“If you’re talented and work hard, success (whatever that is) will be yours!” – So says the powerful system and ideology known as “meritocracy”. But if only it were so simple! Jo Littler joins Uncommon Sense to reflect on where this idea came from, how it became mainstream, and how it gets used by elites to convince us we live in a system that is open and fair when the reality is anything but that.
But Jo also shows things are changing. Since the crash of 2008 it’s been clear we’re living and working on a far from “level” playing field. Jo describes the recent embrace of non-work and the rise of assertive “left feminisms” as a sign of hope that the tide may be turning against meritocracy and shallow ideas of success, and discusses the work of people leading the way.
Plus: we reflect on the trope of escape. Why is it so often that to “succeed” in life, one must leave the place that they’re from and embrace the risky and new? And what’s up with the cliche of the “ladder” as a visual image for success? Jo reflects with reference to everyone from Ayn Rand to Raymond Williams. Also: we consider the 1990s rise of the “Mumpreneur” and the more recent phenomenon of the “Cleanfluencer”.
Guest: Jo Littler
Hosts: Rosie Hancock, Alexis Hieu Truong
Executive Producer: Alice Bloch
Sound Engineer: David Crackles
Music: Joe Gardner
Artwork: Erin Aniker
Find more about Uncommon Sense at The Sociological Review.
Episode Resources
Jo, Alexis and Rosie recommend
- C. Carraway’s book “Skint Estate”
- M. Brown and R. Jones’ book “Paint Your Town Red”
- D. Aronofsky’s film “Requiem for a Dream”
- R. Linklater’s film “Slacker”
From The Sociological Review
- Sociological reflections on ‘doing’ aspiration within the psychic landscape of class – Kim Allen
- Birds of a Feather – Natalie Wreyford
- The price of the ticket revised – Anthony Miro Born
By Jo Littler
- Against Meritocracy
- Mrs Hinch, the rise of the cleanfluencer and the neoliberal refashioning of housework (co-authored with Emma Casey)
- Left Feminisms: Conversations on the Personal and Political
Further reading
- “The Rise of the Meritocracy” – Michael Young
- “The Coming of Post-industrial Society” – Daniel Bell
- “Coloniality and Meritocracy in Unequal EU Migrations” – Simone Varriale
- “Perceptions of Meritocracy in Singapore” – Terri-Anne Teo
- “Meritocracy and Elitism in a Global City” – Kenneth Paul Tan
- “The Tyranny of Merit” – Michael Sandel
- “Inequality by Design” – Claude Fischer, et al.
- “Notes on the Perfect”– Angela McRobbie
- “Culture and Society” – Raymond Williams
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10/20/23 • 43 min
Uncommon Sense - Success, with Jo Littler
Transcript
Rosie Hancock 0:09
Hi, welcome back to Uncommon Sense, I'm Rosie Hancock in Sydney, Australia.
Alexis Hieu Truong 0:13
And I'm Alexis Hieu Truong in Gatineau/Ottawa, Canada. This show comes to you from the Sociological Review, and we're all about grabbing hold of an everyday notion that we tend to take for granted, right, and putting it in a kind of freeze frame, trying to see it differently – maybe more critically. The whole idea is that in doing
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