posted on 2019-05-20, 10:58authored byJilly Boyce Kay, Sarah Banet-Weiser
How bad things have become. Or perhaps it is more accurate to say: how bad things have
always been. But it is only now that some people with particular kinds of class and race
privilege are beginning to grasp just how awful things are: how very deeply racism and
misogyny are entrenched in our culture; how devastating neoliberalism has been to social
bonds and human lives; how impending ecological disaster is increasingly not a possibility
but a sure-fire certainty. We seem to be in a moment of intense despair, hopelessness and
powerlessness; politics and public institutions as we know them are unravelling --- and not in
a good way. We are living in what Pankaj Mishra (2017) calls the “age of anger”, in which
modernity has singularly failed to live up to its promises of democracy, equality and freedom,
and has thus given rise to the spread of a deep ressentiment that manifests as the
normalisation of nationalisms, racisms, and misogynies.
History
Citation
Feminist Media Studies, 2019, 19:4, 603-609
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/Department of Media, Communication and Sociology
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