When Barack Obama listed as one of his summer reads a year ago, Yascha Mounkās reflections on the frailties of liberal democracy acquired a new audience and authority.
Yet having thoroughly skewered right-wing populism and its brash demagogues in popular books, his Good Fight podcast series and essays for The Atlantic, Mounkās next target may surprise his considerable fanbase. This month, published by Penguin, explains how dangerous styles of thinking developed in and once largely confined to the academy have now gone mainstream ā and why we should all be worried.
Criticising āwokeā campus culture is a staple for the conservative right so how did Mounk, a darling of the liberal left and professor of the practice of international affairs at Johns Hopkins University, end up sharing the same concerns?
Having grown up in a Jewish family in 1980s Munich, Mounk āperhaps had a keener awareness than some others of how quickly seemingly stable political systems can turn sour, and what that means for ethnic and religious minorities within those countries,ā he explains. Many of his motherās Polish family were killed or exiled during the Holocaust. But when, as a PhD student at Harvard University, he was first reflecting on its powerful central message ā that seemingly stable liberal democracies could collapse quickly thanks to right-wing populism ā his colleagues were sceptical prior to 2016, when the threat of a figure like Trump to the US political system seemed remote.
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When he and a colleague presented research āshowing a decline in support for democratic institutions in many Western countriesā, he recalls, other academics were sceptical and made comments such as, āItās a fun argument for you to be making, and youāve found some interesting stuff, but surely youāre not really concerned about the future of American democracy?ā He was also warned by senior scholars that trying to address what he saw as a major crisis for a wider readership was, at best, a distraction from producing specialist articles in leading journals.
Yet by the time his breakthrough book, 2018ās , was published, many of Mounkās colleagues had come to share his fears about how āa system of government [liberal democracy] that had seemed immutable looks as though it might come apartā. Still, he has some sharp criticisms of universities. At a time when the US needed to ārenew civic faithā, much teaching in the humanities and the more politicised social sciences, writes Mounk, āfar from seeking to preserve the most valuable aspects of our political systemā, largely aimed to āhelp students recognize its manifold injustices and hypocrisiesā.
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Furthermore, the powerful career incentives in elite institutions that push young scholars to focus on research at the expense of teaching often led to students and faculty making āa tacit pact of nonaggression: as long as students donāt take up too much of their time, professors will make it easy for the bulk of their charges to get a degree without thinking too hardā.
Much of this is relevant to The Identity Trap. Although Mounk stresses that his āmain concern has been and continues to be threats from the populist far rightā, he has long devoted attention to āthe ways in which liberal values could also come under threat from parts of the left ā and how a failure to appreciate and stand up for those liberal values actually makes the job of the right easierā. He has now opted to explore this in depth.
While Mounk is careful to avoid the word āwokeā and even the term āidentity politicsā as too contentious, it would not be unfair to describe The Identity Trap as an āanti-wokeā book. There have already been quite a few others, including predictable polemics from right-wing pundits about āsnowflakesā and ācancel cultureā. So, as a self-described ālongtime member of the leftā, where does Mounk feel that he is breaking new ground?

āWhat makes it distinctive,ā he replies, āis that itās the first comprehensive attempt to understand where this ideology comes from [and] how it could become so influential in the mainstreamā. The book āthen builds its critiques on a more intimate and sophisticated understanding of these ideasā.
Unlike many conservative writers, Mounk accepts the contention that āmany societies that claim to be just and democratic, that claim to treat all their members equally, have historically failed to live up to those ideals in terrible waysā¦Just about every democratic society today continues to discriminate against vulnerable minorities in all kinds of ways.ā
What he totally disagrees with, however, is the idea that āwe need to do away with [our] universal aspirations because theyāre just pulling the wool over peopleās eyes. So the only way to build a better society is to explicitly build politics around groups in such a way that how youāre treated depends on your ethnic, religious and sexual identity.ā On the contrary: universalist liberal values remain āthe best guide to building a better futureā, according to The Identity Trap, āespecially if we recognize that these ideals are yet to be fully realizedā.
The first section of the book explores the work of Michel Foucault, postcolonial theorists such as Edward Said and Gayatri Spivak and the pioneers of critical race theory, Derrick Bell and KimberlĆ© Crenshaw. Mounk believes these are all āserious thinkers whom itās worth grappling with, who have some important insights to offerā but he strongly disputes the claim that āthe United States has not made any real progress on racial issues since Jim Crow or perhaps before thatā. And that claim has become more problematic since around 2010, before which, such ideas, while āvery influential in universitiesā, remained āquite marginal to society as a wholeā, he tells 51³Ō¹Ļ.
Since then, a simplified amalgam of the ideas of Foucault, Said and Bell, forged into what Mounk calls āthe identity synthesisā, has moved into the mainstream, he says. āThe language of postgraduate seminars at Harvard turned into the language of Democrat presidential candidates and some of the social customs which started on Ivy League campuses became the social customs of broad swaths of the American and British elite,ā he argues.
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This development clearly makes the 41-year-old political scientist, who took US citizenship in 2017, very uncomfortable. Though he enjoyed his time at Trinity College, Cambridge and Harvard, Mounk is worried about the wider impact of such institutions on their societies: āAt the age of 18, you move to these fancy places, youāre around all these other people who are going to be incredibly influential and powerful. Then you move into neighbourhoods in London or New York or Los Angeles where most of the people you are hanging out with have a similar educational background and are working in similar fields,ā he says. āBy the time that youāre 40 or 50 and have genuine power and influence, youāve been disconnected from anybody who didnāt go to one of the top universities for the majority of your lifetime.ā
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What emerges from this, continues Mounk, is āa cultural elite, of which Iām a part, that is very disconnected from the rest of the society, but sits in judgement on the word choices and customs of a lot of our fellow citizens. That provokes a lot of the anger that can then be channelled by far-right populists. I do think that that is an important element of how these societies function ā and often my friends and colleagues are in denial about that.ā
It is here that Mounk makes another link to his background. Since he grew up Jewish in Germany, he remembers experiencing āsome antisemitism and straightforward discriminationā but also āquite a lot of creepy philosemitismā, when āpeople wanted to prove how sorry they were about the Nazis by treating you with kid gloves. I often found that to be an equally big barrier to being friends with somebody, to feeling that they were treating me as an individual rather than as a representative of some abstract group.ā
Today, Mounk sees something similar in the way that activist groups committed to intersectionality, as he puts it in The Identity Trap, now expect their members to āsign up to a very broad catalogue of causes and positions ā with the necessary stance on each being determined by the group that is most directly affectedā.
āThe idea of solidarity weāve embraced in a large part of politics and public discourse is really impoverished,ā he explains. āI canāt understand you if you come from a different ethnic or cultural group, or your sexual orientation is different from mine. So what it means to be in solidarity with you is simply to defer to you.ā
Instead, Mounk wants to ādefend a version of solidarity that is based on true mutual understanding. I may need to recognise that you are aware of certain forms of injustice to which itās easy for me to be blind, but political solidarity then means fighting against them because they violate my own vision of the kind of society we want to live in.ā
One of the striking features of The Identity Trap is that Mounk is generally supportive of the values and goals of those he criticises, even when he is opposed to their methods. On affirmative action, which was recently outlawed by the US Supreme Court, he takes the view that āitās certainly understandable why, given the history of slavery and centuries of discrimination against African Americans, it would be deeply troubling if there was a very small number of black students on, for example, Ivy League campuses, and Iām certainly sympathetic to universities wanting to find ways to ensure that doesnāt happen.ā
Unfortunately, Mounk goes on, āone of the levers that universities have pulled in order to achieve that effect is to discriminate against Asian Americans, and thatās simply unacceptableā. Yet the clear evidence for this is often ignored because āthereās a general political tendency that, when youāre in pursuit of a good, you donāt want to look at some of the bad that you have to do on the road to achieving thatā¦Itās not a set of facts that youāre encouraged to look at.ā
Another problematic concept is cultural appropriation. Mounkās book admits that this concept is often used to call attention to genuinely offensive behaviour, such as a , where, along with ponchos and sombreros, āsome of the girls had dressed up as maids. Two boys were dancing on a table clad in construction outfits.ā And he acknowledges that he has āviscerally understood how intimidating the public display of racial hatred can beā ever since he witnessed a neo-Nazi rally as a 15-year-old. Hence, he āretain[s] real sympathy for some of the core arguments against free speechā. Nonetheless, he also argues forcefully that the notion of ācultural appropriationā is incoherent and unhelpful and that the dangers of restricting free speech outweigh any benefits, not least because of āthe impossibility of appointing smart and selfless censorsā.
It can be difficult for university presidents to hold the free speech line when controversial speakers are invited on to their campuses and students, faculty and sometimes even donors raise objections. Has Mounk got any advice for them?
They must be utterly committed to upholding academic freedom, he responds, but he sees no reason why they cannot also make their own feelings known. They could say, for example: āIām not going to forbid certain kinds of speakers from coming to campus, even when I deeply disagree with them and find them offensive. I am willing to join a peaceful student protest that expresses dissent from their views, but the moment that turns violent, or somebody tries to disrupt their speech, there will be disciplinary consequences. Given how competitive entrance at least to elite universities in America has become, I donāt think that it will be overtaxing the cognitive capabilities of students to trust them to understand this argument.ā
As a darling of the political left, Mounkās criticisms of Americaās elite universities will probably hit harder than the anti-woke rants to which institutions have become accustomed. His constructive tone, however, may help higher education institutions to play their part more effectively in a defence of democracy to which he has dedicated himself.
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The Identity Trap: A Story of Ideas and Power in Our Time by Yascha Mounk is published by Penguin Books on 26 September.
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