Hear the Bern Episode 43 | Origin of Identity Politics (w/ Barbara Smith)
Is there any term more vilified on the right than “identity politics”? Supposedly, “IDpol” is all about creating hierarchies of oppression, and the lower down the ranks you fall, the less value your voice has.
On this episode, Briahna talks to Barbara Smith, who as part of the Combahee River Collective – a radical, black, feminist organization based in Boston – coined the term in the late 1970s. Barbara explains that, far from excluding people, her group meant to include everyone in a common struggle for liberation by recognizing the unique challenges that different groups face. “If Black women were free, it would mean that everyone else would have to be free since our freedom would necessitate the destruction of all the systems of oppression,” the group wrote.
Smith recently endorsed Bernie for president, saying that our campaign and movement carries on the structural, intersectional politics for which she has fought all her life.
Barbara Smith is an author, activist, independent scholar, and Nobel Peace Prize nominee. She lives in Albany.
Barbara Smith on Twitter: (
————
We’re going to win this election and transform the country, but we can’t do it alone. The way we win is person-to-person contact, knocking on doors and making the case for people to get out to vote. Are you in?
Make a donation:
Volunteer for Bernie: berniesanders.com/volunteer
Volunteer in early states:
Organizer your friends:
Make calls for Bernie:
Send texts for Bernie:
Host or attend an event:
source