Ta-Nehisi Coates Rules, The Thread

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agreed, he totally changed the dialogue on reparations & that kind of impact is imo absolutely a powerful political act

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 20 December 2017 16:19 (eight years ago)

dude I wasn't agreeing with him

― Simon H., 20. december 2017 16:30 (forty-one minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Sorry, didn't mean to imply that, wrote that wrong.

Frederik B, Wednesday, 20 December 2017 16:24 (eight years ago)

Coates, at least in BTWAM, writes about 'The Mecca' as the thing to engage in. Which is again metaphorical, for him it's HBCU's and his writing, for someone else it might be political activism. He writes that everyone should find their Mecca to keep themselves alive, and specifically warns his son to spend his life on trying to convince white people of anything. I don't think there's anything in that book that specifically goes against political activism? It's just not what Coates himself does.

Frederik B, Wednesday, 20 December 2017 16:32 (eight years ago)

just want to raise my anecdotal experience that plenty of white readers resent Coates for making them feel bad about themselves, just to throw that on the pile. not sure it makes sense to hold Coates accountable for the stuff white readers may or may not project onto his writing. tipsy already said this, so I’m just amplifying.

West’s critique was in bad faith in places inasmuch as he deliberately misread Coates. West and Coates have substantive differences which West is, of course, well within his rights to discuss. His critique, though, read to me as in the spirit of academic culture wars in terms of his rhetorical strategies. In all the worst ways.

horseshoe, Wednesday, 20 December 2017 17:09 (eight years ago)

It seems to me (disclaimer: ignore me) that one of the key points in discussing Coates visa vis “neo liberalism vs the left” is his underlining of the historical fact that efforts to bring about equality which aren’t explicitly anti-racist won’t help black people, and will probably hurt them more. If you want to paint that as being pessimistic because of the general chances of a plan that starts “Step 1: fix racism” then that’s reasonable, but I think he’d consider that a better idea than one starting “Step 1: fix everything else”

Andrew Farrell, Wednesday, 20 December 2017 17:09 (eight years ago)

an example of what I mean by West’s bad faith:

God knows my politics are closer to West's and I owe him a lot re: my personal development, but come on man, what the hell pic.twitter.com/lwTkDeAVmY

— Malcolm Harris (@BigMeanInternet) December 17, 2017

horseshoe, Wednesday, 20 December 2017 17:11 (eight years ago)

Andrew Farrell otm (and tipsy & horseshoe & the people saying “neoliberal” is becoming a buzzword /signal w no real meaning)

Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Wednesday, 20 December 2017 19:38 (eight years ago)

The idea that one must address these separate but connected entities is correct at its core, but it is also neoliberal thinking at its highest level.

This is a peculiar sentence. It seems to be saying that something that is objectively correct is also inherently wrong, not because it is wrong in any particular, but because it can be labeled "neoliberal".

A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 20 December 2017 20:11 (eight years ago)

And again the notion that it is inherently "neoliberal" to take this line of attack is outright bizarre

Simon H., Wednesday, 20 December 2017 21:05 (eight years ago)

i can't wait for boomers to die everyone who can remember the 2016 primary to die, then we can be free

goole, Wednesday, 20 December 2017 21:29 (eight years ago)

Neoliberal has a precise meaning. It means you support policies that let loose the creative destruction of the market, at the expense of systems that have been put in place to shield certain workers from volatility. Ta Nehisi Coates is not a neoliberal and neither, really, was Obama because he wasn’t trying to accelerate the process of privatization (as Bill Clinton did.) He also didn’t try to overturn this trend either — he wasn’t talking like Sanders about going back to a New Deal era thinking.

treeship 2, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:04 (eight years ago)

West thinks capital turns people into commodities and the US military is opening markets at gunpoint and that the only moral thing to do is to oppose capital and empire. The fight against racism, to him, is a humanistic struggle and so it’s connected to all the other fights for liberation, equality, and human dignity. It’s extremely straightforward. Coates is neoliberal, to him, because he isn’t engaged directly in anticapitalist activism. I’d probably be a neoliberal too, to him.

treeship 2, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:13 (eight years ago)

I don’t really think it’s a manipulative or underhanded argument he is making. It might be anti-intellectual, though — Coates is a unique writer because he faces difficult truths and follows them, even into the abyss. He’ll be read for decades but it might be worth asking what effect his extremely influential texts might have on a generation now ocmi g to politi al consciousness. West is also a teacher.

treeship 2, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:17 (eight years ago)

*coming. Jesus. Typos.

treeship 2, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:18 (eight years ago)

It’s unfortunate to me that these conversatioms become so vindictive and maybe West’s haranguing tone is partly at fault for that. But I kind of think an older generation of activists more steeped in like, humanism and Christianity rather than like, critical theory, which Coates has been able (remarkably, I think) to turn into literature.

treeship 2, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:22 (eight years ago)

*(it’s worth listening to) an older generation of activists

treeship 2, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:23 (eight years ago)

He scores rhetorical points off misreadings of Coates. Cornel West knows how to read, so I don’t know how else to understand that than bad faith.

horseshoe, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:23 (eight years ago)

Neoliberal has shifted in meaning recently to mean you are a liberal like me, but our views line up at most 99%, therefore you deserve the firing squad.

Moodles, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:25 (eight years ago)

I’m not saying there are no good critiques of Coates possible, but I honestly don’t think West came for Coates in a fair way. And I suspect the thing that frustrates West about Coates’s work is its reception, to which I say it’s going to take more than a radical black prophet to unsettle comfortable people’s complacency about the order of things. The fact that the literary ruling class likes to anoint a single black male writer is not Coates’s fault, nor is late capitalism.

horseshoe, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:28 (eight years ago)

Horseshoe in my absence from ILX I missed ur posts ur great

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:30 (eight years ago)

Tbf though I respect Cornel West’s intelligence and believe his politics to be sincere, his persona as a public intellectual is offputtingly slick to me and Coates’s is easier to take. I may be biased in my reading of his critique as a result.

horseshoe, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:31 (eight years ago)

<3 hoos how u been man???

horseshoe, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:31 (eight years ago)

I felt like it was unfair when Coates tweeted that Richard Spencer “agreed” with West. He knows it’s logically impossible for them to actually agree and Spencer was just trolling.

treeship 2, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:31 (eight years ago)

But also i agree with you horseshoe, broadly, that West wasn’t being totally fair either and was blaming Coates for things beyond his control.

treeship 2, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:33 (eight years ago)

Maybe, but he was hurt. West knew his dad, I think!

horseshoe, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:33 (eight years ago)

Neoliberalism is when traditional conservatives embraced the free market: i.e. Thatcher, Reagan and so on. The idea that it means 'modern liberals' (liberals in the American sense) is a sign of how fractured political discourse has become. I still think it's mostly a definition of the internet, rather than concrete politics. People reasoned from the name to the definition, and assumed it meant centrist.

Leaghaidh am brón an t-anam bochd (dowd), Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:35 (eight years ago)

But the mainstream Democratic Party has supported neoliberal policies for decades now. It isn’t totally off the mark.

treeship 2, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:38 (eight years ago)

I guess so. But there is still a difference between Thatcherism and this attempt to rebrand Neoliberalism as third-way Blairism (to use British examples).

Leaghaidh am brón an t-anam bochd (dowd), Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:43 (eight years ago)

West seems off his rocket three days, my 1cents

brimstead, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:47 (eight years ago)

Nice

treeship 2, Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:48 (eight years ago)

(I felt uncomfortable about the fact folks were using US party names and I was responding with UK names. I wasn't doubting folks knowledge, just being anxious)

Leaghaidh am brón an t-anam bochd (dowd), Thursday, 21 December 2017 00:53 (eight years ago)

Well the rise of Neo-Liberalism roughly coincides with the death (by merger) of the UK’s Liberal Party, which was just slightly younger than the United States. They did a lot of good, but the line still sticks that they were devoted to everywhere upholding the lot of the working class, as long as they never had to meet any.

Andrew Farrell, Thursday, 21 December 2017 02:54 (eight years ago)

In the 1980s I felt reasonably confident that neoliberalism referred to the embrace of extreme laissez-faire economics (a la Milton Friedman) by the likes of Pinochet and to a slightly lesser extent Thatcher and Reagan, as well as by international institutions that imposed such norms in the form of austerity measures. As West’s latest sally demonstrates, the term has taken a boozy, meandering stroll through the woods since then.

never have i been a blue calm sea (collardio gelatinous), Thursday, 21 December 2017 04:43 (eight years ago)

Yep.

Embalming is a flirty business (DJP), Thursday, 21 December 2017 12:54 (eight years ago)

Thirded

El Tomboto, Thursday, 21 December 2017 14:56 (eight years ago)

The lesson of the West/Coates affair is, black people can’t even have a bad conversation without someone speaking on our behalf or treating us as totems in which one finds the expression of this or that political belief; the latter is distinct from reading their works politically

— Dominick (@FanonsDream) December 21, 2017

Simon H., Thursday, 21 December 2017 15:00 (eight years ago)

OK tbf famous people of any color, gender, stripe or religion can’t have any public conversation without being treated as totems or mouthpieces for other people’s beliefs, but it has to be gratingly paternalistic when white guys intervene in shit like this to tell it how it is, and I too am guilty as charged

Also Simon H., on that note, is your posting that tweet a sort of weary self-clown?

El Tomboto, Thursday, 21 December 2017 15:17 (eight years ago)

absolutely

Simon H., Thursday, 21 December 2017 15:18 (eight years ago)

what idiot called it a debate between cornel west and ta-nehisi coates and not the East Coast West-Coates Feud

— big kesha fan (@lynyrdsremmurd) December 22, 2017

I want to change my display name (dan m), Friday, 22 December 2017 13:31 (eight years ago)

Jesus Christ

Embalming is a flirty business (DJP), Friday, 22 December 2017 17:53 (eight years ago)

“How can I make a nigger joke about this without using the word ‘nigger’? WAIT I’VE GOT IT”

Embalming is a flirty business (DJP), Friday, 22 December 2017 17:54 (eight years ago)

http://bostonreview.net/race/robin-d-g-kelley-coates-and-west-jackson

robin kelley on coates, the west incident, and why both perspectives have value and are needed. by far the best, most considered essay to come out of this dustup I’ve read

k3vin k., Saturday, 23 December 2017 16:39 (eight years ago)

it's good

j., Saturday, 23 December 2017 17:01 (eight years ago)

ultimately Coates quit Twitter because of this so his life will be a lot better for this beef if for no other reason

Joan Digimon (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 23 December 2017 17:04 (eight years ago)

The Kelley piece is fantastic.

Embalming is a flirty business (DJP), Saturday, 23 December 2017 18:03 (eight years ago)

Great perspective but i think his analysis of Obama and liberalism is-not sure if “overly-reductive” is the phrase i’m looking for?

y'know, LIBS! libertarians, libertines, even liberians and librarians (Hunt3r), Sunday, 24 December 2017 16:32 (eight years ago)

three weeks pass...

A Twitter thread worth reading (I haven't checked out the YouTube clips yet).

Coates issa trip. So someone tweets Black women's critiques of you and you respond w/ "I did not come for this"? Begs the question of what tf DID you come here for then if THIS is the thing you run away from? 🤔🤔🤔https://t.co/BtT1AGdCov pic.twitter.com/N6LX7ohjil

— William Jamal Richardson (@DecolonialBlack) January 18, 2018

grawlix (unperson), Thursday, 18 January 2018 17:53 (eight years ago)

That's a horrible thread.

Anyone else who has read the book? I'm on year seven, and it's predictably amazing. West def didn't read it, btw, that should be quite clear.

Frederik B, Thursday, 18 January 2018 18:04 (eight years ago)

It’s not horrible but Twitter certainly is

El Tomboto, Thursday, 18 January 2018 18:44 (eight years ago)


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