Panda La
Terriere
Why Gen Z
is turning against woke culture
We made
it into a cultural revolution – and traumatised ourselves
18 February
2023, 5:00am
From
Spectator Life
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/why-gen-z-is-turning-against-woke-culture/
The other
day, in a bar in London frequented by students of the infamously ‘woke’
Goldsmiths University, I met a young white cis-male who said that the English
were to blame for his inherited trauma because of their historic oppression of
the Irish. The only problem was, he wasn’t Irish – he was American and so were
his parents and probably grandparents. ‘Pain lasts a long time,’ he assured me.
What struck
me about this encounter was not that it was typical of my Gen Z generation but
that it was so obviously cringe-inducing – a sort of hackneyed pick-up line.
Another student at the same bar – sporting an orange mullet and a thong as a
T-shirt – tried to convince me my age was a social construct.
To me and
many of my Gen Z peers, who were born after 1996, such talk feels increasingly
silly: a millennial trend that’s got old and tired. The absurdity has become
too glaring. If being distantly related to the Irish can engender
self-compassion, could not my white Englishness be reframed as a form of
victimhood? How can there be an end to oppression when the opportunities to be
oppressed are so endless?
We feel as
if we’ve run into a mental wall, and the whole woke business is running out of
road. ‘Intersectionality’ – the academic word for the game of victimhood
top-trumps which has dominated our discourse for so long – seems to have
metastasised so much it makes no sense to anyone. New neurodiversities, new
genders, new sexual orientations, new disadvantages are spawned every day.
At
university we were scared of committing cultural appropriation, of forgetting
to wear our (she/him) stickers, of missing trigger warnings and contaminating
safe-spaces. We were scared of each other
Actual
poverty, the original disadvantage, is rejected at the victim-card vending
machine. Take millennial singer Harry Styles, who is known to wave a Pride flag
at almost every one of his concerts. Accepting his Album of the Year award at
the Grammys last week, he said: ‘This doesn’t happen to people like me very
often.’ He was right. Boys from the Midlands who grow up working class in
single-parent households rarely reach the heights of fame and success that
Styles has. But Styles had forgotten that, no matter how androgynously he
dresses, he is still white and a man and pale males aren’t meant to talk about
overcoming odds. Some of his fans, as Vogue put it, ‘can’t quite believe
anybody who looks like Styles, any homogenous white guy, has the audacity to
publicly signal a lack of privilege’.
Clearly,
Styles should have studied more. To be specific, he needed to be incubated in a
campus environment with an obscene amount of free time and no desperate
imperative to make money from around 2017 onwards. This is where the millennial
and Gen Z respective commitment to ‘woke’ diverges. Millennials spoke out about
race, feminism, sex, consent and so on. The cohort that succeeded didn’t reject
their ideas, but they picked up the baton and ran with it in a million
different directions. Gen Z has so complicated and corrupted the theories it
inherited that none of us can even begin to understand any more.
Our
university careers were spent in a state of intermittent abject terror. We were
scared of committing cultural appropriation, of forgetting to wear our
(she/him) stickers, of missing trigger warnings and contaminating safe-spaces.
We were scared of each other.
Millennials,
such as Styles (and the other Harry, HRH, for that matter), were able to
popularise and profit from woke. We, on the other hand, have gone further,
turned it into a cultural revolution and traumatised ourselves. Fast-forward a
few years and most of the older Zs find themselves disenfranchised within the
movement. Many of them, having just flown the nest in an increasingly expensive
world, are experiencing that one setback that the religion of woke won’t let
them build a self-soothing identity out of, namely a shortage of cash.
The younger
Z cohort, those who are still at university or school, are still dominated by
radicalised nutters who enjoy the cerebral workout of building a case for their
own insurmountable unhappiness. But the older Zs are jumping ship fast, en
masse, and leaving the flags, the pronouns and the millennials in their dust.
Written by
Panda La
Terriere
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