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Class solidarity is no walk in the park
ADAM THERON-LEE RENSCH talks to Mike Quille about what it is to be a working-class writer in the US and patronising perceptions of class that abound left, right and centre
Adam Theron-Lee Rensch

Can you tell us about the book and why you decided to write it as a memoir?

I was very resistant to writing a traditional memoir, and the first draft of the book included very little personal narrative.

I believe the memoir or “creative nonfiction” genre tends to perpetuate neoliberal narratives that eliminate structural critique in favour of emotional identification. Everything becomes about the writer as an individual: their suffering, their triumph, etc. Who cares about the larger set of social relations that make this possible? What matters is what is moving enough to sell copy. So, I knew I didn’t want to play into this.

At the same time, I realised my life was something of a convenient structure onto which I could hang my critique. I was born in 1984, came of age in the post-9/11 landscape, and internalised the liberal obsession with meritocracy. If I was going to make something of myself, I thought, I had to become educated.

One of the ways you are clearly hoping that readers will “unlearn” their political outlook is through a more accurate understanding of their class position, and the importance of class-based politics. What is your understanding of class, and your thoughts on how to achieve a cultural shift towards greater class consciousness among working people?

What do you think is the responsibility of cultural workers – artists, poets, writers, film-makers, playmakers etc – to help our class develop and apply a more class-conscious approach to social and political campaigns?

Finally, what is your view on the result of the election, in terms of the need to develop and promote class-based, socialist politics in the US?

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