'Working Class' Is NOT An Identity | Ash Sarkar meets China Miéville | Downstream

The Communist Manifesto is encountered by each generation differently. Marx and Engels' effect mutates to relate to the era in which it's read. The ways in which it is understood changes too - whether it's read as a political treatise, as literature or as a spell to bring about a different reality.
Ash Sarkar talks to China Miéville about his new book: A Spectre, Haunting: On The Communist Manifesto.
You can find China's book here: headofzeus.com/books/97817866...
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  • @juhavantzelfde
    @juhavantzelfde2 жыл бұрын

    I have nothing more to want from Novara Media after this interview. Love seeing Ash and China on screen together.

  • @jonathan4835

    @jonathan4835

    Жыл бұрын

    They're Trotskyists, not Communists. Trotskyism is a pernicious and false ideology that undermines Communism

  • @Glaiket

    @Glaiket

    5 ай бұрын

    I'm absolutely appalled that they had him on after all the allegations and the legal bullying of the women making them.

  • @zarathustracave5732
    @zarathustracave57322 жыл бұрын

    Nietzsche once said “we have to learn to feel differently”. He saw art & music as a conduit to feeling differently. While Art won’t organise political campaigns etc it does prepare the soil for organising. Art can be about the creation of values and often is. Many see the world almost as a 90s action film with moral binaries and nefarious foreigners. Once there’s a critical mass of Art pointing towards a particular kind of morality it becomes engrained. Otherwise efforts to create propaganda through Art & music would have been dropped a very long time ago.

  • @billhicks8

    @billhicks8

    2 жыл бұрын

    Exactly, it is more about cultural trends and "zeitgeists" than it is about singular, intentional pieces of art transforming the world through their narrative. To think it is the latter is almost a "Great Man Theory" of literature, which is generally out of touch. And yes, the space to generate some finer, differentiated forms of feeling, allowing empathy to develop, etc, rather than trying to lead society as a whole through some tortuous political program with only a veneer of what might only vaguely be called "art".

  • @zarathustracave5732

    @zarathustracave5732

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@hazelwray4184 I’m a 19th century kind of guy Hazel. Still valid though!

  • @anthonyfurlong4972

    @anthonyfurlong4972

    2 жыл бұрын

    "Otherwise efforts to create propaganda through Art & music would have been dropped a very long time ago" explain this further? Art and propaganda are persistent bed-fellows? Art combined with morality have a hiden totalitarian agenda or affect? Modern reality a 90's simulation? Interesting talking heads - I reckon 👍

  • @anthonyfurlong4972

    @anthonyfurlong4972

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@grantkerr8298 the speaker mentions sado masochism by the right - theres a lot of that from the left. As for the current Russia treatment by the left - is the left in the 'free West' in reality leftist?

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    2 жыл бұрын

    And yet it has always been art and literature that defines civilisation. and since art and literature is a never ending cycle of updates how do we ever hope to evolve? Or are we satisfied that this is the best we can be?

  • @chrishorner7679
    @chrishorner76792 жыл бұрын

    One of the very best interviews Novara and Ash, have done. A consistently fascinating interview that is more like a developing conversation. Mieville is a superb interlocutor. Brilliant.

  • @hainish2381
    @hainish2381 Жыл бұрын

    Brilliantly conduced interview. Thank you so much for bringing Miéville to the show!

  • @mynameisjoejeans
    @mynameisjoejeans Жыл бұрын

    I could listen to these two talk all day. Everything from the content, to the forms of expression, to the sound of this interview is beautiful.

  • @0211brucetube
    @0211brucetube2 жыл бұрын

    25:40 is an interesting question and the answer may be a tad rude (sorry Ash) - it's because you work in a university and journalist environment, full of rich people and wankers. Class produces affect and solidarity through shared crap conditions and struggle. A group of warehouse workers getting shafted by a supervisor will take their shared situation to heart. Working class people who have basically left a working class environment, forming cross-class relationships etc., are naturally going to have a more complicated feeling towards class.

  • @jackdeniston6150

    @jackdeniston6150

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not rude comrade, true. The arrogant ignorance of people who have never worked hard, or even physically. Really, the results of communism are manifest.

  • @CC-hx5fz

    @CC-hx5fz

    2 жыл бұрын

    The working class carry a legacy of inherited trauma, in common with other "identities". A University education makes no difference. If you come from a background of people who were literally murdered for profit, then you are aware that the alternative to living your "best life" is work that is dangerous, dirty and/ or low status. The middle-classes organise to ensure that failure is a completely different experience for them. It's not about individuals, education, and income. Working class people have a greater need for community. Hence a heightened attachment to a particular place, even when these places are held back and impoverished.

  • @KS-em1lp

    @KS-em1lp

    2 жыл бұрын

    In my opinion, you’re completely right on this. Shared struggle and shared suffering is one of the main aspects working class solidarity and unity etc.

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@CC-hx5fz Abslutely, the working class [what's left of them] needs community, the middle class need insurance. The ruling classes need insurance payments to invest because they keep losing it all.

  • @TheYopogo

    @TheYopogo

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm from what I think you'd call a privileged working class background. Either that or lower middle class. Parents were shop floor in a food plant until it got shut down, but they owned their own home (or rather my agricultural worker grandparents did and it was a multi-generational household), I went to university and had piano lessons and we had holidays and things, now I'm in an ambiguous job (newly qualified teacher in an inner city comprehensive). I can't afford to live anywhere other than in shared, private rented housing, until recently I was on minimum wage, I'm in unbelievable amounts of debt, I don't have a car; but I'm also quite arty-farty, I like classical music and poetry and modernist literature and stuff. But I really do feel class in my bones in the way that Ash is saying she doesn't; I see it all the time. For comparison I'm also gay and that inflects my identity a lot too (the left will abide a regal queer 😘), but I can't honestly say I feel it in my bones any more strongly than the objective fact of my economic status moves me to feel instinctive solidarity with other people from working class backgrounds.

  • @KJ-je6yu
    @KJ-je6yu2 жыл бұрын

    Really appreciated all the words you both spoke. Helped me grapple with some of my own thoughts about navigating the world as an anti-Capitalist in 2022. Solidarity from Sydney, Australia. Love all your stuff Ash!

  • @walidb123
    @walidb1232 жыл бұрын

    Have admired China since I was a little teenage fanboy of his fiction . It’s remarkable to see him approach politics and world affairs as I’ve matured because his particular lens is unique among contemporary writers

  • @littlebrothermoneywithmich6178

    @littlebrothermoneywithmich6178

    5 ай бұрын

    Unique? How? He’s just a communist idealist like every other 22 year old child.

  • @jenschristopher6261
    @jenschristopher626111 ай бұрын

    Wow. What a fantastic conversation between one of my three favourite authors and one of my three favourite journalists. This was absolutely fantastic.

  • @plushred7384
    @plushred73842 жыл бұрын

    CM: "...in senescent capitalism." AS: (interjecting) "What does 'senescent mean?" Thank you Ash. I would have had to look it up. I can't think of any mainstream interviewer who would done the same whether they understood the word or not.

  • @queeniegreengrass3513

    @queeniegreengrass3513

    2 жыл бұрын

    Oppose of nascent, maybe?

  • @moonfruit9567
    @moonfruit95674 ай бұрын

    The reason ‘we’ don’t think of ‘ourselves’ as workers is because the ‘we’ of the IDPOL left are not from working class backgrounds. The working classes are absent from these debates. IDPOL debates are generated, generally, by students in/from elite universities, places from which the working classes are generally excluded.

  • @00Platypus00
    @00Platypus00Ай бұрын

    Such a brilliant interview. Amazing questions, amazing answers... wow

  • @matthewvaughan1532
    @matthewvaughan15327 ай бұрын

    What a brilliant conversation. I'm totally a SF and Speculative Fiction geek but couldn't get into Perdido Street Station and never went back to CM. Interestingly they touch on "should be favourites that aren't" in the conversation and this is one of mine. Anyway, 20 years later, Perhaps i should have another go, I certainly love what he had to say here. Think I'll start with A Spectre, Haunting first and then maybe one of his stand alones before heading back to New Crobuzon. Any recommendations gratefully received. As for Ash Sarkar, what a superb interviewer. I love that she can ask what a word means or admit that she's 'only just framed the question' or say, 'I'm open to the possibility I just said something dumb' It speaks of an intellectual honesty and self-awareness that is not always apparent in journalism.

  • @joshuahmaxfield5729
    @joshuahmaxfield57292 жыл бұрын

    One of the best interviews so far. Can't wait for more.

  • @l.sabiabyrne9259
    @l.sabiabyrne92592 жыл бұрын

    Communism desperately needs rebranding. Even the word socialism has been practically criminalised by a victorious and out of control capitalist system.

  • @hoymuereelheroe
    @hoymuereelheroe Жыл бұрын

    So glad to see him back in arms. Such a brilliant writer. Loved the interview!

  • @nicholaskostopulos8631
    @nicholaskostopulos86315 ай бұрын

    Yet another excellent interview. NM is on a roll. Ash and Anton are creating a network in front of our eyes.

  • @TRWorld490
    @TRWorld4902 жыл бұрын

    This was a really interesting conversation, great content and please more stuff like this! I fell out of the way with China Mieville a few years ago after reading his (admittedly great) early books. I can't exactly put my finger on why this was the case, but having listened to this conversation I will have to get back into his work.

  • @ritawing1064

    @ritawing1064

    2 жыл бұрын

    I left off because he is so cruel to his characters, but it was with great reluctance, they are outstanding works.

  • @HereIsMyStuff35

    @HereIsMyStuff35

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ritawing1064 Agreed. He's particularly cruel to animals in some stories, and that turned me off.

  • @ritawing1064

    @ritawing1064

    Жыл бұрын

    @@HereIsMyStuff35 some of the books, like Embassytown, don't suffer from this defect: perhaps they could be published with a cruelty rating so we could avoid the ones we can't cope with!

  • @HereIsMyStuff35

    @HereIsMyStuff35

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ritawing1064 Thanks for the recommendation, I'll give Embassytown a whirl. A rating system would be great!

  • @Hellserch

    @Hellserch

    8 ай бұрын

    I to fell of the Mieville wagon after ‘King Rat’. I also don’t know why I drifted off but there’s always a reason. Enjoyed your comment.

  • @bumblebeeatbreadloaf1286
    @bumblebeeatbreadloaf1286 Жыл бұрын

    How did I miss this? Been a fan of his fiction for a long time.

  • @justinanderson617callme
    @justinanderson617callme2 жыл бұрын

    Been coming out with a ton of great, factual content really enjoying it.

  • @guyaitken8590
    @guyaitken85902 жыл бұрын

    Hey China long time fan from Australia here. Love your work brother and feel the same about the problems of the day. Good to hear you speak.

  • @Gusling100
    @Gusling1002 жыл бұрын

    Very much enjoyed this talk. Especially the touching on the relationship between religious eschatology/apocalyse/millenarianism and leftist manifestation. That connection was incredibly important in democratic and decolonization drives the world over, but is rarely discussed in the context of British leftism (obviously because Britain was on the other end of the spear). I'd wager unpacking its relationship is essential, as the function of that theological/apocalyptic connection was always its power for breaking through the impasse of the imagination.

  • @ChirpoTunes
    @ChirpoTunes2 жыл бұрын

    This conversation was way out of my intellectual pay grade but really inspiring regardless. Thanks to everyone involved.

  • @MJK808

    @MJK808

    Жыл бұрын

    It's amazing this man doesn't understand this. While his thoughts are very interesting he's either doing himself and the people he wants to reach a disservice or he's being disengenuous in his intent. This is clear from his choice of delivery.

  • @antispindr8613

    @antispindr8613

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MJK808 At last, someone willing to question the way this interview helped (mis)inform the debate and set the agenda

  • @HereIsMyStuff35

    @HereIsMyStuff35

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MJK808 How is China being disingenuous? I'm honestly interested to read your explanation.

  • @alan2102X

    @alan2102X

    Жыл бұрын

    @@HereIsMyStuff35 I don't know that he is being "disingenous", but he is clearly speaking on a high intellectual and oft-abstract level, barely comprehensible or incomprehensible, and unrelatable, to most members of the working class as well as a lot of other people. Kinda like listening to a postmodernist. He is not pomo but the level of his words resemble it.

  • @Hellserch

    @Hellserch

    8 ай бұрын

    Just by saying this you prove you are clearly intellectually able to understand what’s at stake here.

  • @DevonMcFarlane
    @DevonMcFarlane2 жыл бұрын

    This interview has enriched every cell of my m being. Thank you to both of you and all at Novara Media 🙌

  • @antispindr8613

    @antispindr8613

    Жыл бұрын

    In that case, could explain what he was talking about? For his point seemed as clear as fog

  • @danrudge5997

    @danrudge5997

    10 ай бұрын

    @@antispindr8613 which point? there are many explored in this exploratory interview.

  • @Sunnysue31
    @Sunnysue312 жыл бұрын

    Blown away... Many Thanks ....Encore, Encore .... Brilliant ...

  • @michaelskinner3067
    @michaelskinner30672 жыл бұрын

    I could sit listening to people having conversations like this all day.

  • @leighclark5257
    @leighclark52572 жыл бұрын

    One of Ash's most intensely personal and exploratory interviews, where she puts the subject on the spot, in a very genial manner, and, even more so, puts herself on the spot, and thereby creates a genuine discussion about politics, literature, consciousness, psychology. When is she going to get her own weekly show? And when is Ash going to write the radical genre-busting "domestic novel" that will transform what we think we know about women, race, sex, romance, and politics?

  • @amandajones3332

    @amandajones3332

    Жыл бұрын

    Listened to this 3 times. Shared it widely . Thanks it was so stimulating.

  • @rajasmasala

    @rajasmasala

    9 ай бұрын

    That would indeed be wonderful to read.

  • @purplesheep99
    @purplesheep992 жыл бұрын

    While I might not agree with the politics of both of them, this was an interesting and fascinating interview. One of the best I've seen in a long time.

  • @stevemsmith1
    @stevemsmith110 күн бұрын

    This is a really open conversation, I love the way that both of you are open to being challenged and take the challenge into your thinking. A fantastic antidote to our political times

  • @DanielRetureau
    @DanielRetureau2 жыл бұрын

    The Manifesto was written at the beginning of modern capitalism, we read it when it nears its end due to the climate an biological crises caused by a system totally inhuman and irrational. I was 15 when I read it, and I read much more since, I am 78 now and it helped me to understand the society, the exploitation, the commodity fetichism when I read the Capital (more than once) later on. The Capital is a very complex and difficult scientific work, and not everything we face today was studied in Marx work, but the essential, fundamental is definitely there. We have to start from here, integrate new realities of race, gender, classes, all the evolution of superstructures and dominant ideology permanence behind apparent changes. The ruling class still rules, it is so clear in the UK conservative policies. Democratic management of production means by workers is still on the agenda, to satisfy needs and stop the destructive crisis of the capitalist system.

  • @MichaelFlanagan
    @MichaelFlanagan2 жыл бұрын

    This was great. Thanks!

  • @hilaryporter7841
    @hilaryporter78414 ай бұрын

    This interview, made me realise how little I know about anything.

  • @davidmacaart953
    @davidmacaart9532 жыл бұрын

    This was a fantastic discussion!

  • @valq10
    @valq102 жыл бұрын

    I remember Zizek talking about the 'untouchables' in India - when asked what the aim of their campaign was, they retorted 'our aim is to no longer exist'. Whereas the politicisation of oppressed sexual or ethnic identity results in their transformation into sites of joy (hence pride and carnival), the politicisation of the oppressed class results in its total abolition.

  • @therealrobertbirchall

    @therealrobertbirchall

    2 жыл бұрын

    We need to abolish the ruling class

  • @valq10

    @valq10

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@therealrobertbirchall yes but abolition of a ruling class is the abolition of class as such

  • @therealrobertbirchall

    @therealrobertbirchall

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@valq10 true, so whomever wins the 'class war' takes all. Then society will divide again on the lines of those who have the wealth and power and those who don't. All over the globe Archaeologists find the remains of poor staved wretches along those of Kings and Emperors in the same deposits from the same era. Humanity divide is man's natural condition, the Romantic thinkers imagine this can be fixed by us all sharing some sort of cultural fusion, we classical thinkers look at the data and say the human race is run.

  • @emilianosintarias7337

    @emilianosintarias7337

    2 жыл бұрын

    that's right, but it must go further- we can't know what sexual or ethnic identities are oppressed and what aren't. So it is really the principle of universalism kept on hand, ready to make a site of solidarity as needed in any situation. The current left doesn't get this, they think they can keep track of thousands of identities in 180 countries and all the changing dynamics, like some kind of stock index of power relations

  • @ruffey1748

    @ruffey1748

    Жыл бұрын

    To be clear, oppressed sexual and ethnic identities are still oppressed, we just have parties alongside it.

  • @mattiethemongoose3rd
    @mattiethemongoose3rd Жыл бұрын

    At 29:40 ish, speaking as a political person from an older generation, terms like microaggressions are a great way of talking about things I experienced and understood to be happening all along. Expanding the language to define more things that have existed as long as everything else is good actually. It means we can talk about them more. Like gaslighting, I knew very well it existed because I experienced it a lot my whole life, it didn't just come into existence because people started talking about it a lot more.

  • @alan2102X

    @alan2102X

    Жыл бұрын

    +100

  • @ahahaha3505
    @ahahaha35052 жыл бұрын

    Well that was one great convo.

  • @mattbradbury
    @mattbradbury Жыл бұрын

    An outstanding conversation

  • @bumblebeeatbreadloaf1286
    @bumblebeeatbreadloaf1286 Жыл бұрын

    I actually kind of got into socialism through reading science fiction. Reading a lot of sci-fi forced me to think different worlds and scenarios. I read many works where the technology was fantastic but socially things had barely progressed anywhere which left me wanting for something more. Eventually The Culture series by Iain M. Banks was the one that gave me a sense for a better world and pushed me towards leftism and anti-capitalism.

  • @Hellserch

    @Hellserch

    8 ай бұрын

    Inspiring stuff. I met Iain M Banks at a book signing in 1992 at Waterstones in Oxford Street, London. He was warm, accompany most importantly, funny. We had a compressed chat (his pres agent was giving me evils throughout) and I asked him if he thought the Culture was an ideal socialist society. He shocked me by saying that he thought the real thing could be even better; he had many reasons for thinking this. Great bloke.

  • @moonfruit9567
    @moonfruit95674 ай бұрын

    The reason why AS and CM don’t ‘feel’ class in that affective (or any other) way is because they simply don’t have working class origins. Both are products of (different kinds of) privilege. This conversation would be so much better if they would acknowledge and be honest about this.

  • @UnravellingTomcat
    @UnravellingTomcat Жыл бұрын

    Nice to see China around again. It's been, what, 11 years since his last novel? Hoping he returns to long-form fiction soon.

  • @gravesplendour3481
    @gravesplendour34812 жыл бұрын

    It feels unbelievable to me, having grown up in the north in the 80s and 90s that there are people who don't have a strong sense of what it means to be working class.

  • @antispindr8613

    @antispindr8613

    Жыл бұрын

    And on and on he goes. Sorry, but what planet did they get this guy from? Getting down to Earth, might he is not have asked questions such as: when did the idea that 'there is No Such Thing as Society' take hold? For, instead of taking slight digs at the left, might he not have mentioned real issue - such as the defeat of the Miners or the sell off of council housing?

  • @sigil5772

    @sigil5772

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't know why you've visited Novara if it's somehow surprising to you to hear a couple of well-read left wing thinkers having a philosophical/intellectual discussion about art and culture and how that relates to politics. I would also venture that you and Grave Splendour above are right in one sense to tacitly refer back to Thatcher in terms of her being the architect of the destruction of the old notion of the working class; but those who were born this century are as exploited by capitalism, if not more so, than those who suffered under Thatcher's regime two decades before they were born. I agree with Ash it's still a workers-v-capitalists issue whether or not they like nutmeg in their Caffe Nero.

  • @jaijai5250

    @jaijai5250

    8 ай бұрын

    @@sigil5772the sooner so called working, and middle class people realise they’re the same the better. If you have to get up in the morning, work an allocated number of hours, meet the agenda of another, in exchange for money…..you are working class, regardless of financial remuneration. There’s the aristocracy or ruling class, the underprivileged class, and everyone else is working class! I suppose being called middle class allows some to feel superior over others, simply because of their perceived values. Democracy is a myth. World leaders are selected, not elected. Left wing, right wing are two wings of the same bird. Do people really believe they’d be allowed to vote, if voting really made a difference. Alister Campbell said after the brexit vote “they shouldn’t be allowed to vote”. The ruling class made a mistake, and misjudged the serfs. They thought the serfs would simply follow the mainstream and vote remain.

  • @littlehammers9032

    @littlehammers9032

    6 ай бұрын

    @@sigil5772 I think the notion of collapsing cultural preferences with the social phenomena of working class social history, its defeats & successes that are specific to a particular feasibility of radical politics. For instance squatting in England, has a strong (not necessarily working-class social history) but its premise as Colin Ward noted is the 'oldest tenure in the world'. That, at least since LASPO passed in 2012 means that the feasibility of those collective actions are limited. But working class social politics are not collapsible remotely to middle class social politics, they are foundationally built with a different set of realisable and sociable goals. Saying that they are is to unbind the social conditions under which say, housing or accessibility to Union support is constructed. Eliminating the social history of the working class under some juiced by contradictory politics of say the precariat...is to simply see the phenomena extended to working class people spread, yes that indeed socialise people to the fundamental rights (fought by working class people) for sick pay, annual leave etc.

  • @19pgs85

    @19pgs85

    6 күн бұрын

    @@sigil5772 well read but totally pretentious, chomsky is well read but just clear and easy to understand. silly academic waffle is dangerous, it just puts people off.

  • @warrenbond32
    @warrenbond322 жыл бұрын

    Being Working Class is an everyday reality. Oh and this is definitely the 1st comment. Looking forward to watching this, You always supply us with thought provoking content. God Bless You all at Novara Media.

  • @davidspencer7254

    @davidspencer7254

    2 жыл бұрын

    From Basildon

  • @James-mb3je

    @James-mb3je

    2 жыл бұрын

    How did you see this 2 days ago?

  • @erebusvonmori8050
    @erebusvonmori80502 жыл бұрын

    In terms of class as identity, I think it's best to frame class as the oppressed identity which all other forms are oppression funnel into. So every other form of oppression a person is under increases their odds of being working class, and the lower a person's class the more they will suffer from their other oppression.

  • @CC-hx5fz

    @CC-hx5fz

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's a good definition. It's interesting that we live in societies that function by trapping 60-70% of the population in the lowest class, while most of us think we can escape, somehow.

  • @MsHan71

    @MsHan71

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes, and also, all the other identities are set up to divide us, the working class and keep the class system in place. It's like the merry-go-round where the horses are each identity oppression, but the base is the class system and root of capitalism.

  • @emilianosintarias7337

    @emilianosintarias7337

    2 жыл бұрын

    @jcorb that can't be right on gender inequality, more unequal societies are often more gender equal because both sexes get screwed over

  • @emilianosintarias7337

    @emilianosintarias7337

    2 жыл бұрын

    @jcorb it is actually. that is what equal means. For example in many less developed countries both sexes are screwed over equally (usually men are more abused/killed/die young, and women are more excluded, from education for example), whereas in the US for example, men are more screwed over (but it used to be otherwise).

  • @emilianosintarias7337

    @emilianosintarias7337

    2 жыл бұрын

    @jcorb THEN THAT"S GENDER INEQUALITY . "more unequal societies are often more gender equal because both sexes get screwed over" . This is what you replied to. That means both 70% or both 60%. Not one 60 and one 70. There is a greater trend of economically unequal societies that are equally oppressive to both sexes, than less unequal societies, which tend to screw over both sexes UNEQUALLY. And I am basing everything I am saying on academic research alone.

  • @petrosstefanidis6396
    @petrosstefanidis63962 жыл бұрын

    In relation to how you take your relation to capital closer to your heart, I believe it heavily depends on your life conditions. Sure, getting inspired by charismatic people could play a role, but the moment the system gives you and you and people around you shit, something clicks inside you. I believe trying to feel immense suffering of others is key to that.

  • @m0fr001
    @m0fr0014 ай бұрын

    Phenomenal interview again. I really enjoy China.. someone I take inspiration from.

  • @willsnow6057
    @willsnow60572 жыл бұрын

    Really thoughtful discussion around class and identity. Good work Novara!

  • @coffeyvideoproductions7767
    @coffeyvideoproductions77673 ай бұрын

    Never been here before. She is a great interviewer.

  • @TheTristanmarcus
    @TheTristanmarcus2 жыл бұрын

    What a fascinating conversation - totally agree about 'capitalist art' and it's great to hear it spoken out loud by somebody else. Ash is just so super-cute, intelligent and also beautifully humble - in love ❤😎❤ And a great interviewer too 🙏🏽

  • @lunaridge4510

    @lunaridge4510

    2 жыл бұрын

    Do you have to call a woman cute, an intellectual female? Would you all a man cute?

  • @realtijuana5998
    @realtijuana59982 жыл бұрын

    This guy who calls himself "really old" is only 49. And he really was born with that name!

  • @newforestpixie5297

    @newforestpixie5297

    2 жыл бұрын

    An old monarchist debating Australian affairs recently declared how ( Prince )Charles being 75 “ isn’t old at all “ . …if he was 58 and waking up the day after a day of heavy manual work , he would notice how time isn’t ineffective upon us mortals and even 60 is too old for many things let alone 75. 🏴❤️

  • @robmoon6442
    @robmoon64422 жыл бұрын

    Evening from sunny Wales :)

  • @davidmcivor2761
    @davidmcivor2761 Жыл бұрын

    So pleased for myself, I had to google cortado, nice to know my place!

  • @kennethmarshall306
    @kennethmarshall3062 жыл бұрын

    One part that really stood out for me when I first read it was the bit about globalisation

  • @the-selfish-meme7585
    @the-selfish-meme75852 жыл бұрын

    I see identity being used to divide and conquer my class. Marx would've had a fit!

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    2 жыл бұрын

    Identity is a tool used by the opressors to identify their targets. I have no desire for an identity as I have no need to identify myself. My only need is to be myself. Of course, being 100% myself is not possible without ignoring the existence of outside influences therefore I can only hope to be self[ish]. Language is a strange tool to put all of your faith in.

  • @mattbradbury

    @mattbradbury

    Жыл бұрын

    Identity literally means the sense one has of what marks oneself as distinct, of selfhood; I don’t think your own identity is something you can opt out of even if you choose not to interrogate it in yourself

  • @the-selfish-meme7585

    @the-selfish-meme7585

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mattbradbury We don't get to choose our identity. It's a negotiation between us and the rest of humanity. We don't own it - nor should we.

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mattbradbury Is our identity something we ourselves curate, or is it in the eyes of the beholder?

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    Жыл бұрын

    @@the-selfish-meme7585 Precisely.

  • @annakaricole9368
    @annakaricole9368 Жыл бұрын

    One reason we no longer recognize ourselves as working class is decades upon decades of creating environments where work is as simple a part of life as being born or dying... even the idea of having children or getting married is no longer as much a guarantee of who we will be/are as being a worker.

  • @Nomoreanons
    @Nomoreanons2 жыл бұрын

    In my experience, intuition is rarely wrong. The issue is that the majority of people tend to want rational evidence.

  • @mattsimpson6493
    @mattsimpson64932 жыл бұрын

    great video

  • @Nomoreanons
    @Nomoreanons2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Ash for asking China to define some of his vocabulary. I also learnt some new words!

  • @bogdiworksV2
    @bogdiworksV2 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent convo, especially the part about the quality of culture capitalism produces. NFTs are a graft, don't fall into the trap of adopting everything that is heralded as world changing.

  • @jemfrankel4099
    @jemfrankel40992 жыл бұрын

    Really interesting and useful discussion - thanks! I think the problem with using identity as an analytic category or driver of ‘action’ is that it privileges difference (‘otherness’) over what unites and binds us (class). That - it seems - is a really useful way of dividing & ruling.

  • @antispindr8613

    @antispindr8613

    Жыл бұрын

    Sadly, is not the way you have framed your comments a really useful way of shutting many people out of the debate?

  • @TheOptimisticCommunist
    @TheOptimisticCommunist2 жыл бұрын

    Class is an important factor in identity formation.

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    2 жыл бұрын

    Identity forming is an important factor in individualist ideologies.

  • @TheOptimisticCommunist

    @TheOptimisticCommunist

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@happinesstan identity formation happens way before ideology formation and is a natural human process. It does not necessarily lead to individualistic ideology formation but it can depending on the environment. You think that in a communist context identity just stops existing or something?

  • @TheOptimisticCommunist

    @TheOptimisticCommunist

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@happinesstan a lot of a persons identity is not even individual choice. There is a social aspect to peoples identity its not just how you see yourself but how others in society perceive and treat you too

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@TheOptimisticCommunist No it doesn't. We are born into an ideology and our personal experience is managed to fit that Ideology.

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@TheOptimisticCommunist That's my point. Nobody gets to choose their identity. Others identify you by the characteristics which they recognise. We are different people in different scenarios. So there is little to be gained by hoping everybody identifies you in the same way.

  • @peenjedoyle1010
    @peenjedoyle10102 жыл бұрын

    Didn’t understand the half of that but really enjoyed it. Ash is a hero!

  • @mitch999
    @mitch9992 жыл бұрын

    Paulo Freire is perhaps the most important figure of the twentieth century when it comes to the issue of class he provided many with the ability to self-actualise by being conscious of the systems they face

  • @henrythoreau645
    @henrythoreau6452 жыл бұрын

    Class is a living reality for me. Something I've always felt very sharply. I've always felt working class, no doubt about that. I can also say I'm male, I'm of French and Croatian extraction, culturally also very Australian, and I can say many other things: like I'm over 50, balding, and not tall, and all this is a part of who I am too (and I haven't even started with religion) but feeling working class has been a strong part of how I identify ever since I was a 10 year old boy.

  • @florianfelix8295

    @florianfelix8295

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah but that still entails an identity.

  • @matthewsemple
    @matthewsemple2 жыл бұрын

    I loved The City & The City - I only watched it on TV but it was ace

  • @supamarx5782
    @supamarx57822 жыл бұрын

    Ash showing for the umpteenth time why she completely belongs in the media big leagues.

  • @fingersflynn

    @fingersflynn

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ash is briliant - don't believe the "big leagues" would let Ash be herself.

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    2 жыл бұрын

    In a real world she belongs in the big leagues, but not in this fabricated world of deceit.

  • @SuperTonyony

    @SuperTonyony

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ash IS the big leagues! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fingersflynn Visions of Selina Scott interviewing Jimmy saville spring to mind.

  • @LongDefiant

    @LongDefiant

    9 ай бұрын

    Is this an insult??

  • @musiqtee
    @musiqtee2 жыл бұрын

    Could the ethics from metamodernism maybe make the coop/communist narrative easier to communicate? Just thinking that feelings, culture and general sociology as seen through metamodern philosophy is a bit more in sync with our time - as a different critique of our post modern gloom? Once, modernity encapsulated “everything” and as such was an easy sell. Postmodernism contains all the necessary criticism thereof, but is stuck because of its focus on deconstruction and intellectual understanding. From what I hear from this great discussion, the integration of humanity’s complexity into an idea of a dynamic societal system is a goal in itself. Class and identity can be too abstract and divisive to many today, so we need to focus on what 99% of us actually feel, observe, enjoy or fear. I can’t see “political parties” picking up on this, because the classical parliamentary system just isn’t democratic. Scary that big corp appeal to our feelings better than politics, and they (the ownership) know this well. Thanks to Sarkar and Novara for great work!

  • @antispindr8613

    @antispindr8613

    Жыл бұрын

    Again, do not some of the (needlessly-involved) ideas contained within the interview help to prove your point? Time for some 'on-the-left' to say what they mean - and mean what they say?

  • @danielwatson7540
    @danielwatson75402 жыл бұрын

    Can't remember the last time I had to reach for the dictionary so many times

  • @colinbrigham8253
    @colinbrigham82532 жыл бұрын

    Lived reality made me who I am 🤔

  • @roterotevideo
    @roterotevideo4 ай бұрын

    Real talk coming from his book I didn’t expect him to be this jacked and tatted 😂

  • @keithreynolds
    @keithreynolds Жыл бұрын

    I’m around 38 minutes in and I’m thinking about what I care about most, what I do in my life as a human being. I make visual art; book works, collage, photo collage, photo sequences, colour, paint, texture, so on so on…. I recently stopped “employment” in my sixties and I’m questioning and worrying about what I should be doing? Apart from a few friends and internet ‘likes’ my work is not seen. Should I be trying to apply my work commercially so that it can engage with a wider audience… but then it is “capitalistically” compromised? Is their any point in having exhibitions? To whom? I’ve spent a lot of my life teaching, I don’t want to slog on again in compromised employment where you cannot communicate what you really believe? I feel very introspective, but I am investing much of myself into my children. My children and my students are the key legacy to the world.

  • @alexturner6247
    @alexturner6247 Жыл бұрын

    The ultimate crossover episode

  • @jimkowalski3395
    @jimkowalski33952 жыл бұрын

    Awesome interview, the worst click bait. There's some dialectics right there 👊🏼🚩

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    2 жыл бұрын

    It does seem like clickbait, but I think it could be a reference to his comments on the passage "the working class has no country". This identity politics nonsense is just providing effective ammunition to the right, it's crazy. We create a world for everybody or we create a world for nobody.

  • @alvarobarcala
    @alvarobarcala Жыл бұрын

    I do understand his anger, plus I am a massive fan/reader/admirer of his work, but the more I listen to him the more I see that what he is truly angered about is not just the miserable system in which we live, but that in his very depths he knows that nor communism, nor the left in general, are the answer (but rather the very antithetical complement of capitalism), no matter how much he tries to squeeze such ideological schemes/ideas/pathos. I do think what what he was doing before, focusing totally in fiction, is material that will really make things change (though it needs time and generations), instead of being so absorbed in the ideological/political schema per se, as he has been in the last years. What he did before with his fiction transcended politics and ideology (in the sense of transcending the schematic and mental boundaries of mere ideology), even if it was inspired by such things, taking a step further... and that is precisely what is needed to transcend capitalism. He should have more trust in the power of his work.

  • @sonicasonica729
    @sonicasonica7292 жыл бұрын

    Love it when the Salvage gang and the Novara gang hang out. Sally Rooney and Patricia Lockwood would make great interviewees too.

  • @jamie-sims
    @jamie-sims2 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant interview, one of my favourite authors - both for his novels and for non-fiction, especially October. I've just ordered the new book (and re-read the Manifesto in preparation for its arrival). The point about the apocalyptic religious style of the Manifesto is super interesting. I'm reading Q at the moment, which is sort of the reverse - a historical novel about millenarian peasant movements that is written as if it's about revolutionary communist politics. Also obviously vital to talk about negative solidarity and social sadism - I've just seen The Sun is livestreaming the Rwanda deportation flight, so clearly media-led social sadism is alive and well!

  • @eileencorcoran3057
    @eileencorcoran3057 Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant

  • @elliottjohnson967
    @elliottjohnson9672 жыл бұрын

    This interview is good for the soul. I could listen to China talk for hours. And of course Ash asks all the right questions!

  • @harrycookson6086
    @harrycookson6086 Жыл бұрын

    The discussion in the last 10 minutes or so has a lot of common threads with that dawn of everything book they had on downstream a couple months ago

  • @briancrowther3272
    @briancrowther3272 Жыл бұрын

    2023 03 18 Comment on discussion re the communist manifesto Great interview. Loved it. Am tired now and did start a long comment but lost it when I looked for the following book people may like to read. I did a BA in politics in the mid 90's at a good Oz uni. Loved the fact that China did the same as Marx and refused to say what communism would look like as we cant imagine it and how we would be thinking in it as we would have moved from the capitalist paradigm to a communist one, equivalent to the change from feudalism to capitalism. In that Ba I was lucky enough to have got good enough grades to be allowed for a semester to work with a lecturer to make my own question and then answer it. "Is the Herman/Chomsky Model Of Propaganda Realistic and If So does It Apply To the Australian Context.". One of the main texts I used to work this out was "R.N. Berki, On Political Realism, London, Dent, 1981". ie in this paradigm. This is a good book in the context of this discussion. I loved Marx's theories as presented and his books on alienation in a capitalist system. I recently started to read EP Thompsons The Making Of the English Working Class, about 1780 to 1840, written in the 1960's a Penguin classic. You can see in this some of the influences Marx and Engles witnessed in the Lancashire Cotton towns and Manchester (where they were writing from and Engles had his cotton mill) and the wider UK context. From this the ideas in The Communist Manifesto. It is wonderful to read books about how and in what ways capitalism is conforming to the, critique, patterns and predictions of Marx via his theories. I would like to get a copy of this one, looks fascinating and vital reading. Ursula Le Guin's Sci Fi novel, “The Dispossessed” was studied in that BA for a semester as a part of a Politics In Litrature unit. I'd read it before that and loved it both times. Having studied anarchism in a prior unit by the 2nd reading, bought it so much more to life in terms of the depth behind that science fiction. So from all this you can see why I found watching this cast so rewarding. I too am motivated by an increasing hatred of capitalism and love for the possibility of something much better. Having said that, I love riding my flashy fast motorbike (a product of capitalism) but am well aware its in the context of capitalism that I ride through the wonderful countryside west of Sydney, able to see it, giving an illusion of freedom and belonging, yet am totally alienated from it by property relations, manifest physically by fences and that if I fly fish (a hobby) the rivers I inspect without permission from the property owner I may well be shot at. The law is I have a right of way along and access to the waterways (unlike the UK) but the farmers still put barred wire across the rivers at the edge of their land. I suspect illegally. But they are capitalists. A lot more could be said about riding a motorcycle and capitalism but I will leave it at that. And the 1st year science uni science text, The Art Of Motorcycle Maintenance. LOL. Thankyou. Was bought up in London did a geology/physics/physical geography degree at Sheffield uni then went to oz, as a petroleum geologist to look for oil and gas. Right at the heart of capitalism, EXXON/MOBIL. Loved the job by the way but that does not stop me hating capitalism the more I understand it and want it superseded. We are a part of Gaia. Marx was not good on environment.

  • @littlebrothermoneywithmich6178
    @littlebrothermoneywithmich61785 ай бұрын

    “I don’t Know my intentions until the wrong things happens.” If that’s that a quote of communism’s impact, I don’t know what is.

  • @duuuad2350
    @duuuad23502 жыл бұрын

    Brecht isn’t about ‘holding up the mirror’ - that’s exactly the ‘Aristotelian’ (realist) theatre he defined his own ‘Epic’ theatre against. Brecht’s stage is, as Raymond Williams says, in the subjunctive, about possibility, dynamism, change as opposed to the indicative stage of realist theatre.

  • @DanielRetureau
    @DanielRetureau2 жыл бұрын

    Forme et fond sont inséparables dans le Manifeste; c'est un texte efficace, convaincant, entraînant, qui ouvre la conscience, et vous invite à penser ensuite longtemps; tout le reste de ma vie, en fait. Ensuite, critique de l'économie politique, et enfin le capital. Un texte magnifique, déterminant pour moi; j'avais quinze ans, j'en ai presque soixante-quinze de plus, et ces textes ont nourri ma réflexion et mon action. I could have written that in english, but my expression might have been less precise. I support the green party but as a marxist, always.

  • @MrDeadhead1952

    @MrDeadhead1952

    2 жыл бұрын

    A rough translation of the above 'Form and substance are inseparable in the Manifesto; it is an effective, convincing, catchy text, which opens the conscience, and invites you to think then for a long time; the rest of my life, in fact. Next, critique of political economy, and finally capital. A magnificent text, decisive for me; I was fifteen, I'm almost seventy-five older, and these texts have nourished my reflection and my action'. Make you own judgement about its precision.

  • @ritawing1064
    @ritawing10642 жыл бұрын

    Ooooh! Must watch this, Mieville's books are amazing (sometimes a bit too cruel for me), must-reads! Glad to see him here!

  • @Smittumi
    @Smittumi2 жыл бұрын

    Yo! I didn't know China Mieville was down!

  • @ravenshadowz2343
    @ravenshadowz2343 Жыл бұрын

    The link for China's book sends me to a blank page, there are icons at the top and if I click on any of them each of the icons that I click on are a white blank page. Is the website down?

  • @zarantikka106
    @zarantikka1065 ай бұрын

    The whole part about worker as a identity really ressonated for me. For some time l have wondered why there is alot of cognitive disassociation with being working class. Then it struck me that the working class have very little representation. There are few movies about working class people staying working class and social media erases any representation with its focus on materialisme and the "self made" trops.

  • @Daybed4448
    @Daybed44482 жыл бұрын

    Nice to see Mieville on Novara again

  • @sheepewe4505
    @sheepewe45052 жыл бұрын

    32:12 White bread, meaty fried breakfasts, and tea were once the food of the weathy. The proletariat of the 19thC loved emulating their "betters"

  • @happinesstan

    @happinesstan

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yep, the poor had to make do with oysters.

  • @anthonymcintyre2242
    @anthonymcintyre22422 жыл бұрын

    An issue is the attitude seeded in the middle class, they demand an infinite appraisal of their actions - ie despite upholding and gatekeeping consumer ideals they demand the idea that they are "trying as hard as they can". It's nonsense, just don't, you have privelege, hereditary wealth, give up those ideals and represent the working class beyond arbitrary impersonations of our culture. The "working class" that you say no longer exist have literally grown up in classist Britain. We're watching as middle class "communists" exploit every aspect of the market accessible to them. Reaction after reaction to the trends and themes set out by the consumer society. Have you seen the amount of people walking around selling their stuff at climate protests? The difference between someone receving a few grand from their parents and nothing has notable implications - the difference between thereafter is enormous. Some would deny the reality of others to suit their priveleged appraisal of behaviour. The worst part? You're not even real.

  • @CC-hx5fz
    @CC-hx5fz2 жыл бұрын

    You seem to be missing an explanation of the clash of the Working-class left with Id-Pol. The unique problem for the working class identity (they are the majority) is political representation and disenfranchisement, while minority identities don't have any ideological opposition to a weakening democracy. In fact many of these groups have been actively anti-democratic, dismissing working-class interests as populist, or sidelined as "poverty issues". Even if Working Class is not strictly an identity, they need to organise separately, prioritising their own interests. It's the "classification" of other identities that turns off many working class people because the middle classes prioritise their own class distinctions and voices above every other identity consideration. How do the working-class organise against a middle-class that insists on speaking for everyone else?

  • @jemfrankel4099

    @jemfrankel4099

    2 жыл бұрын

    Really good point! Echoes Owen Jones point in Chavs - ‘rubbishing’ working class values by aspiring to upward mobility and hollowing out working class political structures (esp trade unions) to effectively disenfranchise working class resistance to exploitation and making ‘working class’ an identity ‘like any other’.

  • @AndyCropperArt
    @AndyCropperArt2 жыл бұрын

    Oh wow!! one of my favourite authors on one of my favourite channels!! 😍

  • @ezza88ster
    @ezza88ster7 ай бұрын

    "You don't get any Bangladeshi elves". You nailed that one Ash! HaHaHa!

  • @davidhull9510
    @davidhull95102 жыл бұрын

    wow, I think I followed most of it. need to watch again

  • @richard_d_bird
    @richard_d_bird2 жыл бұрын

    when i need to figure out who i am i usually check my driver's license

  • @princeofchetarria5375
    @princeofchetarria53752 жыл бұрын

    I feel like people could fight over distinct ideology for years and not get anywhere. Much more important (in my opinion) to focus more on policy as it’s easier to agree on. Don’t let perfect be the enemy of good. Personally I don’t label myself with an ideology because there will always be people in good or bad faith who misrepresent that ideology and paint it as villainous. Whereas they can’t quite do that the same way with policy

  • @JD-td8kl
    @JD-td8kl8 ай бұрын

    Bring China back on, please! Ripper of an interview.

  • @Imperator_Prime
    @Imperator_Prime Жыл бұрын

    Oooh, now granted I'm high right now, but I suspect the reason "worker" class consciousness is so hard to personally lock in is because when you become aware of the concept, by the time you do, you realize what a "consumer" you were preconditioned by capitalism to be. Like, your desire to become otherwise immediately clashes with guilt over how much you've already consumed and benefited from exploitation.

  • @kennethmarshall306
    @kennethmarshall3062 жыл бұрын

    Class is about who gives the orders and who follows them. It’s a bit more complex but that’s basically it.

  • @liamlenihan1328
    @liamlenihan13282 жыл бұрын

    Great author, great interview

  • @dazpatreg
    @dazpatreg2 жыл бұрын

    This content makes me look forward to Sundays