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Length:
72 minutes
Released:
Mar 10, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
The New Discourses Podcast with James Lindsay, Episode 24
"Mapping the Margins," by Kimberlé Crenshaw, is an academic law paper that changed the world (abridged pdf here). It was published in the Stanford Law Review in 1991 and makes the case for putting intersectionality into all cultural analysis. It is also more or less unambiguously the birthplace of Wokeness, as in this paper, Crenshaw indicates explicitly that, to her, intersectionality is "a provisional concept linking contemporary politics with postmodern theory," that is, as Jordan Peterson has it, postmodern neo-Marxism. Crenshaw is no minor figure, by the way. She is the creator of intersectionality as well as the co-creator (with her mentor Derrick Bell) and namer of Critical Race Theory. This paper is, in all likelihood, by far her most influential.
In this episode of the New Discourses Podcast, James Lindsay reads through the introduction to "Mapping the Margins" and offers his commentary on the paper and its role as the birthplace (though not gestation) of the Woke movement and, as he and Helen Pluckrose named it in Cynical Theories, applied postmodernism. It is in this paper that intersectionality became the Woke One Ring, which would bring all of the other aspects of identity politics and Critical Theory under the dominion of one mode of analysis from which they cannot deviate. Join him as he reads through the text of the paper and explains what Crenshaw means, where she is coming from, and where she intends for this idea to go.
This episode of the New Discourses podcast is the first part of a two-part series reading an abridged version of Crenshaw's "Mapping the Margins."
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"Mapping the Margins," by Kimberlé Crenshaw, is an academic law paper that changed the world (abridged pdf here). It was published in the Stanford Law Review in 1991 and makes the case for putting intersectionality into all cultural analysis. It is also more or less unambiguously the birthplace of Wokeness, as in this paper, Crenshaw indicates explicitly that, to her, intersectionality is "a provisional concept linking contemporary politics with postmodern theory," that is, as Jordan Peterson has it, postmodern neo-Marxism. Crenshaw is no minor figure, by the way. She is the creator of intersectionality as well as the co-creator (with her mentor Derrick Bell) and namer of Critical Race Theory. This paper is, in all likelihood, by far her most influential.
In this episode of the New Discourses Podcast, James Lindsay reads through the introduction to "Mapping the Margins" and offers his commentary on the paper and its role as the birthplace (though not gestation) of the Woke movement and, as he and Helen Pluckrose named it in Cynical Theories, applied postmodernism. It is in this paper that intersectionality became the Woke One Ring, which would bring all of the other aspects of identity politics and Critical Theory under the dominion of one mode of analysis from which they cannot deviate. Join him as he reads through the text of the paper and explains what Crenshaw means, where she is coming from, and where she intends for this idea to go.
This episode of the New Discourses podcast is the first part of a two-part series reading an abridged version of Crenshaw's "Mapping the Margins."
Support New Discourses:
paypal.me/newdiscourses
newdiscourses.locals.com/support
patreon.com/newdiscourses
subscribestar.com/newdiscourses
youtube.com/channel/UC9K5PLkj0N_b9JTPdSRwPkg/join
Website:
https://newdiscourses.com
Follow:
facebook.com/newdiscourses
twitter.com/NewDiscourses
instagram.com/newdiscourses
newdiscourses.locals.com
pinterest.com/newdiscourses
linkedin.com/company/newdiscourses
minds.com/newdiscourses
reddit.com/r/NewDiscourses
Podcast:
@newdiscourses
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/new-…es/id1499880546
bit.ly/NDGooglePodcasts
open.spotify.com/show/0HfzDaXI5L4LnJQStFWgZp
stitcher.com/podcast/new-discourses
© 2021 New Discourses. All rights reserved.
Released:
Mar 10, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
- 35 min listen