In the first full length analysis of the rise of left-wing hobbyists, performative radicals and the 'Identity Left', A Left for Itself interrogates the connection between socio-economic realities and politico-cultural views and boldly asks what is a worthy politics, one for the follower count or one for effecting change. 'In the sometimes febrile environment of contemporary left politics, this book is a measured and evaluative contribution. David Swift cuts through the rhetoric of often violent and divisive exchanges to uncover the roots, motivations, diverse character and strengths and weaknesses of the current phenomenon of so-called `identity politics'.' Dr Stephen Meredith
In the first full length analysis of the rise of left-wing hobbyists, performative radicals and the 'Identity Left', A Left for Itself interrogates the connection between socio-economic realities and politico-cultural views and boldly asks what is a worthy politics, one for the follower count or one for effecting change. 'In the sometimes febrile environment of contemporary left politics, this book is a measured and evaluative contribution. David Swift cuts through the rhetoric of often violent and divisive exchanges to uncover the roots, motivations, diverse character and strengths and weaknesses of the current phenomenon of so-called `identity politics'.' Dr Stephen Meredith
David Swift is the Kreitman post-doctoral fellow at Ben Gurion University, in the faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. He has published in journals including the History Workshop Journal and the Women's History Review, as well as writing for The Independent and LabourList. Swift has taught at Queen Mary University of London and the University of Central Lancashire. He lives in Cambridge, UK.
The language and politics [of the Left today] seem to be what
motivated Swift, a left-wing academic, to write this angry polemic
against almost the entire class of people whom he considers to have
led the left and a whole generation astray. The problem, as he says
at the beginning, is that "much of the contemporary left is driven
not by a desire for real change, but rather by a desire for an
enjoyable pastime, and a search for an identity. It is a left for
itself." In other words, they like the idea of herself caring and
of there being an enemy that callously doesn't, but don't care
enough practically (and unromantically) to engage with others so
that there's a realistic chance of changing things. Swift's
explanation for this apparent gap between stated virtues and the
ability to endorse a successful strategy for change is that too
much of the left is fundamentally unserious. And, he argues, it is
unserious because - contrary to its protestations - it has no real
dog in the great social fights. This is because - unlike previous
lefts - it is educated, wealthier and holds elite values, which
distances it from the lives of ordinary people. Politics for the
modern left is a hobby, he says, not a necessary way of effecting
changes to their circumstances...it is easy enough to encounter the
matrix of attitudes that Swift refers to, although he illustrates
his book with some of the most vacuous and self-consciously
virtuous sentiments expressed by a relatively small group of people
who, with one or two exceptions, are products of the Corbyn era.
The problem, Swift says, is that these ways of talking and these
priorities alienate some of the very people who the
"hobbyists"...claim they care most about. And in some situations
are in themselves harmful.--David Aaronovitch "The Times"
David Swift astutely diagnoses the pathological narcissism at the
heart of what he calls the 'hobbyist left', which has captured the
Labour Party. With its preoccupation with language and
virtue-signalling, and scant interest in the concerns and culture
of actual working people, today's middle-class elitist left no
longer speaks to the voters who once gave their support to the
Labour Party.--Professor Eric Kaufmann, author of Whiteshift:
Populism, Immigration and the Future of White Majorities
David Swift rides a coach and horses through the self-indulgence,
radical chic and bloviating of too much of today's British
left.--Professor John Bew, author of Citizen Clem, winner of the
Orwell Prize 2017
This book is essential reading for anyone who is interested in the
contemporary state of the left.--Professor Matthew Goodwin, author
of National Populism: the Revolt Against Liberal Democracy
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