When former U.S. House Speaker Tip O바카라Neill coined the phrase that 바카라all politics is local바카라, little did he realise that actually 바카라all politics is identity politics바카라. From the Black Lives Matter movement, LGBTQ+, #MeToo to Dalit and Adivasi politics in India, identity politics has emerged as radical politics of emancipation in what author George Packer provocatively calls 바카라multi-everything democracy바카라. Unlike conventional liberal politics of pressure groups or MarÂxist politics of peasants and working class of yore, the liquid modernity-era subalterns and the oppressed people all over the world have become more interested in material benefits and symbolic recognition (anerkennung) in terms of their group identities and status.
Though the term identity politics has come to be used so promiscuously that it has become something of a noise word, yet this Hegelian valourisation of 바카라the politics of recognition바카라, in the words of philosopher Charles Taylor, has encouraged a more egalitarian discourse and made it possible for the voices of the previously disenfranchised to be heard and represented. Challenging all inherited stereotypes or signifiers of race, class, caste, and sexual preferences, identity politics has indeed crossed all bouÂndaries of political imaginary. If this 바카라imaÂgining of unimaginable바카라 has unleaÂshed a vast range of electoral coalitions and choices unheard of, it has also produced such malleable hybrid identities that our identity has also become a paranormal double of a living person with a phantom self. Â
Are you surprised when women begin to love the dapperness of a suit and metrosexual men are comfortable with painted nails and rocking skirts? Or how else do you explain the rising popularity of radical self-love movements among black, fat and disabled women? Or are you still wondering about the populist surge of comedians-turned-politicians like Bhagwant Mann and Navjot Singh Sidhu in Punjab? MayÂbe, when poker-faced comics are running for offÂice and politicians are trying to be funny, and politics resembles Kapil Sharma바카라s comedy circus, they reflect deep distrust in the regular class of Weberian politicians with 바카라cold focus and hard reason바카라. We don바카라t know it, for sure, becÂause neither Johnny Walker nor Mehmood, who mesmerised audiences with their comic acts, ever aspired to become politicians in the heydays of Nehruvian India. But the truth must be told here. While professional politicians are clowning everywhere, these new species of 바카라Homo Deus바카라 of identity politics have emerged as the most powerful brand of anti-establishment politics and promotion of direct democracy in India and elsewhere. Â
Ask Arvind Kejriwal who has done the impossible. He has not only blunted furies of farmers바카라 movements in Punjab, he has also virtue-signaÂlÂled his brand of politics of identity through reality TV-style popular endorsement for his comedian CM candidate바카라it바카라s impact will be contagious바카라exaggerating identities of politicians as caricatures of ourselves in the emergent 바카라regimes of narcissism and desÂpair바카라, in the words of political psychologist Ashis Nandy. If all this sounds like a comic then you are living in another century! In other words, this new form of 바카라politics of difference바카라 or 바카라politics of dignity바카라 has indeed become the leitmotif of our 바카라truth-challenÂged times바카라. Predictably, the identity-group agenda has become a new-age mantra of governance for both right-wing populists and left-wing liberals. While the West may be debating 바카라after identity politics바카라, in India, it is just beginning, and becÂoming shriller every day.


Consider the case of elections in India. PolÂitical scientists and journalists routinely report that 바카라caste or community continues to be the primary building block of political affiliation바카라 in the egalitarian mechanics of democratic elections in the country. ElecÂtions offer voters not only 바카라an opportunity for the expression of citizenship바카라 but also accÂess to governance goodies like MNREGA job cards or Ujjwala gas connections. In other words, the identity politics structures not only sacred to profane in elections, it also crafts a sense of a solidaristic and symbolic collective in a bitterly faction-ridden environment of patronage democracy, as political scientist Kanchan Chandra avers, and then using that image to determine policy priorities for citizens: who gets welfare payments, who gets employment priority. This may appear bizarre to rational-choice minÂded Westerners, but it is quite expected in a hierarchical society where caste and class converge to a great extent and where the plebeians are mobilised by so-called primordial loyalties of caste or community identity.
Unsurprisingly, while for the saffron-clad mascot of politics of Hindutva in Uttar PradÂesh, elections are essentially a face-off betwÂeen majority Hindus and minority Muslims, but the poster-boy of social justice politics of identity would have us believe that this time resurgent backward Mandal castes will defÂeat forward caste votaries of Mandir. Thus, it may seem strange but an election is not just about contestation, as celebrated political scientist Robert Dahl would have us believe; it바카라s also about expression of identity, with or without facial prosthetics. And this partly explains why politicians rush to lifestyle gurus, beauty parlours and plastic surgeons for yoga lessons, hair dyeing, face-lifts, liposuctions, eyeÂlid operations and breast-lifts to acquire a mythic identity to look more dapper and chic. Come elections, all our identities are revealed in the vanishing daylight, and social coalitions are built around shared understandings of what it is to be, say, a lower caste subaltern or forward caste voter in the cacophonous 바카라clash of civilisations바카라. Â
This is empowering for the historically margÂinalised groups and therapeutic for many, but it could also be horrific for some; a narcissistic and polarising version of identity politics can leave you afflicted with surreal fantasies of prejudices and biases. Hinting at the possibility of politics of identity being hostage of an 바카라apocalyptic vision in which the former oppÂressor is brought low, and this vision parades as justice바카라, philosopher Martha Nussbaum has drawn our attention to locating politics of recognition in the prophetic vision of justice and reconciliation for recÂlaiming a politics of universal humanity and solidarity. I can now imagine why in Mumbai바카라s Kala Ghoda Lit Fest, my co-panellist, film director Dibakar Banerjee, had startled the audience when he said, 바카라The world is now divided between haters and non-haters.바카라 Hope politicians and voters in Uttar Pradesh and elsewhere are listening!
Indeed, politics of identity has been the driving force of politics of social justice and multiculturalism, but let me caution you here thoÂugh. With every election바카라national or local바카라the appetite of the electorate in India and elsewhere for internecine warfare between identities (benign or malignant) has become more insatiable and the struggles over the booty of politics of identity have become more vicious, and frightening as well. In this new algorithm of politics of identity, in the Ayn Rand style of 바카라selÂfie happiness바카라, demagogues with all stripes of ideology have flourished. Let us not forget that most charismatic, popularly elected leaders바카라a new generation of tyrants바카라 infused with what Socrates calls megalothymia, 바카라the tyrannical impulse of the soul to be superior to others바카라, have exploited the identity fault lines caused by the Nietzschean idea of ressentiment, as Pankaj Mishra has argued in his magnum opus Age of Anger. In other words, the dramatic rise of identity politics in mainstream politics in India and elsewhere is also regarded as both a cause and effect of the rise of populÂiÂsm, resulting in 바카라electoral autocracies바카라 or 바카라backÂsliding democracies바카라 around the world. In fact, scholars complain that 바카라when groups feel threatened, they retreat into tribalism바카라, causing groups of people to become 바카라more defensive, more punitive, more us-versus-them바카라. Â
In this environment of 바카라Must Politics Be War?바카라, with over-normalised, hyper-real media images, mostly automated, augmented and simulated by trolls with bondage gear and swaÂsÂtika symbols, particularistic forms of identity politics also mask imperial dreams, hide necrophiliac political fantasies and justify ethnic cleÂaÂnsing of various sorts, including dividing people into vegetarian and non-vegetarian camps. BlaÂming both right-wingers and left-Âwingers for letting us desÂcend into the dystopian politics of recognition that often degenerates into a decaffeinated politics of isolation, anger, and grievance, political theorist Francis Fukuyama has recently warÂned against the dangers of identity becoming a nihilistic case of cynical narcissism or self-love for self-Âpreservation and survival. CurioÂusly, Fukuyama, known for his neo-conservative past and StrÂaussian philosophical moorings, celebrates India as the most luminous cradle of diversity of human life. No wonder, Babasaheb Ambedkar, fully supporÂtive of the civilisational divÂersity of India, had submitted a proposal befÂore the Constituent AssÂembly of India for makÂing India the 바카라United States of India바카라 to undÂerline the importance of what he called maitri or fellowship towards all forms of identities바카라ethnic, cultural or regional. Despite its limitations and challenges, identity politics, in short, has become the locus of expÂression, expÂerimentation and exploration바카라particularly for those who cannot yet fully inhabit themselÂves for fear of discrimination, or punishment in the real or virtual world. ThereÂfore, it is better to get used to the fact that all politics is identity politics, even if it morphs into wokeÂism until the universal politics of humanity and solidarity is rebooted against all forms of majority oppressions. As a poet I can바카라t help but conclude with the haunting words of Agha Shahid Ali. 바카라And I, Shahid, only am escaped to tell thee바카라God sobs in my arms. Call me Ishmael tonight!바카라
(This appeared in the print edition as "Call Me Ishmael Tonight!")
(Views expressed are personal)
Ashwani Kumar is a poet, political scientist and professor at TISS, Mumbai