What Are You Reading? Responses to the Election and Inauguration

From the Studio: Cultural Anthropology Responds to Trump

Photo by Patrick Tomasso.

Like many anthropologists, we responded to this postelection moment by turning to books. But confronted by the long lists of readings in crowdsourced syllabi, we were both impressed and paralyzed by the impossibility of reading such a vast number of pages. To help us figure out what to read first—and to help the readers of Cultural Anthropology do the same—we asked a number of scholars, including early-career scholars in our Contributing Editors Program, to reflect on a text (or a few) that has helped them to understand the current political moment. We’ve compiled their responses here.

This is an ongoing, community-built project: if you would like to submit a post to this series, please email Ned Dostaler ([email protected]) or Julia Sizek ([email protected]) with your contribution of approximately 350–450 words, discussing a small number of texts. We welcome a wide range of submissions, from personal narratives to more academic takes on the issues of the day.

Posts in This Series

Pierre Bourdieu and Antonio Gramsci

Pierre Bourdieu and Antonio Gramsci

Donald Trump’s election reminded me, yet again, just how inconsequential our activities as academics are to the trajectory of national politics (and not only in... More

Octavia Butler

Octavia Butler

Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower (1993) begins in July 2024 on the fifteenth birthday of Lauren Olamina, a Black girl living near Los Angeles. The city and... More

John Hartigan

John Hartigan

John Hartigan’s Racial Situations: Class Predicaments of Whiteness in Detroit (1999) engages Whiteness in a prescient way that is directly relevant to the curre... More

Zora Neale Hurston and Gerald Berreman

Zora Neale Hurston and Gerald Berreman

This past week, I’ve been writing on Donald Trump and the anthropology of lying, and I reread Veena Das’s (1998) article on rumors and the social production of ... More

Michel Foucault

Michel Foucault

We, along with many other scholars, are reading Lecture Eleven in Michel Foucault’s Society Must Be Defended: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1975–1976 (2003... More

Cheryl Harris and Robin D. G. Kelley

Cheryl Harris and Robin D. G. Kelley

We cannot change this country without winning over some portion of white working people, and I am not talking about gaining votes for the Democratic Party. I am... More

Iris Marion Young and Ernst Kantorowicz

Iris Marion Young and Ernst Kantorowicz

We have arrived at a paradoxical historical moment when nearly everyone favors democracy, but apparently few believe that democratic governance can do anything.... More

Ashis Nandy, Teju Cole, and Zadie Smith

Ashis Nandy, Teju Cole, and Zadie Smith

The week after the election, I was scheduled to guest lecture for the course in which I was serving as a teaching assistant during the fall semester. The topic ... More

Ari Ne’eman, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Hortense Spillers, and Elizabeth Povinelli

Ari Ne’eman, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Hortense Spillers, and Elizabeth Povinelli

The question of what to read in response to the shit storm of the election been surfacing in many ways. As the ill-fated election night wore on, I found myself ... More

Anna Tsing and Michael Taussig

Anna Tsing and Michael Taussig

The current political moment involves an overwhelming mass hysteria under the apocalyptic sign of Donald Trump’s presidency. It also features the shutting down ... More

Edward Casey and Mary Watkins

Edward Casey and Mary Watkins

I’ve been thinking a lot about The Wall: what might make a project of such gargantuan and disruptive scale so appealing to many Americans, and how to think and ... More

Alexis Pauline Gumbs and Maureen N. McLane

Alexis Pauline Gumbs and Maureen N. McLane

I have been trying to think differently about the process of ethnographic storytelling these days, about what sensations/feelings/experiences language can or ca... More