheritance law allows for intergenerational wealth transfers that maintain economic segregation;23 thus intergenerational mobility from being propertyless into wealth is difficult and rare.24 What's more, finally, the backdrop for all this is a global economy where the ability to inherit wealth increasingly determines one's life chances.25 Whatever else changed, the people who have the stuff still tend to be white, and blacks must still sell our labour to them if we are to get by.</p><p>In this way American domestic politics mirrored the broader global trends of a post-imperial world.26 The European empires despoiled and depopulated nations.27 What they left in their wake were often underdeveloped economies28 and institutional structures ripe to be taken over by local elites who could simply continue the pattern of authoritarian wealth extraction.29 But the end of formal colonization did not generally lead to reparations. For the most part, agents based in the former colonial metropoles retained ownership of key resources and even infrastructure,30 and, if anything, inefficiencies in the credit market have led to a net capital flow from the former colonies to the former colonizers.31 Neither domestically nor internationally did a change in cultural attitudes and legal permissions correlate with a change in racial patterns of ownership. As such, many of the material patterns of inequality from the bad old days of de jure racist regimes have survived the demise of their former ideological superstructure.</p><p>Returning to the US, these persistent material inequalities have consequences for occupational inequality. The legacy of de jure segregation plausibly goes a long way to explaining wealth and income gaps between black and white Americans.32 And contemporary de facto segregation generates social networks that concentrate access to opportunities for work and education among the already prosperous, further disadvantaging blacks.33 What's more, fulfilling and legal employment for ‘less skilled’ workers was already drying up by the early twenty-first century.34 In so far as there has been a coherent social response to this collapse in opportunity, what has stepped in to the place of those jobs has been the prison system.35 The rapid rise in the population of incarcerated persons has, of course, disproportionately affected black people,36 and despite mass incarceration being a persistent public concern, the American political establishment has been unable to effectively react.37</p><p>Finally, even if explicit appeal to white interests withered away, race continues to be in fact a powerful predictor of how Americans vote.38 The liberalization of social attitudes has not led to the total disappearance of overtly racist stereotypes.39 And the political intelligentsia are still largely white, which has arguably affected the content and focus of their work.40</p><p>This, then, is where history has placed us. The maddening ambiguity of our position is what leads to the titular white psychodrama. One cannot reconcile oneself to this society because it constantly pulls in two directions—it presents one with an ideological narrative that speaks of equality, and a material structure that witnesses rank inequality. At some level, this society just does not make sense to itself, its own ideology out of whack with the plain facts of its own existence. There are those who are tempted to focus only on the positives, and see in this a story of triumphant progress towards racial justice or a post-racial future. And there are those who are inclined to see in it a story of eternal recurrence, racism ever reinventing itself. But both of these perspectives are too tidy to capture the phenomenon. For this story is of a world and a nation in contradiction with itself.</p><p>After much struggle, this world has publicly declared, and in some sense sincerely come to believe, that racial hatred is a social failure and a horrid character defect. We now welcome forms of love, friendship, and cooperation that were once unthinkable. And yet we carefully divide up the pie to ensure former slaves are kept poor and ashamed. The inevitable social discord generated by this immiseration are dealt with by brutality and caging. And the lingering suspicion remains that all this is the former slaves' fault. How then do people respond to the facts relayed in this historical narrative, and what does it mean for their ability to reconcile themselves to their own social order?</p><p>The character archetypes are stylized representations of typical responses to the status quo. Each of the types below is assumed to be driven by some fairly normal psychological motivations—they do not wish to feel guilty, they would prefer to have more stuff rather than less—and respond accordingly to the evidence, incentives, and institutional structures their society presents them with. To that extent one can think of these as something like publicly available social roles which facilitate intentional action,41 or as agents for whose behaviour I am giving a structural explanation.42 In either case, allowing for the overly neat appearance of any stylized picture, what follows is meant to be a descriptively plausible picture of reactions by many actual politically switched-on agents to life in a society shaped by the circumstances of the historical narrative just relayed. They are caricatures for sure, but ones which I expect many readers will see resemblances to within their own lives.</p><p>The agents we discuss are highly polarized people fighting a culture war. There is empirical evidence available which lets us situate what sort of person this would be. Partisanship has largely been a phenomenon only among wealthier and more politically engaged voters.43 These are mutually reinforcing categories; home ownership, for instance, predicts being more politically involved.44 Polarization encompasses far more than just party or policy preference.45 It includes, significantly for us, what news media and commentariat figures people listen to and engage with.46 This association with media consumption and lifestyle differences makes the polarization highly affectively charged.47 White people are more likely to be politically engaged48—if anything, black voter turnout is systematically over-reported.49 And, as already discussed, whites are also more likely to be wealthy. So all this means that the culture war categories I focus on will primarily be elite agents, and will largely (though not entirely) focus on various white responses to the status quo.</p><p>Despite culture war polarization largely being a fight between whites, issues of race still turn out to be very important to how it plays out. Measures of racist attitudes still do a good job of predicting Americans' attitudes to candidates and policies.50 Since the 2008 election of Barack Obama, measures of white Americans' level of racial antagonism have spiked.51 And voters report racial issues as some of those on which they are most divided.52 Plausibly, at least some of the cultural divides now wracking this section of elite white America arose from differing responses to the changing social meaning of whiteness following the end of de jure racist regimes.53</p><p>So I shall rationally construct character types which allow one to appreciate how the sort of elite white agent engaged in a culture war revolving around race might behave and ideologically understand themselves.54 These responses may not always strike you as plausible or fully coherent. But I think that is to be expected in a situation where people are having to make sense of a society shaped by contradictory forces.55 That, after all, is why this is a story of psychodrama. The conflict between an ideology of racial egalitarianism and a material reality of strict hierarchy generates such a tension, and it is the desire to keep one's status atop that hierarchy (or make one's way within it) while avoiding guilt which thereby drives the culture war archetypes.</p><p>We now have our narrative and our cast. America, mirroring global trends, has gone from a de jure racist state to one with a far more egalitarian ideology, but a racially stratified distribution of wealth. Inhabiting this contradictory land are Repenters, wracked with guilt about the ideology–reality mismatch and seeking to avoid making it worse themselves. Repressers, wanting to stave off rather than alleviate guilt, and worried that in all the concern over inequality we lose track of our progress, seek to instantiate a colour-blind meritocracy as the antithesis of de jure racism. And PoC intelligentsia, along for the ride, selling their ideological wares to either side as opportunity or inclination permits. I hope this is a somewhat recognizable picture of elements of our present ideological configuration in those bits of the world dominated by US culture.</p><p>But at the outset I promised that one could be reconciled to one's social role through all this. None of the above characters is entirely unsympathetic, yet in so far as one sees oneself in them it is probably with a profound sense of unease. Surely coming to recognize oneself in the characters as sketched above responding to our narrative cannot be a means of reconciling ourselves to the present situation?</p><p>Quite so, but it is not the passionate participants of the culture war among the whites that I hope to reconcile you to, nor the hustle and grind of the PoC intelligentsia. For there is another character archetype being depicted in all this—it is the ironic detachment of the narrator, in whom I hope to persuade readers, especially non-white readers, they may profitably see themselves. By analogy to the Cold War, let us call this the Non-Aligned character archetype.</p><p>The Non-Aligned person represents a kind of ideal, a character type to which one could be reconciled even amid a society as so described. The basic idea is borrowed and adapted from key ideas in Wiredu's philosophy of conceptual decolonization,71 so I will explain the big-picture strategy before giving more concrete illustrations. Broadly speaking, I have fulfilled half of the task I set for political philosophy in the introduction. I have outlined a cause which prevents people being able to reconcile themselves to their social order—the fact that the ideology they espouse and the material reality they live within fundamentally come apart, the one always generating problems for the other. And, at a high level, this immediately suggests a path to reconciliation—make the world better resemble the ideology, or the ideology better resemble the world. I will presume here that in some form or another a racially egalitarian ideology is to be maintained, and thus consider the more specific question: how can one earnestly work towards a more egalitarian social structure given the situation we now find ourselves in? As I will outline in a moment, epistemic features of the status quo make this a non-trivially difficult task to even attempt, and so it requires certain characterological virtues that I shall use to construct the Non-Aligned person's archetype.</p><p>And this is where the central idea from Wiredu comes in. The situation of the person of colour facing the contemporary culture war, recognizing it as doomed to incoherence, yet unsure of how to do better, shares certain features with the situation of any formerly colonized person trying to understand their present situation. Passing familiarity with the history leading up to now makes it clear that key concepts through which one understands the social world, the institutions charged with gathering and marshalling evidence about that world, and the bodies empowered to set the agenda in social discussion, have all been developed by powers indifferent or hostile to one's interests. And yet it would clearly be facile to simply reject whatever one inherits from this nexus.72 After all, this too lets those same forces set the agenda. It simply adds a negation sign before stating a preferred response to someone else's agenda. One must thus develop the skills and capacities to sift through the discourse space cautiously, weigh and evaluate what one finds, and synthesize what is best therein so that it serves ends one sets oneself. This is what Wiredu calls conceptual decolonization, and I shall more or less contract the Non-Aligned ideal to be an ideal practitioner of conceptual decolonization within the present culture war, working towards the end of a genuinely racially egalitarian socio-political order.</p><p>Let us then work through that abstract story as applied to our more concrete case. First, why is it that the Non-Aligned person is in a situation wherein they cannot trust their concepts, agenda-setting agencies, or evidence-gathering institutions? This follows from the way in which the culture war is sustained by a material inequality that no one is seriously trying to fix. Repenters and Repressers are both responding to discontent generated by an ideology–reality mismatch, but neither of them wishes to either ideologically justify the material inequality or give away their property and superior opportunities. But as long as such material inequalities exist, they can generate stable patterns of inegalitarian interaction in line with salient identity categories.73 These can compound one's disadvantage the more minoritized one is.74 And even if, per impossible, we could somehow persuade all the whites to adopt the right sort of inner attitude, the wrong sort of institutional structure can perpetuate racial inequality regardless.75</p><p>What's more, due attention to colonial history makes it apparent that regimes of stark and brutal racial inequality can last a long time despite a firm majority of the population thinking them entirely illegitimate.76 Participants in the culture war, organized as it is around responding to this situation, thus find themselves with endless new fodder with which to fuel their battles. The ideology–reality mismatch is forever asserting itself, ever directing their intellectual and practical attention. The Du Boisian social problem can be temporarily forgotten or the guilt from failing to solve it meliorated for a moment—but it will never stop generating new instances of itself, never stop reaffirming its own basic reality.</p><p>Hence as long as the material inequalities exist they will keep making racial hierarchy salient whatever the Repressers want, and keep generating reasons for guilt whatever the Repenters want. All of the institutions designed to respond to this culture war—which is essentially all of the epistemic institutions controlled by the white bourgeois, which is to say all of them—are thus fundamentally addressing the wrong questions from the point of view of the Non-Aligned person. They are concerned with managing the results of a tension they can never resolve, which the nature of the Repenter and Repressor conflict will not allow them to resolve. They are not arranged to produce information, or set an agenda, that will aid in resolving material inequality, and in fact will forever be supplied with more culture war flashpoints on which to focus and with which to distract.</p><p>Since that will no doubt strike many as a bleak situation, it is worth pausing here to address a temptation many have felt, which may indeed be the psychological basis of many becoming PoC intelligentsia. If this is all our society has to offer, why not give in to the overwhelming temptation for an educated person of colour and participate in the culture war, usually from a perspective much more friendly to the Repenters? Could we not win serious material change by persuading them to act as our agents? And even if we cannot, maybe pessimism is simply the proper response to this; and one may as well at least get paid for blunting the worst edges of oppression. It is easy to see why this tempts, not only for reasons of material interest mentioned above, but also in light of the sort of policies and social standing which the Repenters would seem to offer us. But earnestly trying to win the culture war in the sense of achieving victory for either Repenter or Represser is a fool's errand; if those are the teams, then the only winning move is not to play.</p><p>For one thing, it is impossible that we shall ever be so persuasive. The matters disputed are sufficiently complex, and the historical narrative sufficiently contradictory, that there will always be the possibility of reasonable disagreement. For another, many people benefit from the status quo. First, in the obvious sense in which both Represser and Repenter strategies do not involve surrendering white wealth and are thus relatively advantageous to white elites when compared to seriously redistributive policies that might actually advance the material welfare of black people. But even beyond that there are many, including both whites77 and the PoC intelligentsia outlined above, who materially benefit from the perpetuation of the culture war as it now exists. They will not be keen to let go of it without a fight. And in a highly interconnected and ideologically diverse society, everyone will always be able to find sympathetic intellectual spokespeople to bolster their faith in their preferred narrative. Under these conditions, we should not expect any coherent grand narrative to achieve consensus.78 Strategic participation on one side might seem like the pragmatic hard-nosed response of a realist, but it is doomed and in fact simply a waste of time.</p><p>Instead, we should bear in mind that some situations are simply beyond our control and can only do us harm by involving ourselves.79 As long as the material circumstances underlying the culture war remain the same, neither the Represser nor the Repenter archetype will reliably act for our good. That is not to counsel inaction, but rather to stress that our actions should be aimed at other ends. With that, let us return and ask ourselves: if the Non-Aligned person cannot trust the politico-epistemic institutions of the participants in the culture war, nor reasonably hope to turn one of their sides into an engine for change, what ought they to do instead?</p><p>Well, at a high level they ought to act in such a way that they can earnestly see themselves as sensibly working towards the eradication of the material inequalities between racial groups. While it is not the only way of advancing this goal, as a placeholder let us assume the Non-Aligned person seeks to remove the ideology–reality mismatch by securing the physical and cultural conditions necessary for non-white people to enjoy republican freedom.80 There is good reason to think that this cannot be achieved by mere change in people's attitudes or shifting interpersonal etiquette norms.81 For republican freedom to be attained, far-reaching modifications in the basic economic structure may well be required.82 The Non-Aligned character is therefore moved to seek out avenues for effective collective action that might realize the necessary changes. The question is then: what sort of attitudes and dispositions do they need to have to be effective at this?</p><p>The psychological virtues necessary to work towards this under the present situation are difficult to attain. As noted, most of the venues wherein intellectual work and cultural media are produced are controlled by either Repenters or Repressers, with whom Non-Aligned people are, well, not aligned. In so far as people of colour have found a voice there, they have been highly vulnerable to elite capture.83 Yet, at least until counter-institutions have been built which have sufficient reach, these are the spaces many of us must exist in, and persons whose work we must draw from, if we are to plan and coordinate working out how to collectively build a better world. What is more, all the while those institutions will be humming to the rhythm of the perpetual Repenter versus Represser conflict, as the world we inhabit continues inevitably to defy their preferred ideologies. We will thus be bombarded with messaging which claims that their culture war flashpoints are supremely important and worthy of our immediate attention. The Non-Aligned person must learn to tune out the culture war noise, while being attentive to what is of value given their distinctive projects. What sort of projects would these be, and what sort of psychological dispositions would aid their completion?</p><p>It is unfortunately rather difficult to say what those distinctive projects will be at this point, precisely because the present author is one subject to all the epistemic disadvantages outlined. But we can say a bit. Before we engage in the project of trying to refine and disseminate racial etiquette codes,84 Non-Aligned persons will want some evidence that improved civility norms would actually generate material redistribution. Where there is some reason to think they will not, we will simply set aside such research projects and reallocate our attention elsewhere. That is simply an example of a broader point; an immediate project for a non-aligned intellectual would be the re-evaluation of projects which are ostensibly for the good of black people and presently taking up much time, attention, and resources—such as racial etiquette training85—and see which of these projects are premised on in fact serving Repenter or Represser goals. Where examples of misallocated resources are identified, as is the case for etiquette training,86 we will siphon off resources and prevent people sympathetic to our cause from casting their pearls here.</p><p>For a more positive example of a project we could engage in that has both intellectual and more directly material elements, Olúfẹ́mi Táíwò has recently advocated for a forward-looking vision of climate reparations, concerned with what sort of world we can make together, in a fashion that very much mirrors the concerns of the Non-Aligned person.87 What is more, he argues that, due to many of the factors discussed in my narrative earlier, any hope for a decent world for the vast majority of the world's non-white population requires (among other things) the provision of resources and technology to counteract the ecological and political effects of climate change. This is a form of climate reparations. To this we would perhaps wish to add research on ways in which such people could become independent of the generosity and good behaviour of the world's wealthy, in light of our adopted republican ideals. But in any case, redirecting the conversation, practices, and ultimately resources, involved in how we deal with reparations towards specific climate ends requires powers we do not presently have, and a mixture of skills and dispositions that are rare. Indeed, even thinking about things this way is often very contentious.88 However, it is exactly the sort of shift in mindset and practice we will need if we are to carry out the Non-Aligned project of striving to actually resolve our material inequalities.</p><p>With our examples of Non-Aligned scholar-activist projects before us, we can think about what psychological virtues they require. And since both require shifting focus quite dramatically within already established areas of enquiry, we have our first characterological requirement of the Non-Aligned person. By whatever psychological means necessary we must stop granting the white bourgeoisie agenda-setting power over our own concerns. That is to say, the Non-Aligned person must cultivate mental self-determination in order to ensure we are pursuing lines of thought and action pertinent to our projects and responsive to our concerns.89 For guidance in this we can look to outsider political traditions that have also had to develop within the confines of social forms they could not control.90 This requires of us a kind of self-conscious autonomy in formulating and setting sub-goals towards our ultimate end; and a stance of reflective irony towards what is being proffered as important by institutions we cannot trust is essential to remaining Non-Aligned.</p><p>Relatedly, we must cultivate dispassion towards culture war flashpoints.91 Repenters, Repressers, and many of the PoC intelligentsia, will insist we ought to care deeply about these issues. And there are genuinely good arguments for affective engagement with political injustices.92 But, where our own agenda of securing republican freedom by changes to the material base does not independently confirm their concerns to be of interest, these affectively charged flashpoints are nothing more than a distraction. Yet, Non-Aligned people are psychologically formed in the environment of our narrative. Our ill-considered passions are hence likely to align with the spurious concerns of the Repressers and Repenters, and this can be very hard to break free from.93 Hopefully, the very act of coming to appreciate one's place in the narrative will help denaturalize its concerns and allow one to better liberate oneself from being swept along by the affective salience regime it brings with it.94 This allows one to focus on what matters to one's own project and better cooperate with others to those ends.95</p><p>Of course, this will not mean that we are always unconcerned with whatever Repressers or Repenters care about—the ability of the police to engage in extra-judicial killing certainly affects poor black people's republican freedom! And even where our indifference is maintained, this should not be understood as being simply unfeeling.96 But we must none the less strive to maintain our own inner seat of judgement apart from the concerns the dominant culture attempts to foist upon us.97 With our own assessments given primacy, the superior wealth and access to media of the Repenters and Repressers will be unable to cajole or bribe us away from our task.98 In this way, we can carry out Wireduite conceptual decolonization, having put ourselves in a position to sift through what our epistemic environment offers us and select only what we need.</p><p>Cultivating this inner space is hence no mere personal retreat from the world. It is vital to achieving the Non-Aligned person's goal. By ensuring one is able to effectively work towards real change, one may help create a political community and material circumstance where all, now properly inclusive of non-white people, may freely exercise and live according to their own considered judgements.99 This, then, is the ideal of the Non-Aligned character archetype. Someone who can see themselves as genuinely pursuing a reasoned approach to creating a better society, dispassionate enough and at enough ironic distance not to get torn away from their tasks by the raging of the Repenters and the Repressors, reconciled to a project of genuinely resolving social incoherences rather than just eternally responding anew to each successive dramatic demonstration of this incoherence.</p><p>Confusion is characteristic of a transitional society. This is a society that has undergone sufficiently rapid changes in its mode of life and ideological superstructure that the two have not yet had time to properly adjust to each other.100 The case of race relationships is especially fraught, because one effect of all these changes has been to call the concept itself into question. Since the close of the twentieth century, we have not even really agreed whether or not there is a ‘there’ there to race at all101—and this is no consequence-free metaphysical disagreement; our technological practices embody (often confused) notions of race.102 It is hence no surprise, and no reason for shame, that we as a culture have had a hard time thinking through this. The USA and the broader postcolonial world have not yet found a way of making sense of themselves after de jure racist regimes. It is natural enough that the narratives we have available are unsatisfying, and the character archetypes available are not appealing roles.</p><p>I have offered as a more attractive character archetype the Non-Aligned person. They seek to eliminate the mismatch between ideological aspiration and material reality. This they do by rendering material circumstances more akin to what one might expect given a racially egalitarian ideology. That is to say, rather than solve the Du Boisian social problem by trying to better manage its fallout, they wish to simply eliminate the circumstances that gave rise to it. Since they have to operate amid the present society with all its confusions and distractions, I argued that the Non-Aligned person needs to develop a habit of considering issues with Stoical dispassion, while maintaining ironic detachment from the concerns of the other character archetypes. In this way, they can focus on achieving their goals, rather than be distracted by the pervasive and highly affectively charged white psychodramas that constitute the mainstay of Repenters and Repressers battling it out in the culture war. I hope this also illustrates how the ideal of reconciliation can still guide political philosophers even in non-ideal societies; we can think about what sort of person and project would constitute a rationally satisfying mode of working towards the better world, and work out how to create conditions that facilitate occupying such a role.</p><p>But whether my vision of the Non-Aligned as character archetype with which one could be reconciled is appealing or not, it is imperative that we cease investing our psychic energy in the white bourgeoisie's culture war. It will never get better, and only makes us worse.</p><p>Too many people assisted in the creation of this article to offer full thanks. But you know who you are and you have my gratitude.</p><p>None relevant.</p><p>There are no potential conflicts of interest relevant to this article.</p><p>All relevant data are included in the article.</p><p>The author declares human ethics approval was not needed for this study.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":47624,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Political Philosophy\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":2.9000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-03-15\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/jopp.12290\",\"citationCount\":\"1\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Political Philosophy\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"98\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jopp.12290\",\"RegionNum\":1,\"RegionCategory\":\"哲学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"ETHICS\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Political Philosophy","FirstCategoryId":"98","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jopp.12290","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"哲学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"ETHICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

摘要

正如世界上大部分地区一样,它被种族主义的欧洲帝国控制着。关于谁可以住在哪里,个人如何互动,什么样的工作适合谁,法律和秩序将如何运作——或者不会运作——有一个广泛理解、明确成文和强制执行的种族组织。5当时的科学、体育、7和艺术文化8在很大程度上是按照种族主义规范进行的,如果不是支持的话。在任何特定的例子中,无论是粗糙的还是微妙的,颜色线都贯穿了一切,只有在巨大的个人边界上才能穿过。9但山脉崩塌,河流消失,新的道路取代了旧的道路,石头被掩埋,消失在地里。时间过去了,世界变了。因此,最终这种法律上的种族主义制度走上了所有事情的道路。内战推翻了奴隶政权。种族移民法被废除。《民权法案》规定各种明确的种族主义法律和做法是不允许的。到了20世纪后半叶,很明显,官方认可的法律上的种族种姓制度不再在美国人的生活中占据主导地位。同样,在国外,伟大的欧洲帝国衰落了,取而代之的是由以前的殖民地人民统治的众多国家。综合考虑,在二十世纪,法律上的种族主义遭受了世界历史性的失败。伴随着这些法律和制度变革而来的是文化变革。随意使用最严厉的种族诽谤只限于最恶劣的偏执狂,如今人们可以听到这样一种情绪,即公开表达偏执应该取消某人的公职资格。10在20世纪,据报道,美国人越来越不反对黑人和白人之间的跨种族婚姻。11以前经营着一个向非白人开放的绝对肤色酒吧的职业。12美国黑人的各种艺术贡献不仅定义了美国人,13主流右翼政客不再明确认同捍卫白人主导地位或白人利益,14即使是特朗普总统也名义上努力尊重这一规范的改变。15因此,美国的社会态度似乎随着20世纪的法律变化而调整。但变化并不是完全的。20世纪的开端是一位经济学家哀叹黑人中产阶级通过合并获得资本。16 21世纪也是以同样的方式开始的,因为美国黑人与白人拥有的总财富和资产之间的差距再次扩大。17黑人资产在2008年的危机中受到了特别严重的打击。18即使抛开危机不谈,黑人财富的存在往往与房地产有关,这本身就是种族脆弱性的根源。在持续的居住隔离中,黑人的财产往往价值较低。20这种隔离可能会集中社会困难,进一步阻碍美国黑人的生活机会。21种族间接触的罕见无疑与种族通婚率持续较低有关。22所有这些都加剧了继承法允许代际的事实维持经济隔离的财富转移;23因此,从没有财产到财富的代际流动是困难和罕见的。24更重要的是,这一切的背景是全球经济,继承财富的能力越来越决定一个人的人生机会。25无论其他情况发生了什么变化,拥有财富的人仍然倾向于白人,如果我们想生存下去,黑人仍然必须把我们的劳动力卖给他们。这样,美国国内政治反映了后帝国时代更广泛的全球趋势。26欧洲帝国掠夺和人口减少了国家。27他们留下的往往是不发达的经济28和制度结构,这些结构已经成熟,可以由当地精英接管,他们只需继续这种模式29但正式殖民化的结束通常不会带来赔偿。在大多数情况下,前殖民地大都市的代理商保留了关键资源甚至基础设施的所有权,30如果有的话,信贷市场的低效导致资本从前殖民地流向前殖民者。31无论是在国内还是国际上,文化态度和法律许可的变化都与所有权的种族模式的变化无关。因此,许多来自法律上种族主义政权糟糕的旧时代的不平等物质模式,在其以前的意识形态上层建筑消亡后幸存了下来。回到美国,这些持续存在的物质不平等对职业不平等产生了影响。法律上种族隔离的遗留问题似乎在很大程度上解释了美国黑人和白人之间的财富和收入差距。 种族主义态度的衡量标准仍然能很好地预测美国人对候选人和政策的态度。50自2008年巴拉克·奥巴马当选以来,衡量美国白人种族对立程度的指标激增,至少现在困扰这一部分美国白人精英的一些文化分歧源于对法律上的种族主义统治结束后白人社会意义变化的不同反应。53因此,我将理性地构建人物类型,让人们了解参与围绕种族的文化战争的白人精英在行为和意识形态上可能会有什么样的表现理解自己。54这些回答可能并不总是让你觉得可信或完全连贯。但我认为,在人们必须理解一个由矛盾力量塑造的社会的情况下,这是意料之中的。55毕竟,这就是为什么这是一个心理剧的故事。种族平等主义的意识形态和严格等级制度的物质现实之间的冲突产生了这种紧张关系,正是这种欲望使自己的地位保持在等级制度之上(或在等级制度中走自己的路),同时避免内疚,从而驱动了文化战争原型。我们现在有了自己的叙述和演员阵容。美国反映了全球趋势,已经从一个法律上的种族主义国家变成了一个意识形态更加平等,但财富分配却存在种族分层的国家。居住在这片矛盾的土地上的是忏悔者,他们对意识形态和现实的不匹配感到内疚,并试图避免让情况变得更糟。镇压者希望避免而不是减轻罪恶感,并担心在所有对不平等的担忧中,我们都会忘记自己的进步,他们试图将色盲精英政治视为法律上种族主义的对立面。PoC知识分子也顺势而为,在机会或倾向允许的情况下,向任何一方出售他们的意识形态产品。我希望这是一幅有点可识别的画面,展示了我们目前在美国文化主导的世界中的意识形态结构。但一开始我承诺,通过这一切,一个人可以适应自己的社会角色。上面的角色都不是完全没有同情心的,但就人们在他们身上看到的自己而言,这可能是一种深刻的不安感。当然,根据我们的叙述,在上面描绘的人物中认识到自己并不能成为调和我们自己与现状的手段吗?的确如此,但我希望让你们和解的不是白人文化战争的热情参与者,也不是PoC知识分子的喧嚣。因为这一切中描绘了另一个人物原型——那就是叙述者的讽刺超然,我希望说服读者,尤其是非白人读者,他们可以从中看到自己。通过与冷战的类比,让我们称之为不结盟人物原型。不结盟者代表了一种理想,一种即使在这样一个社会中也可以调和的性格类型。基本思想借鉴并改编自Wiredu概念去殖民化哲学中的关键思想,71因此,在给出更具体的说明之前,我将解释全局策略。总的来说,我已经完成了引言中为政治哲学设定的任务的一半。我概述了一个阻碍人们与社会秩序和解的原因——事实上,他们所信奉的意识形态和生活在其中的物质现实从根本上是分开的,这一个总是给另一个带来问题。从高层来看,这立即表明了一条和解之路——让世界更像意识形态,或者让意识形态更像世界。我在这里假设,以某种形式的种族平等主义意识形态将得到维护,从而考虑更具体的问题:考虑到我们现在所处的情况,一个人如何才能真正致力于建立一个更平等的社会结构?正如我稍后将概述的那样,现状的认识特征使这成为一项不平凡的任务,甚至是一项难以尝试的任务,因此它需要某些性格美德,我将用这些美德来构建不结盟者的原型。这就是Wiredu的核心思想所在。有色人种面对当代文化战争的处境,认识到这场战争注定会不连贯,但又不确定如何做得更好,这与任何试图了解自己现状的前殖民地人的处境都有某些特点。 对迄今为止的历史的熟悉表明,人们理解社会世界的关键概念,负责收集和整理有关该世界证据的机构,以及有权在社会讨论中制定议程的机构,都是由对自己的利益漠不关心或怀有敌意的权力发展起来的。然而,简单地拒绝从下一代继承的任何东西显然是很容易的。72毕竟,这也让这些力量制定了议程。它只是在陈述对他人议程的首选回应之前添加一个否定符号。因此,一个人必须发展技能和能力,谨慎地筛选话语空间,权衡和评估自己的发现,并综合其中最好的东西,以便达到自己设定的目的。这就是Wiredu所说的概念上的非殖民化,我将或多或少地将不结盟理想契约化为当前文化战争中概念上非殖民化的理想实践者,致力于结束真正的种族平等的社会政治秩序。然后,让我们把这个抽象的故事应用到我们更具体的案例中。首先,为什么不结盟运动的人处于一种无法信任其概念、议程制定机构或证据收集机构的境地?这源于文化战争是由物质不平等所维持的,而没有人认真试图解决这种不平等。排斥者和镇压者都在回应意识形态与现实不匹配所产生的不满,但他们都不希望在意识形态上为物质不平等辩护,也不希望放弃自己的财产和优越的机会。但是,只要这种物质上的不平等存在,它们就可以根据显著的身份类别产生稳定的不平等互动模式。73这些会加剧一个人的劣势,越是少数族裔。74即使不可能,我们也可以以某种方式说服所有白人采取正确的内心态度,错误的制度结构无论如何都会使种族不平等现象长期存在。75此外,对殖民历史的适当关注表明,尽管绝大多数人认为种族不平等制度完全非法,但这种严重而残酷的种族不平等体制显然可以持续很长一段时间,因此,他们发现自己有了无尽的新素材,可以为他们的战斗火上浇油。意识形态与现实的不匹配永远在坚持自己,永远在引导他们的智力和实践注意力。杜波依斯式的社会问题可以暂时被遗忘,也可以暂时缓解因未能解决而产生的内疚感——但它永远不会停止产生新的例子,永远不会停止重申自己的基本现实。因此,只要物质上的不平等存在,他们就会继续突出种族等级制度,无论Repressers想要什么,并不断产生有罪的理由,无论Repeters想要什么。所有旨在应对这场文化战争的机构——本质上是由白人资产阶级控制的所有认识机构,也就是说所有这些机构——因此从根本上从不结盟者的角度解决了错误的问题。他们关心的是管理他们永远无法解决的紧张局势的结果,而驱逐者和镇压者冲突的性质不允许他们解决这种紧张局势。他们没有被安排制作有助于解决物质不平等的信息或制定议程,事实上,他们将永远被提供更多的文化战争爆发点,可以集中注意力,也可以分散注意力。由于这无疑会让许多人觉得形势黯淡,因此值得在这里停下来谈谈许多人感受到的诱惑,这可能确实是许多人成为PoC知识分子的心理基础。如果这就是我们社会所能提供的,为什么不屈服于对受过教育的有色人种的巨大诱惑,参与文化战争呢?说服他们充当我们的代理人,难道我们就不能赢得重大的物质变革吗?即使我们做不到,也许悲观主义只是对此的恰当回应;一个人至少可以因为削弱压迫最恶劣的边缘而得到报酬。很容易理解为什么这种诱惑,不仅是因为上述物质利益的原因,而且是因为驱逐者似乎为我们提供的政策和社会地位。但真正试图赢得文化战争,无论是驱逐者还是驱逐者,都是一件愚蠢的事;如果是这样的球队,那么唯一获胜的办法就是不参加比赛。首先,我们不可能如此有说服力。 有争议的问题足够复杂,历史叙述也足够矛盾,因此总是有可能出现合理的分歧。另一方面,许多人从现状中受益。首先,从明显的意义上讲,Represser和Repnter策略都不涉及交出白人财富,因此与实际上可能提高黑人物质福利的严重再分配政策相比,对白人精英来说相对有利。但除此之外,还有许多人,包括上文所述的白人77和PoC知识分子,从目前存在的文化战争的持续中受益匪浅。他们不会不战而退。在一个高度互联和意识形态多样的社会中,每个人都能找到富有同情心的知识分子代言人,以增强他们对自己喜欢的叙事的信心。在这种情况下,我们不应该期望任何连贯的宏大叙事能够达成共识。78一方的战略参与可能看起来像是现实主义者务实而精明的回应,但这是注定的,事实上只是浪费时间。相反,我们应该记住,有些情况根本超出了我们的控制范围,只会通过让自己参与进来来伤害我们。79只要文化战争背后的物质环境保持不变,复仇者和忏悔者原型都不会可靠地为我们谋福利。这并不是建议不采取行动,而是强调我们的行动应该针对其他目的。话虽如此,让我们回过头来问问自己:如果不结盟运动的人不能信任文化战争参与者的政治认识机构,也不能合理地希望将他们中的一方变成变革的引擎,他们应该怎么办?好吧,在高层,他们应该以这样一种方式行事,即他们可以真诚地认为自己正在为消除种族群体之间的物质不平等而明智地努力。虽然这不是推进这一目标的唯一途径,作为一个占位符,让我们假设不结盟运动的人试图通过确保非白人享有共和自由所需的物质和文化条件来消除意识形态与现实的不匹配。80有充分的理由认为,这不能仅仅通过改变人们的态度或改变人际礼仪规范来实现。81为了实现共和自由,82因此,不结盟运动的特点是寻求可能实现必要变革的有效集体行动的途径。那么问题来了:他们需要什么样的态度和性格才能有效地做到这一点?在目前的情况下,努力做到这一点所必需的心理美德是很难达到的。如前所述,制作智力作品和文化媒体的大多数场所都由排斥者或镇压者控制,不结盟运动的人与他们并不结盟。83然而,至少在建立起具有足够影响力的反机构之前,如果我们要计划和协调如何共同建设一个更美好的世界,这些都是我们许多人必须存在的空间,也是我们必须从中汲取工作经验的人。更重要的是,与此同时,这些机构将随着“驱逐者”与“镇压者”冲突的节奏而嗡嗡作响,因为我们居住的世界不可避免地继续挑战他们偏好的意识形态。因此,我们将受到信息的轰炸,这些信息声称他们的文化战争爆发点极其重要,值得我们立即关注。不结盟运动的人必须学会避开文化战争的噪音,同时注意他们独特的项目所带来的价值。这些项目会是什么样的,什么样的心理倾向会帮助它们完成?不幸的是,在这一点上,很难说这些独特的项目会是什么,正是因为本作者是一个受到所有认知劣势影响的人。但我们可以说一点。在我们参与努力完善和传播种族礼仪规范的项目之前,84名不结盟运动人士希望得到一些证据,证明改进的文明规范实际上会产生物质再分配。如果有理由认为他们不会,我们只会搁置此类研究项目,将注意力重新分配到其他地方。 这只是一个更广泛观点的例子;对于一个不结盟的知识分子来说,一个直接的项目是重新评估那些表面上是为了黑人的利益,目前占用了大量时间、注意力和资源的项目,比如种族礼仪培训85,并看看这些项目中哪些是以实际服务于驱逐者或镇压者的目标为前提的。如果发现资源分配不当的例子,比如礼仪培训,86我们将吸走资源,阻止同情我们事业的人在这里抛砖引玉。Olúf是一个更积极的例子,我们可以参与一个既有智力元素又有更直接物质元素的项目ẹ́mi Táíwå最近倡导了气候赔偿的前瞻性愿景,关注我们可以共同创造一个什么样的世界,这在很大程度上反映了不结盟运动人士的担忧。87此外,他认为,由于我早些时候在叙述中讨论的许多因素,世界上绝大多数非白人想要有一个体面的世界,就需要(除其他外)提供资源和技术来抵消气候变化的生态和政治影响。这是一种气候补偿形式。除此之外,我们或许希望根据我们所采用的共和理想,增加对这些人如何独立于世界富人的慷慨和良好行为的研究。但无论如何,将我们如何处理赔偿问题的对话、做法以及最终的资源转向特定的气候目的,需要我们目前没有的权力,以及罕见的技能和性格。事实上,即使以这种方式思考问题,也往往是非常有争议的。88然而,如果我们要执行不结盟运动项目,努力实际解决我们的物质不平等问题,这正是我们需要的心态和实践的转变。有了摆在我们面前的不结盟学者活动家项目的例子,我们可以思考它们需要什么样的心理美德。由于两者都需要在已经确定的调查领域内大幅转移重点,我们对不结盟人士有了第一个特征要求。无论采取什么必要的心理手段,我们都必须停止赋予白人资产阶级制定议程的权力,以解决我们自己的问题。也就是说,不结盟运动的人必须培养精神上的自决能力,以确保我们追求与我们的项目相关的思想和行动路线,并对我们的关切作出回应。89在这方面,我们可以寻求局外人的政治传统,这些传统也必须在他们无法控制的社会形式范围内发展。90这需要我们有一种自觉的自主性制定和设定最终目标;对我们不能信任的机构所提供的重要内容采取反思性的讽刺立场,对保持不结盟至关重要。与此相关的是,我们必须培养对文化战争爆发点的冷静。91忏悔者、镇压者和许多PoC知识分子将坚持我们应该深切关注这些问题。情感参与政治不公正确实有很好的理由。92但是,我们自己通过改变物质基础来确保共和党自由的议程并没有独立地证实他们的担忧是有意义的,这些充满感情的爆发点只不过是分散注意力。然而,不结盟运动的人民是在我们叙述的环境中心理形成的。因此,我们考虑不周的激情很可能与镇压者和镇压者的虚假担忧一致,这很难摆脱。93希望,意识到自己在叙事中的地位的行为将有助于改变其关注点,并使自己更好地从其带来的情感显著性机制中解放出来。94这使一个人能够专注于对自己项目重要的事情,并更好地与他人合作。95当然,这并不意味着我们总是对镇压者或镇压者关心的事情漠不关心——警察参与法外杀戮的能力肯定会影响可怜的黑人的共和自由!即使我们保持冷漠,也不应该被理解为根本没有利益。96但除了主流文化试图强加给我们的担忧之外,我们无论如何都必须努力保持我们自己的内心判断。97在我们自己的评估被赋予首要地位的情况下,驱逐者和镇压者的优越财富和媒体渠道将无法哄骗或贿赂我们放弃我们的任务。 98通过这种方式,我们可以进行Wireduite概念上的非殖民化,让自己能够筛选我们的认识环境为我们提供的东西,只选择我们需要的东西。因此,培养这种内在空间不仅仅是个人对世界的退缩。这对于实现不结盟运动人士的目标至关重要。通过确保一个人能够有效地实现真正的变革,可以帮助创造一个政治社区和物质环境,让所有人,现在都适当地包容非白人,可以根据自己深思熟虑的判断自由锻炼和生活。99因此,这就是不结盟运动人物原型的理想。他们可以认为自己真正追求一种理性的方法来创造一个更美好的社会,足够冷静,足够具有讽刺意味,不会被驱逐者和镇压者的愤怒所撕裂,与一个真正解决社会不一致的项目和解,而不仅仅是对这种不一致的每一次连续的戏剧性展示做出永远的新回应。混乱是转型社会的特征。这是一个生活方式和意识形态上层建筑发生了足够迅速的变化的社会,两者还没有时间适当地相互适应。100种族关系的情况尤其令人担忧,因为所有这些变化的一个影响是对这一概念本身提出了质疑。自20世纪末以来,我们甚至没有真正同意是否存在种族的“存在”101——这不是没有后果的形而上学分歧;我们的技术实践体现了(经常混淆的)种族观念。102因此,作为一种文化,我们很难思考这一点,这并不奇怪,也没有理由感到羞耻。在法律上的种族主义政权之后,美国和更广泛的后殖民世界还没有找到一种理解自己的方式。很自然,我们现有的叙事不令人满意,可用的人物原型也不是吸引人的角色。我提供了一个更具吸引力的人物原型——不结盟者。他们试图消除意识形态愿望与物质现实之间的不匹配。在种族平等主义意识形态的背景下,他们通过使物质环境更接近人们的预期来做到这一点。也就是说,他们不想通过试图更好地管理其后果来解决杜波依斯式的社会问题,而是希望简单地消除导致这一问题的环境。由于他们必须在充满困惑和干扰的当今社会中运作,我认为不结盟者需要养成一种习惯,同时对其他人物原型的关注保持讽刺性的超然。通过这种方式,他们可以专注于实现自己的目标,而不是被无处不在、充满激情的白人心理剧分散注意力,这些心理剧构成了在文化战争中与之斗争的反抗者和镇压者的支柱。我希望这也说明,即使在非理想社会中,和解的理想仍然可以指导政治哲学家;我们可以思考什么样的人和项目才能构成一种合理的、令人满意的、朝着更美好的世界努力的模式,并找出如何创造条件来促进扮演这样的角色。但是,无论我将不结盟运动视为一个可以与之和解的人物原型的愿景是否有吸引力,我们都必须停止将精神能量投入到白人资产阶级的文化战争中。它永远不会变得更好,只会让我们变得更糟。太多人参与了这篇文章的创作,无法表示完全的感谢。但你知道你是谁,我很感激你。无相关。本条不存在潜在的利益冲突。所有相关数据均包含在文章中。作者宣称这项研究不需要人类伦理的批准。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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White psychodrama

One might hope that philosophy could reconcile us to our social world and each other. To entertain this as plausible is to think there is some perspective one could reach via philosophical enquiry that shows our life and society to be as they are for good reason, allows us to see it all as in some sense rational. Hegel is no doubt the great exponent of this ideal, his system promising to trace history's patterns and conceptual development, while he is so optimistic as to believe that, at its end, we would achieve the perspective whereby every agent's own actions and situation can be made intelligible to themselves and others. This was meant to be true for us the readers, so we would be able to see for ourselves how what we do makes sense, given our circumstances, and is plausibly tending towards a good end.1

Of course, the problem is that there may not be such a perspective. Perhaps to see the world aright is to recognize it as a jumbled mess, with no progressive tendency towards greater coherence, and no satisfaction to be had in achieving superior insight. Perhaps there is no good end we are collaboratively working towards, no possible reconciliation with each other; maybe we are perpetually on the brink of descending once more into a Hobbesian nightmare. Hegel hoped to reassure us that the existence of that clarificatory perspective is guaranteed; as free agents, once we achieve self-awareness we necessarily mutually recognize one another as engaged in a fundamentally cooperative project tending towards justified ends.2 But, alas, not all of us have been convinced, and a kind of existential anomie can befall a thoughtful person who surveys our present socio-cultural situation.3 What if there really just is no excuse for how things are, and no good reason for me to carry on?

We ought then to make the social world worthy of reconciliation. The guiding idea here is that the ideal of reconciliation underlying Hegelian social thought is desirable, and if it is not yet possible given present social arrangements, we are called upon to change those arrangements until the ideal can be attained. To be clear, this is not a disagreement with Hegel's system at its deepest level; he may have jumped the gun on what a rationally reconcilable social order looks like, but in some sense that is a mere detail compared to his deeper point that we proactively seek a coherence that we can be reconciled to. Social and political philosophy can then play a dual role of identifying points at which our social order will throw up obstacles to attaining a coherent and reconcilable view of one's life, and suggesting means by which these obstacles can be removed.4

I shall illustrate these rather abstract ideas by constructing and analysing a narrative of the historical situation leading up to the current culture war; especially as it plays out concerning race, and black–white relations even more especially, among the middle class of the USA. The US being a culturally dominant global hegemon, the terms and structure of its culture war tend to be exported, so they are worth understanding even for those of us who are not US citizens. The pastime of the chattering classes, the culture war can be understood as a set of symbolic and political conflicts over emotionally highly charged issues du jour. Even if the particular topic of discussion is fleeting, the ultimate resolution to these debates can have drastic effects on the lives of citizens. How we decide to understand and enforce norms around gender and sexuality, for instance, touch upon some of the most intimate and important aspects of our lives.

Here I am interested in how our peculiar socio-economic conditions shape the contours and possible points of resolution in the cultural debate around issues of race. We shall see that characteristic responses to our social order, which I shall describe through stylized character archetypes, make it impossible for participants in the culture war to achieve any lasting reconciliation. Instead, our responses both generate and constitute a kind of racialized psychopathology that I describe as white psychodrama. Given this analysis of the social order and its sources of psychic incoherence, I will suggest a way forward. My hope is that this will at least help people of colour caught in the midst of this to work towards a world we can live in and, by seeing ourselves as so working, to reconcile ourselves to our actual present social activities. We cannot, and ought not to, reconcile ourselves to a society wrapped up in its own contradictions, any more than we should seek to integrate into a burning house. But we can come to see ourselves as knowingly and self-consciously working to resolve those contradictions, quenching that fire, and laying the foundations for a better structure wherein we may all live comfortably.

Once upon a time the United States of America was a de jure racist society. As was much of the world beyond its borders, controlled as it was by racist European empires. There was a broadly understood and explicitly codified and enforced racial organization of who could live where, how individuals could interact, what sort of jobs were appropriate for whom, how law and order would operate—or wouldn't.5 The science,6 sport,7 and artistic culture8 of the day were largely carried out in conformity with, if not support of, racist norms. Gross or subtle as it may have been in any given instance, the colour line ran through everything and one crossed it only at great personal peril.9

But mountains crumble and rivers disappear, new roads replace the old, stones are buried and vanish in the earth. Time passes and the world changes. So it was that eventually this de jure racist system went the way of all things. The Civil War overthrew the slave regime. Racial immigration laws were repealed. The Civil Rights Act made various sorts of explicitly racist laws and practices impermissible. By the latter half of the twentieth century, it was clear an officially endorsed de jure racial caste system was no longer to hold sway in American life. Likewise abroad, the great European empires fell, and in their place sprang up a plethora of nations governed by formerly colonized peoples. All things considered, the twentieth century saw de jure racism suffer a world-historic defeat.

Along with these legal and institutional changes went cultural changes. Casual use of the most highly charged racial slurs became limited to the worst bigots, and nowadays one can hear the sentiment expressed that overt expressions of bigotry ought to disqualify someone from public office.10 Over the twentieth century, Americans steadily reported much less opposition to interracial marriage between blacks and whites.11 Careers which previously operated an absolute colour bar opened up to non-white people.12 Various of black Americans' artistic contributions came to define not just American, but much of the globe's popular culture.13 Mainstream right politicians ceased to explicitly identify as defending white dominance or white interests,14 a norm change which even President Trump made some nominal effort to respect.15 American social attitudes thus seemed to adjust in line with the twentieth century's legal changes.

But change was not total. The twentieth century kicked off with an economist lamenting the black middle class's merger access to capital.16 The twenty-first century began the same way, as the gap between total wealth and assets owned by black versus white Americans was once again increasing.17 Black assets were then hit especially hard by the 2008 crash.18 Even setting the crash aside, the fact that what black wealth exists is often tied up in housing property is its own source of racial vulnerability. Black property tends to be worth less19 amid continuing residential segregation.20 This segregation can concentrate social difficulties that further hinder black Americans' life chances.21 And the rarity of interracial contact induced is no doubt related to the persistently low rates of racial intermarriage.22 All of which compounds the fact that inheritance law allows for intergenerational wealth transfers that maintain economic segregation;23 thus intergenerational mobility from being propertyless into wealth is difficult and rare.24 What's more, finally, the backdrop for all this is a global economy where the ability to inherit wealth increasingly determines one's life chances.25 Whatever else changed, the people who have the stuff still tend to be white, and blacks must still sell our labour to them if we are to get by.

In this way American domestic politics mirrored the broader global trends of a post-imperial world.26 The European empires despoiled and depopulated nations.27 What they left in their wake were often underdeveloped economies28 and institutional structures ripe to be taken over by local elites who could simply continue the pattern of authoritarian wealth extraction.29 But the end of formal colonization did not generally lead to reparations. For the most part, agents based in the former colonial metropoles retained ownership of key resources and even infrastructure,30 and, if anything, inefficiencies in the credit market have led to a net capital flow from the former colonies to the former colonizers.31 Neither domestically nor internationally did a change in cultural attitudes and legal permissions correlate with a change in racial patterns of ownership. As such, many of the material patterns of inequality from the bad old days of de jure racist regimes have survived the demise of their former ideological superstructure.

Returning to the US, these persistent material inequalities have consequences for occupational inequality. The legacy of de jure segregation plausibly goes a long way to explaining wealth and income gaps between black and white Americans.32 And contemporary de facto segregation generates social networks that concentrate access to opportunities for work and education among the already prosperous, further disadvantaging blacks.33 What's more, fulfilling and legal employment for ‘less skilled’ workers was already drying up by the early twenty-first century.34 In so far as there has been a coherent social response to this collapse in opportunity, what has stepped in to the place of those jobs has been the prison system.35 The rapid rise in the population of incarcerated persons has, of course, disproportionately affected black people,36 and despite mass incarceration being a persistent public concern, the American political establishment has been unable to effectively react.37

Finally, even if explicit appeal to white interests withered away, race continues to be in fact a powerful predictor of how Americans vote.38 The liberalization of social attitudes has not led to the total disappearance of overtly racist stereotypes.39 And the political intelligentsia are still largely white, which has arguably affected the content and focus of their work.40

This, then, is where history has placed us. The maddening ambiguity of our position is what leads to the titular white psychodrama. One cannot reconcile oneself to this society because it constantly pulls in two directions—it presents one with an ideological narrative that speaks of equality, and a material structure that witnesses rank inequality. At some level, this society just does not make sense to itself, its own ideology out of whack with the plain facts of its own existence. There are those who are tempted to focus only on the positives, and see in this a story of triumphant progress towards racial justice or a post-racial future. And there are those who are inclined to see in it a story of eternal recurrence, racism ever reinventing itself. But both of these perspectives are too tidy to capture the phenomenon. For this story is of a world and a nation in contradiction with itself.

After much struggle, this world has publicly declared, and in some sense sincerely come to believe, that racial hatred is a social failure and a horrid character defect. We now welcome forms of love, friendship, and cooperation that were once unthinkable. And yet we carefully divide up the pie to ensure former slaves are kept poor and ashamed. The inevitable social discord generated by this immiseration are dealt with by brutality and caging. And the lingering suspicion remains that all this is the former slaves' fault. How then do people respond to the facts relayed in this historical narrative, and what does it mean for their ability to reconcile themselves to their own social order?

The character archetypes are stylized representations of typical responses to the status quo. Each of the types below is assumed to be driven by some fairly normal psychological motivations—they do not wish to feel guilty, they would prefer to have more stuff rather than less—and respond accordingly to the evidence, incentives, and institutional structures their society presents them with. To that extent one can think of these as something like publicly available social roles which facilitate intentional action,41 or as agents for whose behaviour I am giving a structural explanation.42 In either case, allowing for the overly neat appearance of any stylized picture, what follows is meant to be a descriptively plausible picture of reactions by many actual politically switched-on agents to life in a society shaped by the circumstances of the historical narrative just relayed. They are caricatures for sure, but ones which I expect many readers will see resemblances to within their own lives.

The agents we discuss are highly polarized people fighting a culture war. There is empirical evidence available which lets us situate what sort of person this would be. Partisanship has largely been a phenomenon only among wealthier and more politically engaged voters.43 These are mutually reinforcing categories; home ownership, for instance, predicts being more politically involved.44 Polarization encompasses far more than just party or policy preference.45 It includes, significantly for us, what news media and commentariat figures people listen to and engage with.46 This association with media consumption and lifestyle differences makes the polarization highly affectively charged.47 White people are more likely to be politically engaged48—if anything, black voter turnout is systematically over-reported.49 And, as already discussed, whites are also more likely to be wealthy. So all this means that the culture war categories I focus on will primarily be elite agents, and will largely (though not entirely) focus on various white responses to the status quo.

Despite culture war polarization largely being a fight between whites, issues of race still turn out to be very important to how it plays out. Measures of racist attitudes still do a good job of predicting Americans' attitudes to candidates and policies.50 Since the 2008 election of Barack Obama, measures of white Americans' level of racial antagonism have spiked.51 And voters report racial issues as some of those on which they are most divided.52 Plausibly, at least some of the cultural divides now wracking this section of elite white America arose from differing responses to the changing social meaning of whiteness following the end of de jure racist regimes.53

So I shall rationally construct character types which allow one to appreciate how the sort of elite white agent engaged in a culture war revolving around race might behave and ideologically understand themselves.54 These responses may not always strike you as plausible or fully coherent. But I think that is to be expected in a situation where people are having to make sense of a society shaped by contradictory forces.55 That, after all, is why this is a story of psychodrama. The conflict between an ideology of racial egalitarianism and a material reality of strict hierarchy generates such a tension, and it is the desire to keep one's status atop that hierarchy (or make one's way within it) while avoiding guilt which thereby drives the culture war archetypes.

We now have our narrative and our cast. America, mirroring global trends, has gone from a de jure racist state to one with a far more egalitarian ideology, but a racially stratified distribution of wealth. Inhabiting this contradictory land are Repenters, wracked with guilt about the ideology–reality mismatch and seeking to avoid making it worse themselves. Repressers, wanting to stave off rather than alleviate guilt, and worried that in all the concern over inequality we lose track of our progress, seek to instantiate a colour-blind meritocracy as the antithesis of de jure racism. And PoC intelligentsia, along for the ride, selling their ideological wares to either side as opportunity or inclination permits. I hope this is a somewhat recognizable picture of elements of our present ideological configuration in those bits of the world dominated by US culture.

But at the outset I promised that one could be reconciled to one's social role through all this. None of the above characters is entirely unsympathetic, yet in so far as one sees oneself in them it is probably with a profound sense of unease. Surely coming to recognize oneself in the characters as sketched above responding to our narrative cannot be a means of reconciling ourselves to the present situation?

Quite so, but it is not the passionate participants of the culture war among the whites that I hope to reconcile you to, nor the hustle and grind of the PoC intelligentsia. For there is another character archetype being depicted in all this—it is the ironic detachment of the narrator, in whom I hope to persuade readers, especially non-white readers, they may profitably see themselves. By analogy to the Cold War, let us call this the Non-Aligned character archetype.

The Non-Aligned person represents a kind of ideal, a character type to which one could be reconciled even amid a society as so described. The basic idea is borrowed and adapted from key ideas in Wiredu's philosophy of conceptual decolonization,71 so I will explain the big-picture strategy before giving more concrete illustrations. Broadly speaking, I have fulfilled half of the task I set for political philosophy in the introduction. I have outlined a cause which prevents people being able to reconcile themselves to their social order—the fact that the ideology they espouse and the material reality they live within fundamentally come apart, the one always generating problems for the other. And, at a high level, this immediately suggests a path to reconciliation—make the world better resemble the ideology, or the ideology better resemble the world. I will presume here that in some form or another a racially egalitarian ideology is to be maintained, and thus consider the more specific question: how can one earnestly work towards a more egalitarian social structure given the situation we now find ourselves in? As I will outline in a moment, epistemic features of the status quo make this a non-trivially difficult task to even attempt, and so it requires certain characterological virtues that I shall use to construct the Non-Aligned person's archetype.

And this is where the central idea from Wiredu comes in. The situation of the person of colour facing the contemporary culture war, recognizing it as doomed to incoherence, yet unsure of how to do better, shares certain features with the situation of any formerly colonized person trying to understand their present situation. Passing familiarity with the history leading up to now makes it clear that key concepts through which one understands the social world, the institutions charged with gathering and marshalling evidence about that world, and the bodies empowered to set the agenda in social discussion, have all been developed by powers indifferent or hostile to one's interests. And yet it would clearly be facile to simply reject whatever one inherits from this nexus.72 After all, this too lets those same forces set the agenda. It simply adds a negation sign before stating a preferred response to someone else's agenda. One must thus develop the skills and capacities to sift through the discourse space cautiously, weigh and evaluate what one finds, and synthesize what is best therein so that it serves ends one sets oneself. This is what Wiredu calls conceptual decolonization, and I shall more or less contract the Non-Aligned ideal to be an ideal practitioner of conceptual decolonization within the present culture war, working towards the end of a genuinely racially egalitarian socio-political order.

Let us then work through that abstract story as applied to our more concrete case. First, why is it that the Non-Aligned person is in a situation wherein they cannot trust their concepts, agenda-setting agencies, or evidence-gathering institutions? This follows from the way in which the culture war is sustained by a material inequality that no one is seriously trying to fix. Repenters and Repressers are both responding to discontent generated by an ideology–reality mismatch, but neither of them wishes to either ideologically justify the material inequality or give away their property and superior opportunities. But as long as such material inequalities exist, they can generate stable patterns of inegalitarian interaction in line with salient identity categories.73 These can compound one's disadvantage the more minoritized one is.74 And even if, per impossible, we could somehow persuade all the whites to adopt the right sort of inner attitude, the wrong sort of institutional structure can perpetuate racial inequality regardless.75

What's more, due attention to colonial history makes it apparent that regimes of stark and brutal racial inequality can last a long time despite a firm majority of the population thinking them entirely illegitimate.76 Participants in the culture war, organized as it is around responding to this situation, thus find themselves with endless new fodder with which to fuel their battles. The ideology–reality mismatch is forever asserting itself, ever directing their intellectual and practical attention. The Du Boisian social problem can be temporarily forgotten or the guilt from failing to solve it meliorated for a moment—but it will never stop generating new instances of itself, never stop reaffirming its own basic reality.

Hence as long as the material inequalities exist they will keep making racial hierarchy salient whatever the Repressers want, and keep generating reasons for guilt whatever the Repenters want. All of the institutions designed to respond to this culture war—which is essentially all of the epistemic institutions controlled by the white bourgeois, which is to say all of them—are thus fundamentally addressing the wrong questions from the point of view of the Non-Aligned person. They are concerned with managing the results of a tension they can never resolve, which the nature of the Repenter and Repressor conflict will not allow them to resolve. They are not arranged to produce information, or set an agenda, that will aid in resolving material inequality, and in fact will forever be supplied with more culture war flashpoints on which to focus and with which to distract.

Since that will no doubt strike many as a bleak situation, it is worth pausing here to address a temptation many have felt, which may indeed be the psychological basis of many becoming PoC intelligentsia. If this is all our society has to offer, why not give in to the overwhelming temptation for an educated person of colour and participate in the culture war, usually from a perspective much more friendly to the Repenters? Could we not win serious material change by persuading them to act as our agents? And even if we cannot, maybe pessimism is simply the proper response to this; and one may as well at least get paid for blunting the worst edges of oppression. It is easy to see why this tempts, not only for reasons of material interest mentioned above, but also in light of the sort of policies and social standing which the Repenters would seem to offer us. But earnestly trying to win the culture war in the sense of achieving victory for either Repenter or Represser is a fool's errand; if those are the teams, then the only winning move is not to play.

For one thing, it is impossible that we shall ever be so persuasive. The matters disputed are sufficiently complex, and the historical narrative sufficiently contradictory, that there will always be the possibility of reasonable disagreement. For another, many people benefit from the status quo. First, in the obvious sense in which both Represser and Repenter strategies do not involve surrendering white wealth and are thus relatively advantageous to white elites when compared to seriously redistributive policies that might actually advance the material welfare of black people. But even beyond that there are many, including both whites77 and the PoC intelligentsia outlined above, who materially benefit from the perpetuation of the culture war as it now exists. They will not be keen to let go of it without a fight. And in a highly interconnected and ideologically diverse society, everyone will always be able to find sympathetic intellectual spokespeople to bolster their faith in their preferred narrative. Under these conditions, we should not expect any coherent grand narrative to achieve consensus.78 Strategic participation on one side might seem like the pragmatic hard-nosed response of a realist, but it is doomed and in fact simply a waste of time.

Instead, we should bear in mind that some situations are simply beyond our control and can only do us harm by involving ourselves.79 As long as the material circumstances underlying the culture war remain the same, neither the Represser nor the Repenter archetype will reliably act for our good. That is not to counsel inaction, but rather to stress that our actions should be aimed at other ends. With that, let us return and ask ourselves: if the Non-Aligned person cannot trust the politico-epistemic institutions of the participants in the culture war, nor reasonably hope to turn one of their sides into an engine for change, what ought they to do instead?

Well, at a high level they ought to act in such a way that they can earnestly see themselves as sensibly working towards the eradication of the material inequalities between racial groups. While it is not the only way of advancing this goal, as a placeholder let us assume the Non-Aligned person seeks to remove the ideology–reality mismatch by securing the physical and cultural conditions necessary for non-white people to enjoy republican freedom.80 There is good reason to think that this cannot be achieved by mere change in people's attitudes or shifting interpersonal etiquette norms.81 For republican freedom to be attained, far-reaching modifications in the basic economic structure may well be required.82 The Non-Aligned character is therefore moved to seek out avenues for effective collective action that might realize the necessary changes. The question is then: what sort of attitudes and dispositions do they need to have to be effective at this?

The psychological virtues necessary to work towards this under the present situation are difficult to attain. As noted, most of the venues wherein intellectual work and cultural media are produced are controlled by either Repenters or Repressers, with whom Non-Aligned people are, well, not aligned. In so far as people of colour have found a voice there, they have been highly vulnerable to elite capture.83 Yet, at least until counter-institutions have been built which have sufficient reach, these are the spaces many of us must exist in, and persons whose work we must draw from, if we are to plan and coordinate working out how to collectively build a better world. What is more, all the while those institutions will be humming to the rhythm of the perpetual Repenter versus Represser conflict, as the world we inhabit continues inevitably to defy their preferred ideologies. We will thus be bombarded with messaging which claims that their culture war flashpoints are supremely important and worthy of our immediate attention. The Non-Aligned person must learn to tune out the culture war noise, while being attentive to what is of value given their distinctive projects. What sort of projects would these be, and what sort of psychological dispositions would aid their completion?

It is unfortunately rather difficult to say what those distinctive projects will be at this point, precisely because the present author is one subject to all the epistemic disadvantages outlined. But we can say a bit. Before we engage in the project of trying to refine and disseminate racial etiquette codes,84 Non-Aligned persons will want some evidence that improved civility norms would actually generate material redistribution. Where there is some reason to think they will not, we will simply set aside such research projects and reallocate our attention elsewhere. That is simply an example of a broader point; an immediate project for a non-aligned intellectual would be the re-evaluation of projects which are ostensibly for the good of black people and presently taking up much time, attention, and resources—such as racial etiquette training85—and see which of these projects are premised on in fact serving Repenter or Represser goals. Where examples of misallocated resources are identified, as is the case for etiquette training,86 we will siphon off resources and prevent people sympathetic to our cause from casting their pearls here.

For a more positive example of a project we could engage in that has both intellectual and more directly material elements, Olúfẹ́mi Táíwò has recently advocated for a forward-looking vision of climate reparations, concerned with what sort of world we can make together, in a fashion that very much mirrors the concerns of the Non-Aligned person.87 What is more, he argues that, due to many of the factors discussed in my narrative earlier, any hope for a decent world for the vast majority of the world's non-white population requires (among other things) the provision of resources and technology to counteract the ecological and political effects of climate change. This is a form of climate reparations. To this we would perhaps wish to add research on ways in which such people could become independent of the generosity and good behaviour of the world's wealthy, in light of our adopted republican ideals. But in any case, redirecting the conversation, practices, and ultimately resources, involved in how we deal with reparations towards specific climate ends requires powers we do not presently have, and a mixture of skills and dispositions that are rare. Indeed, even thinking about things this way is often very contentious.88 However, it is exactly the sort of shift in mindset and practice we will need if we are to carry out the Non-Aligned project of striving to actually resolve our material inequalities.

With our examples of Non-Aligned scholar-activist projects before us, we can think about what psychological virtues they require. And since both require shifting focus quite dramatically within already established areas of enquiry, we have our first characterological requirement of the Non-Aligned person. By whatever psychological means necessary we must stop granting the white bourgeoisie agenda-setting power over our own concerns. That is to say, the Non-Aligned person must cultivate mental self-determination in order to ensure we are pursuing lines of thought and action pertinent to our projects and responsive to our concerns.89 For guidance in this we can look to outsider political traditions that have also had to develop within the confines of social forms they could not control.90 This requires of us a kind of self-conscious autonomy in formulating and setting sub-goals towards our ultimate end; and a stance of reflective irony towards what is being proffered as important by institutions we cannot trust is essential to remaining Non-Aligned.

Relatedly, we must cultivate dispassion towards culture war flashpoints.91 Repenters, Repressers, and many of the PoC intelligentsia, will insist we ought to care deeply about these issues. And there are genuinely good arguments for affective engagement with political injustices.92 But, where our own agenda of securing republican freedom by changes to the material base does not independently confirm their concerns to be of interest, these affectively charged flashpoints are nothing more than a distraction. Yet, Non-Aligned people are psychologically formed in the environment of our narrative. Our ill-considered passions are hence likely to align with the spurious concerns of the Repressers and Repenters, and this can be very hard to break free from.93 Hopefully, the very act of coming to appreciate one's place in the narrative will help denaturalize its concerns and allow one to better liberate oneself from being swept along by the affective salience regime it brings with it.94 This allows one to focus on what matters to one's own project and better cooperate with others to those ends.95

Of course, this will not mean that we are always unconcerned with whatever Repressers or Repenters care about—the ability of the police to engage in extra-judicial killing certainly affects poor black people's republican freedom! And even where our indifference is maintained, this should not be understood as being simply unfeeling.96 But we must none the less strive to maintain our own inner seat of judgement apart from the concerns the dominant culture attempts to foist upon us.97 With our own assessments given primacy, the superior wealth and access to media of the Repenters and Repressers will be unable to cajole or bribe us away from our task.98 In this way, we can carry out Wireduite conceptual decolonization, having put ourselves in a position to sift through what our epistemic environment offers us and select only what we need.

Cultivating this inner space is hence no mere personal retreat from the world. It is vital to achieving the Non-Aligned person's goal. By ensuring one is able to effectively work towards real change, one may help create a political community and material circumstance where all, now properly inclusive of non-white people, may freely exercise and live according to their own considered judgements.99 This, then, is the ideal of the Non-Aligned character archetype. Someone who can see themselves as genuinely pursuing a reasoned approach to creating a better society, dispassionate enough and at enough ironic distance not to get torn away from their tasks by the raging of the Repenters and the Repressors, reconciled to a project of genuinely resolving social incoherences rather than just eternally responding anew to each successive dramatic demonstration of this incoherence.

Confusion is characteristic of a transitional society. This is a society that has undergone sufficiently rapid changes in its mode of life and ideological superstructure that the two have not yet had time to properly adjust to each other.100 The case of race relationships is especially fraught, because one effect of all these changes has been to call the concept itself into question. Since the close of the twentieth century, we have not even really agreed whether or not there is a ‘there’ there to race at all101—and this is no consequence-free metaphysical disagreement; our technological practices embody (often confused) notions of race.102 It is hence no surprise, and no reason for shame, that we as a culture have had a hard time thinking through this. The USA and the broader postcolonial world have not yet found a way of making sense of themselves after de jure racist regimes. It is natural enough that the narratives we have available are unsatisfying, and the character archetypes available are not appealing roles.

I have offered as a more attractive character archetype the Non-Aligned person. They seek to eliminate the mismatch between ideological aspiration and material reality. This they do by rendering material circumstances more akin to what one might expect given a racially egalitarian ideology. That is to say, rather than solve the Du Boisian social problem by trying to better manage its fallout, they wish to simply eliminate the circumstances that gave rise to it. Since they have to operate amid the present society with all its confusions and distractions, I argued that the Non-Aligned person needs to develop a habit of considering issues with Stoical dispassion, while maintaining ironic detachment from the concerns of the other character archetypes. In this way, they can focus on achieving their goals, rather than be distracted by the pervasive and highly affectively charged white psychodramas that constitute the mainstay of Repenters and Repressers battling it out in the culture war. I hope this also illustrates how the ideal of reconciliation can still guide political philosophers even in non-ideal societies; we can think about what sort of person and project would constitute a rationally satisfying mode of working towards the better world, and work out how to create conditions that facilitate occupying such a role.

But whether my vision of the Non-Aligned as character archetype with which one could be reconciled is appealing or not, it is imperative that we cease investing our psychic energy in the white bourgeoisie's culture war. It will never get better, and only makes us worse.

Too many people assisted in the creation of this article to offer full thanks. But you know who you are and you have my gratitude.

None relevant.

There are no potential conflicts of interest relevant to this article.

All relevant data are included in the article.

The author declares human ethics approval was not needed for this study.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
5.60%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: The Journal of Political Philosophy is an international journal devoted to the study of theoretical issues arising out of moral, legal and political life. It welcomes, and hopes to foster, work cutting across a variety of disciplinary concerns, among them philosophy, sociology, history, economics and political science. The journal encourages new approaches, including (but not limited to): feminism; environmentalism; critical theory, post-modernism and analytical Marxism; social and public choice theory; law and economics, critical legal studies and critical race studies; and game theoretic, socio-biological and anthropological approaches to politics. It also welcomes work in the history of political thought which builds to a larger philosophical point and work in the philosophy of the social sciences and applied ethics with broader political implications. Featuring a distinguished editorial board from major centres of thought from around the globe, the journal draws equally upon the work of non-philosophers and philosophers and provides a forum of debate between disparate factions who usually keep to their own separate journals.
期刊最新文献
Evaluating International Agreements: The Voluntarist Reply and Its Limits Issue Information The Journal of Political Philosophy Index, Volume 31 (2023) The challenge of policing minorities in a liberal society Noncompliance and the Demands of Public Reason
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