An open access publication of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences
Fall 2006

From identity to solidarity

Author
David A. Hollinger

David A. Hollinger, a Fellow of the American Academy since 1997, is Preston Hotchkis Professor of American History at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the editor of a volume recently published under the auspices of the Academy, “The Humanities and the Dynamics of Inclusion since World War II” (2006). His “Postethnic America: Beyond Multiculturalism” was just republished in an expanded Tenth Anniversary Edition (2006). He is also the coeditor of “Reappraising Oppenheimer” (with Cathryn Carson, 2005).

Just who belongs together with whom, and for what purposes, and on what authority? Where and why do the claims of descent, religion, nationality, economic position, ideology, gender, and ‘civilization’ trump one another in the competition for the loyalties of individuals in an epoch of increased global integration? How much do we owe to ‘our own kind’–whatever that may mean– and how much to ‘strangers,’ to the rest of humankind? Our most discerning social observers often conclude that “the boundaries of responsibility are increasingly contested.”1

The problem of solidarity is shaping up as the problem of the twenty-first century. Yet the centrality of this problem to our time, and to our apparent future, is often obscured by the popularity of the term identity.2  This word sounds like a reference to a stable, if not static, condition, largely cultural and psychological, but the word as commonly used in the United States during the past several decades has actually functioned to assign political and social roles to individuals and to flag expectations about just who will make common cause with whom. To share an identity with other people is to feel in solidarity with them: we owe them something special, and we believe we can count on them in ways that we cannot count on the rest of the population. To come to grips with one’s true identity is to ground, on a presumptively primordial basis, vital connections to other people beyond the family.

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Endnotes

  • 1Samuel Scheffler, Boundaries and Allegiances: Problems of Justice and Responsibility in Liberal Thought (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001), 65.
  • 2For a highly informative comparative account of how the notion of ‘identity’ is currently understood and employed in a variety of nations around the world, see Nadia Tazi, ed., Keywords: Identity (New York: The Other Press, 2004). The classic study of the history of this idea in the United States down to about 1980 is Philip Gleason, “Identifying Identity: A Semantic History,” Journal of American History LXIX (1983): 910–931.
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