Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

elleng

(139,031 posts)
Sun Mar 16, 2025, 02:23 AM Mar 16

The Old Idea That Could Give New Life to Progressive Politics

During the first Trump era, the resistance engaged in soaring rhetoric about unity — then fell apart. Will this time be different?

The Trump administration has declared a war on words — some 200 of them and counting. Reporting by The Times found that words like “inclusion” and “identity” have been flagged by agencies, with instruction to avoid them or even remove them from government websites and curriculums, part of the wider initiative to scrub diversity and inclusion initiatives from public life. Some words under scrutiny are so neutral they invite surprise (“belong,” “women”). Others are so universally regarded as vacuous and performative (“allyship”), few might mourn them.

One word, however, seems to have proved shifty enough to slip the net of the censors and hardy enough to retain its moral power. “Solidarity,” a word of the old left, is being shaken free of mothballs and tailored to fit the hopes of the moment. Solidarity is the “one idea that can save democracy,” according to the organizers Leah Hunt-Hendrix and Astra Taylor, who call for a solidarity on the left — a “transformative solidarity” — that confers dignity to all, as opposed to the “reactionary solidarity” on the right, based on a politics of exclusion.

Recent work, and fresh hope, constellate around the word, tracing its history (Hunt-Hendrix and Taylor’s “Solidarity”), its aesthetics (Eszter Szakács and Naeem Mohaiemen’s “Solidarity Must Be Defended”), its contradictions and potential (Sarah Schulman’s “The Fantasy and Necessity of Solidarity,” Aruna D’Souza’s “Imperfect Solidarities”). There are case studies of specific campaigns (Daisy Pitkin’s “On the Line”), oral histories (the Pinko Collective’s “After Accountability”), documentaries (“Plan C,” “The Strike,” the Oscar-winning “No Other Land”), even a play (Bess Wohl’s “Liberation,” currently off Broadway). I omit, for the sake of speeding things along, recent fiction. The South Korean novelist and Nobel laureate Han Kang and the Irish writer Claire Keegan, for example, are preoccupied with the essential questions of solidarity: When we understand ourselves as implicated in larger histories, as entangled in other people’s stories and fates, what choices will we make? What do we risk when we make other people, in the words of the poet Gwendolyn Brooks, our business and our bond?

These books explore solidarity not as a philosophical proposition but as a distinctive and delicate form of intimacy. Solidarity — a notion so oddly elastic and enticingly vague — is the art and practice of sharing in another’s struggle, of making common cause. If the nostalgic notion of solidarity conjures workers united in purpose, their voices and placards raised in unison, this new thinking examines the inner mechanisms of solidarity, before it blossoms into communal feeling — the meetings, the awkward conversations, the earnestness, the errors.'>>>

*Solidarity is the “one idea that can save democracy,” according to the organizers Leah Hunt-Hendrix and Astra Taylor, who call for a solidarity on the left — a “transformative solidarity” — that confers dignity to all, as opposed to the “reactionary solidarity” on the right, based on a politics of exclusion.*

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/15/magazine/trump-progressive-politics-solidarity.html

3 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
The Old Idea That Could Give New Life to Progressive Politics (Original Post) elleng Mar 16 OP
I am hoping that the current community building will last Easterncedar Mar 16 #1
I agree. elleng Mar 16 #2
Oh dear. Keep us posted! Be safe. Easterncedar Mar 16 #3

Easterncedar

(4,135 posts)
1. I am hoping that the current community building will last
Sun Mar 16, 2025, 04:04 AM
Mar 16

We need to come together. Good article. Thanks!

elleng

(139,031 posts)
2. I agree.
Sun Mar 16, 2025, 04:12 AM
Mar 16

You're welcome.

P.S., T'storms coming here tomorrow/later, today, starting @ 5 p.m, 'showers' from 12 midnight til 4 p.m. Monday.. Trying NOT to worry about effect on Big Old Eastern Cedar.

Latest Discussions»Editorials & Other Articles»The Old Idea That Could G...