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Politics of resentment
Form of politics From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The politics of resentment, sometimes called grievance politics, is a form of politics which is based on resentment of some other group of people.[17]
Types
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Perspective
![]() | The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. (October 2023) |
Male
Male grievance culture is a common feature in mass shooters, according to a study which examined their motivations in the intersection of white entitlement, middle-class instability, and heterosexual masculinity. The study's author, Leigh Paterson, wrote that such murderers may be highly motivated by "white male grievance culture".[18][19]
Female
White
Columnist Michael Gerson argues that in American politics, the Republican Party has been "swiftly repositioned as an instrument of white grievance."[20][non-primary source needed]
Reaction to demographic change
Demographic change in the United States propelled by immigration has led to an increasing proportion of people with diverse backgrounds, and a decreasing proportion of whites. This trend increased in the 21st century, with several more cities where whites were once the majority, but no longer are. Highly visible advances of certain minorities, such as the first Black president (Barack Obama) and the first Hispanic Supreme Court justic (Sonia Sotomayor), also took place in this period.
In some states, state legislators moved to restrict immigration by law. In the field of education, some white elected officials have moved to restrict diversity programs, or the availability of courses in ethnic studies or the impact of race in America, while others have worked at tightening election regulations in order to make it more difficult for members of ethnic minorities to vote, leading to opposing protests, sometimes clashing, between mostly white groups favoring restrictions on immigration and minorities, and by minority groups seeking to hold on to their rights.[21]
This came to a head during Donald Trump's 2016 presidential election campaign.[21]: 2
Black
Nationalist
Sociologist Bart Bonikowski argues that ethno-nationalist populism is often based on stirring up resentment against "elites, immigrants, and ethnic, racial and religious minorities".[22]
Religious
Postcolonial
Anti-Western sentiments in the global south or among the intelectual left in Western countries that call colonialism, interventionism and exploitation as the reasons for struggles of the global south.
See also: Postcolonialism
Sexuality and gender
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Grievance culture
Jason Manning and Bradley Campbell draw on the work of sociologist Donald Black on conflict and on cross-cultural studies of conflict and morality to argue that the contemporary culture wars resemble tactics described by scholars in which an aggrieved party or group seeks the support of third parties. They argue that grievance-based conflicts have led to large-scale moral change in which an emergent victimhood culture is clashing with and replacing older honor and dignity cultures.[23] Political commentator E. J. Dionne has written that culture war is an electoral technique to exploit differences and grievances, remarking that the real cultural division is "between those who want to have a culture war and those who don't."[24]
Alternatively, authors such as Helen Pluckrose, Peter Bhoggoshian and James Lindsay have argued that the politics of resentment largely originate from the political left, with the contemporary conservative response being a reaction to it.[citation needed]
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See also
References
Further reading
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