I’m really happy to see this open-access article finally out doi.org/10.1111/anti...
It explores ‘varieties of racial capitalism’ through the experiences of Black and Muslim Italians who moved to Britain during the 2010s and sometimes returned to Italy (or moved elsewhere) 1/5
Posts by Simone Varriale
#sociologicalplaylist 5: a fascinating ethnography of trap music, aspirations and music-making among young migrants and minoritised Italians in Milan (in the context of moral panics about 'maranza', police violence & institutional racism). Really important work & beautifully written (in Italian)
New article out! We rethink ‘meritocracy’ not as a fixed belief but as practical, embodied knowledge transformed through experiences of social and geographical mobility onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/... 1/6
Thank you Dion!
#sociologicalplaylist 4: a recent Italian translation of Lea Ypi's work on class and migration. She's a political theorist & sociologists would learn significantly from how she recentres class in debates about migration & racism. The original essays are in English (probably easy to find via GS)
No emails in the last 4 hours... everyone is marking 😅
I'm still at 20%(ish) 😭
Random facts: it's nice to be published in a geography journal (as a sociologist who was bad at geography in school). And it's the first time (in 12 years) I don't reference Bourdieu 🙃
Finally, the article explores how some participants got caught in Britain’s post-Brexit ‘re-bordering’, and how intersecting inequalities shape unequal experiences of Britain’s labour market 4/5
I also show how Italian citizenship law stratifies access to intra-EU mobility and creates legal inequalities between families and within them. This echoes longstanding arguments by scholars and activists about the institutionally racist effects of Italy’s citizenship regime 3/5
The findings highlight the economic dimension of racism in Italy: how labour-market insecurity shapes family and individual biographies, affects belonging and ideas of ‘integration’, and can feed into decisions to emigrate 2/5
I’m really happy to see this open-access article finally out doi.org/10.1111/anti...
It explores ‘varieties of racial capitalism’ through the experiences of Black and Muslim Italians who moved to Britain during the 2010s and sometimes returned to Italy (or moved elsewhere) 1/5
#sociologicalplaylist 3: Jonathan Dean's article on 'left politics in the age of the social media influencer'. A really sharp analysis of UK-US online left culture. Sadly Jonathan is no longer with us, I wish I'd known him better (met him briefly years ago). journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10....
#sociologicalPlaylist p2, Alessandra Lembo's study of country music fans and their taste trajectories. A criminally under-cited paper (ethnographies of music taste using Bourdieu but in a critical way are as rare as unicorns) www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
I might start a #sociologicalPlaylist (books, articles etc. I think should be rediscovered). Here's Sayer's Why Things Matter to People, a masterpiece on everyday ethics & morality. Philosophically powered but crystal-clear writing that takes time, care & craft www.cambridge.org/core/books/w...
Add growing emigration to this and UK politics will soon experience 'postcolonial panic attacks' rather than the usual 'postcolonial melancholia'
I wrote ‘The urban life of workers in post-Soviet Russia: Engaging in everyday struggle’. It tells the story of working-class communities in post-industrial cities explaining the challenges they face and showing how they struggle with them. manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/9781526167637/
This article by @simov.bsky.social on Black and Muslim Italians navigating post-Brexit Britain brings double consciousness into the realities of global mobility. It's a sharp, thoughtful take on how opportunity, recognition, and belonging collide. onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
Labour's announcements on asylum seem part of an 'anything goes' tendency started by the Conservative governments, essentially going towards reneging on basic international law obligations. The confusion in announcements makes it clear that it is about electoral signalling rather than policy itself
We also show the damages of Italy’s institutional and everyday racism: how it pushes new generations of Black, Muslim and minoritised Italians abroad and the scars it leaves on their sense of identity and belonging. For many, post-Brexit Britain remains desirable compared to this context. 6/6
Yet ‘meritocratic Britain’ is a practical, fuzzy ‘map’: it is transformed by the experience of living in Britain (sometimes leading to new migrations) and co-exists with critique of ‘British’ racism. 5/6
Key findings: participants don’t invoke ‘meritocracy’ as a coherent ideology, but are attracted by imaginaries of ‘meritocratic Britain’ which resonate with their search for recognition, equality and security 4/6
We draw on interviews with Black and Muslim Italians living in post-Brexit Britain and Du Bois’ ‘double consciusness’, which helps us understand racialised minorities’ relationship with hegemonic narratives in more nuanced ways than ‘strong’ ideology theories 3/6
By centring racialised minorities' double-consciousness, practical knowledge & struggles for recognition, we highlight the limitations of false consciousness, misinformation and psychological compensation as explanations for meritocratic belief 2/6
New article out! We rethink ‘meritocracy’ not as a fixed belief but as practical, embodied knowledge transformed through experiences of social and geographical mobility onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/... 1/6
Probably the days of 'excited to announce' are over, but I got an article accepted in a geography journal, which *is* exciting because I was crap at geography in school 😅
www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcv5...
This looks great: “A Problem with the Person”: Class Blindness and the Reproduction of Social Class Inequality
Rediscovering this great track & album youtu.be/W3Ud0UG7JbQ?...
“The far-right’s emphasis on culture conveniently obscures economic inequalities between different factions of the working- and lower-middle class: everyone becomes a ‘lad at the pub’” – @simov.bsky.social in our latest blog post #LSEInequalitiesBlog
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