Left is Not Woke: a philosopher's plea for universalism and 'progress' is a frustrating polemic
- Written by The Conversation
Some years ago I was surprised to come across a person whose politics I knew to be conservative at a Greens fundraiser. When I asked him why he was there, he said he supported any gay candidate, irrespective of party.
It is this emphasis on identity against values that most annoys American philosopher and writer Susan Neiman. She could well have echoed Cate Blanchett’s character in the film Tar, an acclaimed conductor who is appalled when one of her students discards Bach’s music because he was a white, cis male.
Tribal identities, for Neiman, are undermining the traditional claims of the left for a universalist understanding of justice and progress.
Left is Not Woke – Susan Neiman (Polity)
Neiman’s book Left is Not Woke is strongest when querying the centrality of this tribalism. Elsewhere she has written movingly about the way in which German guilt about the Holocaust blocks the capacity to feel empathy for Palestinians now dying in Gaza.
In her book she defends Hannah Arendt’s use of the term “crimes against humanity” to describe the Holocaust, an expression journalist Michael Gawenda has found objectionable because it elides the particular experience of Jews.
Neiman’s defence of universalism is important and has been praised by Fintan O’Toole in a powerful essay in the New York Review of Books titled “Defying Tribalism”. (Despite living in Berlin, the United States is very much her focus in her book.) But nowhere does Neiman demonstrate that “woke” and “tribalism” are identical. As she claims, concern for those who are marginalised can
end by reducing each to the prism of her marginalization […] The idea of intersectionality […] [has] led to a focus on those parts of identities that are most marginalized and multiplies them into a forest of trauma.
Read more: Why 'wokeness' has become the latest battlefront for white conservatives in America
Her concern is that an emphasis on personal experience can easily magnify tribal grievances at the expense of a universal concern for justice. Neiman’s insistence on the importance of universalism is particularly apposite in the current emotional responses to the Gaza conflict.







