Interviewer: Hello, Catherine, welcome to How the Light Gets In. You are a cultural theorist known for your work around class, mainly. Your next book is about trauma. Can you briefly explain this topic and why it’s important?
Catherine: Well, I was really fascinated, but I should say appalled, by the way in which trauma as an affliction and a concept has been instrumentalized by the liberal class of professionals, especially around the sort of very basis of their politics. And instead of just criticizing identity politics or woke politics—as some of my colleagues who I admire on the left have done—I thought I would… I thought we had to go deeper.
There was something about the rise of this kind of psychization of suffering, as well as the gentrification of pain, that really struck me as being critical to the post-68 professional class elites. And one of the things that I think allowed them to eclipse the suffering of the working class and the question of exploitation was that they promoted at every single level—from psychology, to feminism, to medicine, to the… to politics itself—they promoted this idea that trauma was something that was cross-class as a phenomenon.
And I also came up… came of age in the time when human rights in the Cold War were very much dominant in politics. And this whole idea of trauma, I thought hypothetically, was in a way of positioning the American hegemon as the most enlightened force in the world that was going to help the world recover from the trauma of communism, because the communists did not… they were apsychological; they didn’t know how to deal with suffering.
And especially during the end of the Cold War to the 1990s, there was an idea that the Holocaust was the greatest genocide in the world, the greatest atrocity in the world, and it was only the free world that was processing it, and that the recently liberated countries of the East had not looked at the trauma of the Holocaust as such. And I was really interested in how this ideology around the question of trauma and recovery—because there’s a real script in terms of that—dominated every single aspect of the culture industry.
And the trauma objectification only accelerated since COVID and since, you know, the rise of, uh, kind of neoliberal liberalism where trauma becomes content. Publishers were starved for it, and it comes out. And I trace a kind of intellectual history of trauma in the American culture industries as a function of both the end of the Cold War and the war of the professional classes against the working classes, because all ideas of suffering then had to go through this lens of suffering and recovery.
And I was always interested in how Americans and Anglo-Americans—because we’re all Puritans together—focus on sexual violence rather than economic violence. And so in the book, I make the argument that the liberals of today want to say that the greatest form of violence takes place in what I call the “hidden abode of seduction,” rather than what Marx called the “hidden abode of production.”
Interviewer: So, do you think it’s an element of a class war?
Catherine: Yes, absolutely. And, and I had someone do a LexisNexis search of the mention of trauma in American mainstream media. And in 1970, it… the graph is like here, and it goes up gradually. And after 1980—the Reagan revolution—it starts to accelerate. After 2000, it’s an exponential increase in the mention of the word throughout major mainstream media.
Interviewer: You’ve given examples such as AOC’s use of her traumatic experience live-streaming it on Instagram, and there are other celebrities who constantly come out with their traumas to be more relatable. Why do you think they’re doing that?
Catherine: I, I think it’s more than to be just relatable, but it’s to authenticate themselves as good people, as enlightened people, and to burnish their brand. So, for instance, Prince Harry—your prince—is obsessed with his own familial trauma. And I think that he has absolutely been through the ringer in terms of paparazzi, etc. But he’s also born into one of the world’s oldest monarchies, one of the world’s wealthiest families. And he, in collaboration with Oprah Winfrey—who takes up a large piece of the book—are leveraging their celebrity combined with their trauma to create a formula for branding, personal branding.
And it was really unfortunate that AOC just went into this channel. And I really hope that for young leftists in the future that they don’t do that, because I think that in order to have true political conflict and progress, we have to cordon off the personal. For younger people, there is a pressure to expose oneself and to remain in constant contact with social media to leverage one’s trauma and its publicity for eyeballs. And I think it’s enormously destructive on the personal level and on the political level.
And I know she has political ambitions, she’s probably not listening to me, but I think that we have to return to a more objective and stoic, as well as, determined and even, you know, I’m not anti-violence, but militant idea of the left. And to fetishize vulnerability and to fetishize confession only takes us back to the most reactionary forms of bourgeois subjectivity.
Interviewer: Is there an idea that suffering somehow makes you more pure or innocent?
Catherine: It, you know, it’s in this language of “lived experience” that you feel like if you haven’t suffered, you haven’t… you don’t have the right to speak about something. And we have to take the confession at face value. Confession is very, very Christian.
Did Karl Marx ever work in a factory? No, but he was one of the greatest intellectuals and thinkers of the 19th century of the deplorable conditions of the first and second industrial revolutions. He went and saw what the working class was doing, he, along with Engels, were non-religious witnesses to the emiseration of the working classes in this, in this area of England, very close to where Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester [are]. And so, do we say, “Oh, you were never a worker in a textile factory, so you have no right to speak of it”? I think that that is the deepest kinds of anti-intellectualism possible. So that this sort of lived experience authentification is part and parcel of an anti-materialism that’s part of liberal centrist politics in the Anglo-American world, that we export to the rest of the world as some kind of moral good.
Interviewer: That focus on lived experience, does that come from philosophers such as Levinas, who say that the “other” is unknowable, that we… the “other” is eternal?
Catherine: Levinas is a kind of metaphysician of intersubjectivity. I do think the other is unknowable. I don’t know if he… but there is a kind of ethical superiority to this kind of respect for the other and the other’s suffering that I think is a mask for something in psychoanalysis we would call over-identification with a traumatic material.
And when you, as a subject, over-identify with the suffering of the other, you actually don’t give them any room to have their experience. You instrumentalize their suffering and you make yourself the agent of cure, recovery, witness, etc. So in trauma studies, for instance, that came out of Yale University literature department, the highest order of, ethical moral activity was actually witnessing, witnessing the other. And they were very… they owed a lot to, Levinas.
But I think it’s a crypto-religiosity that subtends liberalism. And I think that as leftists, we have to be insistent on secularism and agnosticism, which means that you… there’s a… there’s a kind of ethical, ethical way that we should not identify with the suffering of the other, an ethical skepticism about it. Because now today, young people have received this as a form of self-presentation. So like, that this reification of one’s own suffering and identity is the available language of subjectivity.
And, I like to think about what Adorno said about our subjective experiences, or our subjectivity, is that we are all marbled with objectivity, with ideology. It’s not the, Althusserian “you know, we’ve been hailed,” etc. It’s like we are actually all pieces of marble with veins of individuality and subjectivity in it that are also… that are totally imbricated in objective ideological formations. And so to become a subject is actually a kind of work, a kind of labor that, the trauma culture script allows us to bypass, to take a shortcut in, to be able to have this kind of theater of empathy.
You know, with young people in America today, they kind of like nod. Everything’s like assent, is like the emoji world like, uh, thumbs up, smiley. And there’s this kind of like constant… I think of them as like bobbing heads nodding with each other.
Interviewer: Oh my god, I hope I wasn’t nodding!
Catherine: No, but, how can we be attendant to the objective world, critical and skeptical, but also, truly intersubjective? The trauma culture, trauma script thing just is a veil right now. But how can we be truly intersubjective? I think by being resistant to, to, ready-made forms of empathy. But…
Interviewer: Uh, you mentioned confession. That is an ancient or very old form of therapy in many ways, don’t we… question of religiosity, I don’t know if it’s therapy…
Catherine: Like Augustine’s Confessions actually were the first, if you like, foray into the creation of, inner life. Like action in the ancient world was all the ind… well, if you want to call the individual the agent, the hero, the mythic hero is all… is determined by external action. It’s with Augustine that you have this Christian idea that there’s an internal life with a… an important arc that can, you know, of sin and then guilt and confession and revelation that can be shared through language. It’s a great breakthrough.
But, we are unconsciously aping this, form of confession that actually has no community, because liberalism and centrism are instrumental ideologies. And at least Augustine believed that he was entering into a Christian community, giving people a model for belief that could unite them. Today’s suffering is all about, “Look at me, look at me.” Today’s confession is all about, “Look at me, see me, recognize me, I am doing this, I am suffering.”
And, you know, this is why people say like, “Oh, I feel so seen.” This kind of seeing is about being in a specular, like, hall of mirrors with the other. The other just becomes a mirror and reflects in on us what… how we want to be seen as people possessed of an inner life, people who’ve suffered, people who’ve recovered. We have all suffered, and if you look at the… we have… we have all been traumatized. We can’t be human without being traumatized.
The great British psychoanalyst D.W. Winnicott talked about how, birth is a process of being weaned from the maternal womb, actually, from the womb actually, so every step of establishing some kind of autonomy means breaking from this idea that we’re enclosed in this cocoon, this uterine cocoon of, nurturing and mirroring. And so you have this idea now, I find on social media, especially among the younger gener… I, I should actually say the older generation is just as bad, where, we see social media is just as merely a mirror, not a space where we recognize the otherness of others but also our universal shared commonality, which has to do with class solidarity.
In fact, if you live in a mirror world, there is no solidarity with others. There’s no class. There’s only this kind of specular, insular self that finds other monadic, specular, insular selves, and we’re all like disco balls that just reflect on each other. This… I mean, this is not a good form of sociality. There’s something so antisocial about, anti-identity politics, and it just leads me to despair.
Because right now within, the terrible politics of the United States, you have the far-right represented by Trump, attacking wokeness and identity politics on the liberal left, which is more liberal. There’s… the voice of the left when it comes to attack identity politics is immediately construed as being in alignment with, Trump. And I find in liberal institutions—non-profits, universities, professional, uh, media, professional organizations—people are actually doubling down on identity politics, although voices of dissent are rising.
Vivek Chibber and I are prominent leftists who criticize this thing. The way that we are excoriated on social media is unbelievable. And I think we both fairly have big skin, thick skins, but I’m really shocked, still continually shocked and disappointed by the, knee-jerk, you know, ad hominem attacks that anyone from the left receives when we try to criticize these formations, these liberal, liberal ideological formations. When Vivek’s, uh, interview came out on Doomscroll about, you know, it was “woke over”—I don’t like to use that term because I think it is a term of the right, that’s why I prefer to use identity politics or even trauma culture—some, you know, people… some, some people with PhDs just posted, you know, on social media, “Fuck Chibber,” as if that were an argument.
Interviewer: Well, this brings us to your book on the professional-managerial class, because you’re talking about them. Yeah, right. Who, who are they just quickly?
Catherine: Well, right now we think of them… right now they’re college-educated elites who are liberals, who believe that they have a kind of professional neutrality that makes them superior to other people. They come out… their formation today really comes out of a post-1968 social movement consolidation of their ideology within the professions. In 1900, perhaps there were real progressives within the professional class, which was very, very small; they made up about 3% of the workforce. Today they make up about 25% of the workforce. And the most elite, strata graduate from Ivy League universities, elite universities. They’re in the law firms, they’re in medical profession, they’re, people who, think that they’ve mastered a neutral set of tools that allowed them to give the best solutions to, social problems.
Uh, you know, Thomas Piketty has defined them as being more the “Brahmin left,” and their, opposition is the “mercantile right.” This is a good way of understanding the war between Harvard and Trump right now. But the war between Harvard and Trump masks the greater war between the capitalist and the worker. We just came… there were just statistics out that came out last week that said that 60% of the American population had… is unable to satisfy minimum life requirements—60%. And I think the next level up, which are, you know, maybe the next 20%, are having difficulties and maintain their life requirements, but through credit. So…
Interviewer: Well, so these the… it’s… you would say that the fight between the major… between the professional elites and the mercantile right is a fight in a minority still, and that there are two different kinds of billionaires: the right-wing billionaires like Peter Thiel, and the left and the liberal billionaires like the Pritzkers, of Chicago. Is it intra-class?
Catherine: You could say that it’s intra-class among the professional elites in terms of their allegiance to the, to capital. Yeah, okay. But both sides, both sorts of billionaires—liberals and right-wing billionaires—want to protect capital at all costs, which is why someone like Bernie Sanders was equally excoriated by Democrats and Republicans. Although Trump said, “I like Bernie, I, you know, I kind of respect him.” Because I think that he recognized that, sandals had a kind of authenticity that had no screen. I mean, for… Sanders has disappointed us in many ways, but he’s unscripted.
Look at the rest of the Democrats; they can’t actually answer a simple question without having a focus group or a screen of consultants tell them the right things to say. They are the most, manicured people in the world. And, you know, there’s a popular skepticism and I would say even hatred of this kind of lack of spontaneity, lack of, authentic human experience. And so whatever you want to say about Trump, he uses a very simple language and he connects on some deep emotional level. And that deep emotional level is right now, connected to the hatred of 65% of Americans who didn’t go to college of the rest of Americans who did go to college, who pretend to speak this language that no one understands.
Of course, 30 of, of… the people who go to college, most of them just want to get a job and get on with their lives. But it’s that elite strata who dominate graduate schools, who are in the professions, who speak this completely, artificial language of identity and of, with, uh… and of trauma culture. It is very, very, very, terrifying to see how insular that world is.
Interviewer: So the working class is, uh, more alienated from the affect of elite culture rather than the elitism itself—other than the billionaires such as Trump, I feel.
Catherine: No, the working class is, it’s difficult. They’re, they’re disorganized, but they are… they know and they feel that they’re being ripped off and exploited, not just at work but also in their health, in their consumption habits. You know, private equity is taking over every single aspect of American life, right from hospital care, from, to education, to the financialization of systems. And so people know that they’re being exploited. People know that the system is unfair.
But you have like raw exploitation on the part of Trump and the right-wing—a kind of libertarian Nietzscheanism, Ayn Randianism—and then you have the soft exploitation of people who are, you know, in the professional strata who feel that they know better. So would you be… would you rather be exploited by people who are just naked Nietzscheans, or people who are smarmy do-gooders who are picking your pocket but telling you how to, know, recycle your cans? I don’t know, there’s… well, I, I do know.
But the, but the question is like, there is a deep, legitimate popular hatred of liberal professional class. The fact that there is no political organization that can speak to that from the liberal side is part of the incredible, uh, power of American capitalism.
Interviewer: Is it reciprocal? Does the PMC hate the idea of the swarthy mass of like…
Catherine: I do think so. They would never admit to it, but yeah, yeah. Because this is what Hillary… Hillary Clinton called them “the deplorables.” Harris just simply didn’t address them. It came out recently that one of her political consultants said, “We can’t talk about economic struggle because that would make us look like losers.” Like they literally think poor people are losers, because they’ve been initiated through the meritocracy. They all went to the right schools, they got great grades, they were like raising their hands, so, any… in, in the front of class. So anyone who gets left behind is to them, existentially, like deserving of, their fate. And the only way to rescue those people is if they help them, so that they are still the agent of all political action.
And so, what you call charities is what we have as the sort of non-profit world or the non-governmental organization world.
Interviewer: I wanted to ask you about the meritocracy, sorry. But what does the PMC tell us, because post-68 is also a time of universal education? So what does it tell us about the dream of education? Is it emancipatory? Why isn’t it…
Catherine: Post-68 is… may have used the, rhetoric of universal education, but it actually is a time when the educ… the actual world of the higher… of higher education becomes more and more stratified. So you have elite schools being more and more well-funded and desirable, and the sort of public universities facing, austerity from the 1970s because of stagflation.
And this kind of, let, let’s talk about meritocracy from the post-war period. It was actually… the term itself was actually invented by Michael Young, who is a Labour, politician in the UK, and he, wrote a dystopic, uh… a dystopic science fiction novel about how, there would be a populist rebellion against the meritocracy in the UK because, everyone who didn’t go to the Russell Group universities would be left, you know, doing these low, these low-paid jobs, and there would be this kind of massive, uh, social unrest. And he thought… and the word itself for him was a monstrosity because it’s a combination of Latin and Greek, Greek roots like merit and ocracy coming from Greek. Of course, nobody knows this anymore because no one wants to be… no one cares about education, and the liberals say that we should decolonize education. So, the difference between Latin and Greek is no… is not interesting. Anything that smacks of that should be decolonized anyway.
But meritocracy for, for Young was supposed… was a… was a term of derigat… derogation. It was used by, what’s your Labour, uh… Bill Clinton and Tony Blair as positive terms beginning in the 1990s, that, you know, we would have this select… What Young said was the old, aristocracy they ruled but they didn’t really feel worthy of ruling. After the 20th century with the complexity of knowledge systems, the meritocracy would create a new class of rulers who, because they scored really well on tests, believe they deserved that power and wealth. And so he thought they would be even more corrupted than the aristocracy, who actually would fear the working class, right? Because they were like, “I, I’m just an idiot with like 500,000 acres of land, I don’t really deserve this, so I have to protect myself from the, farmers and peasants who might rise up with pitchforks.” But the meritoc… the meritocratic rulers be like, “Well, you know, I went to Harvard and Yale or Oxbridge, you know, I obviously deserve to have everything that I have because I work really hard for it.”
But the other thing that was the illusory democratization of, power and wealth was that the, the credential—the higher education credential—allegedly was not, inherited. So if I have a PhD, I can’t pass it down to my son. However, we see the rise of Nepo babies everywhere. What wasn’t calculated when people decide to organize… when the rulers decide to organize contemporary capitalism like this is that social and cultural capital are very inheritable, and there are all sorts of ways in which, someone who’s in a profession can pass that… pass down that knowledge of that life world to their children, so that their children can succeed in that world. It’s like NBA stars, uh, coaching their kids and to becoming NBA stars like what LeBron James or something. There’s a set of skills; it’s actually very heritable.
So meritocracy was meant to depose the feudal forms of inheritance that were in… embedded in the American aristocracy who were WASPs, and you have this diversity. You diversify the ruling class through these gatekeeping channels, and now we have this kind of, the credential is actually passed on from generation to generation, and social mobility is harder and harder to achieve through the higher education credential because of the high cost of education and the total, and the total divorce of working-class and poor life worlds from the life worlds of the professional classes, not to even mention the, real… the capitalist.
Interviewer: Is this why you think meritocracy is sliding into technocracy? Is it because it can’t justify itself so easily anymore, or…
Catherine: The professional class has always loved marriage… always loved technocracy. And meritocracy then creates a, a license to abuse their power in some way because they simply think they know better, and all solutions will be technological solutions. Like AI is going to solve our problems. Who want the self-driving car thing and the self-driving truck thing? You realize like all of AI is meant to destroy workers’ working, is meant to reduce the cost of labor. The capitalist wants to invest everything in sunk costs and black box like forms of work so that you can pay the few… you can pay people as little as possible, but it’s even great if you can just not have workers at all, yeah.
Interviewer: You’ve written that the material related to this… that the material conditions of wage labor are the proper sight of a political struggle. But when we think of feminist work around care work, or Black Marxists around post-work and automation as a big issue for wage laborers, why do you defend the wage as the site of political struggle and not other sites? What else is there?
Catherine: If you’re not paid a proper wage, I, you know… the, the feminist argument for care work, that care work should be paid properly, is a good place to start. But there’s a kind of, but I, and I don’t see a contradiction between what I’m saying and that necessarily. But I also feel like the kinds of dignity of work have to do with the skill of the worker and his, no, her knowledge of the work process.
And so this… there’s a kind of generalized de-skilling in our culture of… under capitalism, and a devaluation of work itself for managerialism. So what we’re supposed to… the most highly paid workers are managers. They’re still wage… they’re still wage workers, they don’t live on rent, but they manage other workers and they earn the highest wage. There is a way of thinking about work and the organization of work as something that values the skill of the worker and says the worker should know how best to organize the work in a large organization.
So the, the question is organization and how you organize work. So a care worker—I don’t even know the literature on this, but care work… care work is seen as a one-on-one work—but to create the… a system and network of care workers, of carers, who have these kinds of skills that can only be organized along the levels of wage… of wages. It’s not a one-on-one; it’s actually a set of skills in a profession that should be more valued but is presently devalued today, especially childcare workers, senior care workers.
My parents were both very ill last year and they both passed away, and the people who really worked to take care of them at the end were, mostly immigrant women, non-college-educated women who… whose profession was this kind of care work. And to organize… they are wage workers, and one should organize that level of work in such a way that they are fairly compensated and that the dignity of their work, which is so important in aging society, is, recognized. They’re only organized by temporary organizations; they don’t have any stability of jobs and they don’t have any seniority with regard to like the skills that they accrue over the ages, because it’s all about like whether someone liked you or not. “Oh, someone liked you, therefore you’re okay.” But there’s actually… there’s actually a certain really important set of skills within care work itself that should be recognized. They’re like gig workers, temp work… so organized as gig workers and temp workers now, yeah.
Interviewer: So, how do we actually make a coalition, if you have any tips, against both the elite of the PMC and the Trumps of the world in the US?
Catherine: This is the big question, isn’t it? How do we… Okay, so I feel like most people understand and rebel against irr… the irrationality of the liberals and the actual like, I don’t know, philistine, pure-willed power of, of Trumpers. But we… I think leftist intellectuals have to lead again. We’ve played a recumbent role. We’ve, you know, been eclipsed by something that, has to do with this kind of pseudo-populism that rose up after Thatcher was elected here and Reagan was elected in the States. And I think that there has to be a kind of, a voice of dissent with regard to liberalism and, right-wingism.
And it has to be strongly articulated as rejecting just the diversification of elites or recognition politics, and, articulating that the complexity of modern societies need… demands expertise but not managerialism, and that work should be managed by workers for the benefit of the majority, not for the narcissistic satisfaction of minority, be they capitalist or, liberal elites. Good luck to you. I may not see it in my lifetime, but it would be… it’s the job for, this next generation. And, we’re not even close to something that means social transformation, but I hope that we leave that door open for a kind of revolution.
Interviewer: Well, thank you, Catherine, that was very interesting.
Catherine: Thanks.