The Roots of 'Woke' Culture
βWokenessβ has become a shorthand for one side of the culture wars. But where did it come from? Journalist Helen Lewis uncovers the roots of woke.
Barack Obama condemned it. Black American activists championed it. Meghan Markle brought it to the Royal Family. βWokenessβ has become a shorthand for one side of the culture wars, popularising concepts like βwhite privilegeβ and βtrigger warningsβ - and the idea that βlanguage is violenceβ.
Journalist Helen Lewis is on a mission to uncover the roots of this social phenomenon. On her way she meets three authors who in 2017 hoaxed a series of academic journals with fake papers on dog rape, fat bodybuilding and feminist astrology. They claimed to have exposed the jargon-loving, post-modern absurdity of politically correct university departments - whose theories drive βwokeβ online political movements.
But is there really a link between the contemporary language of social justice warriors and the continental philosophy of the 1960s and 70s? And are critics of wokeness just reactionaries, left uneasy by a changing world?
Producer Craig Templeton Smith
Editor Jasper Corbett
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- Mon 23 Mar 2020 21:00ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
- Sun 29 Mar 2020 21:30ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
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Analysis
Programme examining the ideas and forces which shape public policy in Britain and abroad.