
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode, Swedish journalist, writer, and activist, Kajsa Ekis Ekman reviews the history of the New Left since 1968 when the values of the oppressed class were highlighted to today where power has adopted the language of the oppressed, what she calls “patriarchy changing clothes” while using feminist language. Discussing the importance of class issues within feminism, Ekman highlights how corporate slogans of Zalando’s “celebrate diversity” campaign costs these corporations nothing as they prefer posturing their purity without making any real material changes to how they treat their workers. Comparing this class paradigm to current gender politics, Ekman gives an exegesis of the word “woman” which is currently being erased in many western nations, even prefixed with “cis” such that the meaning of “woman” has been perverted into a privileged oppressor of men vanishing all possibilities of women to speak of themselves an oppressed class. Ekman notes that the left relies on the discursive framework of “being oppressed” to speak within the university and within wider society detailing the bizarre disconnect between workers’ unions which have historically highlighted their labour grievances meanwhile the “sex worker unions” are consistently underscoring “how great” their “profession” is meanwhile it remains “the only industry that has to kidnap workers to survive.”
By Savage Minds4.5
4747 ratings
In this episode, Swedish journalist, writer, and activist, Kajsa Ekis Ekman reviews the history of the New Left since 1968 when the values of the oppressed class were highlighted to today where power has adopted the language of the oppressed, what she calls “patriarchy changing clothes” while using feminist language. Discussing the importance of class issues within feminism, Ekman highlights how corporate slogans of Zalando’s “celebrate diversity” campaign costs these corporations nothing as they prefer posturing their purity without making any real material changes to how they treat their workers. Comparing this class paradigm to current gender politics, Ekman gives an exegesis of the word “woman” which is currently being erased in many western nations, even prefixed with “cis” such that the meaning of “woman” has been perverted into a privileged oppressor of men vanishing all possibilities of women to speak of themselves an oppressed class. Ekman notes that the left relies on the discursive framework of “being oppressed” to speak within the university and within wider society detailing the bizarre disconnect between workers’ unions which have historically highlighted their labour grievances meanwhile the “sex worker unions” are consistently underscoring “how great” their “profession” is meanwhile it remains “the only industry that has to kidnap workers to survive.”

2,274 Listeners

203 Listeners

2,153 Listeners

371 Listeners

3,828 Listeners

650 Listeners

798 Listeners

211 Listeners

136 Listeners

340 Listeners

958 Listeners

240 Listeners

284 Listeners

826 Listeners

61 Listeners