Monday, September 28, 2020

Book Review: Identity: Contemporary Identity Politics and the Struggle for Recognition by Francis Fukuyama

 

Tracing the development of the idea of identity from the time of Plato, the author Francis Fukuyama gives a simple message of shaping a universal understanding of human dignity. Unless humans do that conflict seems unavoidable. The author says that the inner self is the basis of human dignity. He adds that economic grievances become more severe when indignity and disrespect are attached with it.

The concept of identity is rooted in Thymos, according to the author. This emerged only in modern times when it was combined with a notion of an inner and an outer self, and the radical view that the inner self was more valuable than the outer one. This was the product of both a shift in ideas about the self and the realities of societies that started to evolve rapidly under the pressures of economic and technological change.

Modern concept of identity unites three different phenomena. The first is thymos which craves for recognition. The second is the distinction between the inner and the outer self and the raising of the moral valuation of the inner self over outer society. The third is an evolving concept of dignity, in which recognition is due not just to a narrow class of people, but to everyone.

In chapter five titled Revolutions of Dignity, the author states that ‘desire for the state to recognize one’s basic dignity has been at the core of democratic movements since the French Revolution’. The author extensively refers to the western thinkers including Rousseau, Kant, Hegel, Marx and many others. Fukuyama says that nationalism and Islamism can be seen as a species of identity politics. Both provide an ideology that explains why people feel lonely and confused. And both of them demand recognition in restrictive ways (only for the members of a particular national or religious group).

In chapter nine the author describes thymos, isothymia and megalothymia. Thymos is part of the soul that desires for recognition, isothymia which is recognition as equal in dignity to others and megalothymia which is recognition as superior. In the same chapter there is criticism of the left. The argument is that the left is not building solidarity around large collectivities such as the working class, instead it chooses to focus on smaller groups being marginalized in specific ways.

Understandings of dignity forked in two directions during the nineteenth century. One, toward a liberal individualism and second toward collective identities for e.g. nation or religion. Fukuyama says that in liberal democracies identity politics began to reconverge with the collective and illiberal forms of identity such as nation and religion.

Fukuyama suggests that ‘a shift in the agendas of both left and right toward the protection of ever narrower group identities threatens the possibility of communication and collective action’.  In addition to that he suggests that the remedy is to define larger and more integrative national identities that take account of the de facto diversity of existing democracies.

Inclusive national identities are encouraged by the author. Policy of assimilation is to be promoted as liberal democracies benefit greatly from immigration, both economically and culturally, writes the author. Identify politics is making things harder and complicated. Fukuyama says that: “Social media and the internet have facilitated the emergence of self-contained communities, walled off not by physical barriers but by belief in shared identity”. The last chapter stresses that the human race will not escape thinking about themselves in terms of identity. In fact, identity should be used to integrate and if this happen populist politics would be remedied.

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