East Side Freedom Library

History Revealed: The Sinking Middle Class, with David Roediger, 2/11/21


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The  East Side Freedom Library and the Ramsey County Historical Society  invite you to a special session of our “History Revealed” series.

This event will be archived on on the library's Facebook page and on our YouTube channel with closed captioning enabled: https://www.youtube.com/eastsidefreedomlibraryorg

“Middle class” is an ideologically shaped and deployed term in American  culture and politics. Activist-scholar David Roediger makes clear in  his pointed and persuasive polemic, this obsession with the middle-class  is relatively new in US politics. It began with the attempt to win back  so-called “Reagan Democrats” by Bill Clinton and it was accompanied by a  pandering to racism and a shying away from meaningful wealth  redistribution that continues to this day.

Drawing  on rich traditions of radical social thought, Roediger disavows the  thinly sourced idea that the United States was, for much of its history,  a “middle-class” nation and the still more indefensible position that  it is one now. The increasing immiseration of large swathes of  middle-income America, only accelerated by the current pandemic, nails a  fallacy that is a major obstacle to progressives.

David  Roediger taught in the 1990s at the University of Minnesota and now  teaches American Studies at the University of Kansas. His books include  Seizing Freedom, The Wages of Whiteness, How Race Survived U.S. History,  and Towards the Abolition of Whiteness and Working toward Whiteness.  His book The Production of Difference (with Elizabeth Esch) recently won  the International Labor History Association Book Prize. He is past  president of the American Studies Association and of the Working-Class  Studies Association.

Professor Roediger will be joined in conversation by:

August  Nimtz, Professor of Political Science and African American Studies at  the University of Minnesota. August has been an activist in progressive  movements in the Twin Cities (and beyond) since the 1970s with a  particular emphasis on solidarity with the people of Cuba.

Kieran  Knutson, President of Communications Workers of America Local 7250  (Minnesota AT&T). Kieran has been a long time activist at the  intersection of the racial justice and labor movements.

Megan  Brown, Assistant Professor in the Masters in Advocacy and Political  Leadership (MAPL) program at Metropolitan State University. A geographer  by training and trade, Megan has recently found her way to St. Paul.

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