identity politics
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Identity politics
It refers to a position or movement that forms political demands and solidarity based on the "identity group" to which one belongs, such as race/ethnicity, gender, sexuality, religion, and class. It is characterized by starting from a sense of belonging that "we are a party to ____" rather than conventional ideologies (left/right, labor- capital conflicts, etc.).
historical background
The 1980s saw the rise of "minority studies" and queer theory in academia, mutually reinforcing political practice and theory.
Main Purpose
Ensure representativeness
If there are an unreasonably small number of parties of the same group in parliament, business, and the media, demand a quota system or recruitment targets. Correction of systemic inequalities
CULTURAL ACKNOWLEDGMENT
Emphasis on "symbolic justice" such as countering stereotypes and hate speech, revising history textbooks, and establishing memorial days. Criticisms and Issues
criticism of universalism
There is a danger of fragmenting solidarity by prioritizing partial interests over the "whole of society" (e.g., Francis Fukuyama). essentialist criticism
Emotional victimization may create over-mobilization and weaken rational discussion. backlash
summary
While identity politics has the power to put the invisible voices of those involved on the political agenda, it also entails the risk of fragmenting society and deepening conflicts. In practice, the core issue is how to balance the "recognition of difference" and the "construction of the common good.
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