1. politics in which groups of people having a particular racial, religious, ethnic, social, or cultural identity tend to promote their own specific interests or concerns without regard to the interests or concerns of any larger political group Identity politics took its modern form during the second half of the last century. It emerged as an emancipatory mode of political action and thinking based on the shared experience of injustice by particular groups—notably blacks, women, gays, Latinos and American Indians. — Orlando Patterson Although the UCLA center's standards promoted rigorous history, they set off a major culture war because of their relentless emphasis on identity politics. — Diane Ravitch Identity politics is contemporary shorthand for a group's assertion that it is a meaningful group; that it differs significantly from other groups; that its members share a history of injustice and grievance; and that its psychological and political mission is to explore, act out, act on and act up its group identity. — Catharine R. Stimpson A number of critics have viewed her work through a lens of identity politics, taking her to be some sort of oracle of Muslim womanhood. — Lauren Collins
identity politics 片语
片语
identity between politics and economics政治和经济的统一
the politics of identity认同的政治
politics of identity认同政治
the new politics of identity新认同政治
Identity and Politics认同与政治
identity politics 例句
英汉例句
for the bjp, a shift from identity politics and the party’s association with high- and medium-caste hindus makes sense for tapping voters, of whatever religion, who worry most about good governance.
对人民党来说,脱离上层与中层阶级,抛弃身份政治,才能吸引各种信仰不同,但最看重善治的中间选民。
for decades, the language of white identity has only existed in the context of white supremacy. when that became taboo, it left white identity politics without a vocabulary.
behind that shift there are deep philosophical reasons. i will explain these reasons by our new understanding of autonomy, as well as the challenge of identity politics come with value pluralism.