FC Talks 2/13 - Musa al-Gharbi

**Kiva Theater @ The Student Union**

When

12:30 – 1:45 p.m., Feb. 13, 2025

TITLE 

“We Have Never Been Woke: The Cultural Contradictions of a New Elite”

BIO

Musa al-Gharbi is a sociologist and assistant professor in the School of Communication and Journalism at Stony Brook University. An alumnus of the University of Arizona, his work focuses on the intersections of culture, politics, and inequality. His recently published book, We Have Never Been Woke: The Cultural Contradictions of a New Elite, examines the history and political economy of the knowledge professions from the interwar period to the present. With growing attention in the media, the book critiques the narratives of today’s elite, arguing that confronting these self-serving ideologies is essential for addressing broader social and economic inequalities.

ABSTRACT

Starting in the interwar period (between World Wars I and II) and rapidly accelerating in the 1970s, there were shifts to the global economy that radically increased the influence of the “symbolic industries” – science and technology, education, media, law, consulting, administration, finance, non-profits, NGOs and advocacy organizations, and so forth. People who work in these fields traffic primarily in data, ideas, rhetoric, images instead of physical goods or services. Drawing from Bourdieu, we can refer to these professionals as “symbolic capitalists.” 

I’m a symbolic capitalist. If you’re reading this, there’s a strong chance you’re a symbolic capitalist too.

One defining trait of symbolic capitalists is our commitment to social justice. We are the Americans most likely to self-identify as feminists, antiracists or allies to LGBTQ people. Politically, we’re overwhelmingly aligned with America’s primary ‘left’ party. Many of our professions are explicitly oriented around altruism, speaking truth to power, or serving as impartial adjudicators, knowledge producers, facilitators and advisors in order to advance the common good.

Given the ways symbolic capitalists like to understand and describe ourselves and our professions, one might expect that as people like “us” have gained more power over society, longstanding social problems would be on the path to resolution and socioeconomic and cultural inequalities would be greatly diminished. In reality, the opposite has happened.

In tandem with the transitions favoring the symbolic industries, we’ve seen increased polarization and social conflict. Public trust in institutions has been consistently plummeting. Many systems and institutions are growing increasingly dysfunctional and ineffective.  Inequalities in the U.S. have grown increasingly pronounced as symbolic capitalists have risen in affluence and influence. Symbolic capitalists are, themselves, among the primary beneficiaries of these inequalities – and social justice discourse is increasingly mobilized to justify them.

The ‘losers’ in the symbolic economy are portrayed as deserving their lot because they think, feel or say the ‘wrong’ things about race, gender and sexuality. Elites’ bids for more power and status, meanwhile, are increasingly bound up with their egalitarian bona fides.

Understanding this state of affairs requires a deep and unflinching look into the history and political economy of symbolic capitalists. Although our professions have, from the outset, defined themselves as altruistic in nature — oriented towards higher principles or the greater good – the truth is, we have never been woke.

LINK & LOCATION

Thursday, February 13th @ 12:30pm

KIVA THEATER **PLEASE NOTE LOCATION CHANGE**

Join Zoom Meeting
https://arizona.zoom.us/my/clarkdjphilosophy