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Author Archives: Kenan Malik

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A SMALL STATE NOT SO SMALL FOR SOME

October 13, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the myths of the “small state”, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 9 October 2022, under the headline “Libertarians will let you live life as you wish – as long as you’re rich and powerful”. “I’m not going to tell you what to do or what to think or how to live your life,” Liz Truss told the Conservative party conference last week. “When the government plays too big a role, people feel smaller.” Conservatives have […]

Categories: Britain, Politics • Tags: anti-union laws, conservative party, hostile environment, liz truss, policing, small state, strikes, suella braverman, workers rights

9

BLUE LABOUR AND THE CRITIQUE OF LIBERALISM

October 6, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on radical and conservative critiques of liberalism, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 2 October 2022, under the headline “From Aristotle to Meloni, the ‘common good’ has been used to divide and rule”. A prime minister elevated to her role on the basis of 81,000 votes from Conservative party members; the imposition of a regressive “mini”-budget; a policy that a majority of people oppose but the real challenge to which has come through the actions of a handful […]

Categories: Britain, Class, Politics • Tags: blue labour, brothers of italy, common good, communitarians, conservatism, david goodhart, edmund burke, far right, giorgia meloni, maurice glasman, postliberals, radical universalism, reactionary right, roger scruton, universalism

LIBERALISM, CLASS POLITICS AND THE CULTURE WARS

September 29, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on changing public attitudes and the culture wars, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 25 September 2022, under the headline “Britain is becoming a more liberal and open society. But we are ever more divided too”. “The ‘woke’ outlook on national identity, national sentiment and immigration now tends to be the more popular”; and “whereas it might once have represented a widespread view, now the ‘anti-woke’ position on ‘culture war’ issues often appear to be more of a […]

Categories: Britain, Class • Tags: anti-racism, brexit, british politics, british social attitudes, culture wars, john curtice, liberalism, social polarisation, wokeness

THE THRILL OF THE ACTUAL

September 22, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the virtual and the actual, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 18 September 2022, under the headline “The web has expanded the reach of art but nothing beats standing in front of a Picasso”. It is more than 30 years since I saw Pablo Picasso’s Guernica face to face, as it were, in Madrid’s Prado Museum, shortly before it was moved into the Museo Reina Sofia, where it still hangs. Painted in 1937 in furious protest at […]

Categories: Culture & Books • Tags: andre malraux, art, digital art, guernica, moma, pablo picasso, painting, virtual museum

1

QUESTIONING THE MONARCHY

September 15, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the need to question the monarchy, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 10 September 2022, under the headline “We can respect popular affection for the Queen and question the idea of royalty”. King Charles III. As soon as one monarch dies, another takes her place. It is a seamless transition that, for many, is both necessary and reassuring, helping sustain the myth of monarchy that, while kings and queens may pass on, the institution endures. […]

Categories: Britain, Politics • Tags: democracy, king charges, monarchy, queen elizabeth, republicanism, royal prerogative, royalty

1

CUTTING ACCESS, NOT MEETING NEEDS

September 8, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the rise of the regulatory state and its impact of public services, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 4 September 2022, under the headline “It’s no wonder I couldn’t see a GP: limiting access to services is the point”. It’s a problem familiar to millions: the trials of trying to book a doctor’s appointment. Last week, suffering from a debilitating condition but not an emergency, I called the GP surgery to get it checked out. […]

Categories: Britain, Politics • Tags: austerity, grenfell tower, nhs, regulatory state, trilateral commission

HOME OFFICE STATISTICS AND HOME OFFICE PROPAGANDA

September 1, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the reality of immigration statistics, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 28 August 2022, under the headline “There are lies, damn lies, and then there is Home Office propaganda about migrants”. There are Home Office statistics and then there are Home Office press releases. And the gap between the two is often so wide that even the most resourceful migrant would be unlikely to discover a way of navigating from the one to the other. Last week, the […]

Categories: Britain, Race & Immigration • Tags: afghan refugees, albanians, asylum seekers, channel migrants, home office, immigration, immigration statistics, priti patel, refugees, rwanda deportation scheme

MANAGING THE UNWANTED

August 25, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on Britain’s Rwanda deportation scheme, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 21 August 2022, under the headline “Treating refugees like ‘waste people’ is abhorrent, wherever they end up”. “There are state control, security, surveillance structures from the national level down… Political opposition is not tolerated and arbitrary detention, torture and even killings are accepted methods of enforcing control too.” The email from a Foreign Office official to colleagues in the Home Office in response to Britain’s plans to […]

Categories: Britain, Race & Immigration • Tags: deportations, fortress europe, human rights, offshoring, paul kagame, priti patel, racism, rwanda, rwanda deportation scheme

TO SAY THE UNSAYABLE

August 18, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on Salman Rushdie and free speech, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 14 August 2022, under the headline “Where Salman Rushdie defied those who would silence him, today too many fear causing offence”. “A poet’s work,” one of the characters in Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses observes, is “to name the unnamable, to point at frauds, to take sides, start arguments, shape the world and stop it from going to sleep.” “And if rivers of blood flow from […]

Categories: Atheism & Religion, Culture & Books, Free Speech • Tags: ayatollah khomeini, censorship, fatwa, free speech, islam, muslims, offence, peter mayer, salman rushdie, the satanic verses

2

BENEATH THE SKIN OF OUR OBSESSION WITH WHITENESS

August 11, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the contemporary obsession with whiteness, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 7 August 2022, under the headline “Beneath the skin of our obsession with whiteness lie deeper fears about our place in the world”. It is Viktor Orbán’s worst nightmare: “One morning Anders, a white man, woke up to find he had turned a deep and undeniable brown.” It is the opening line to Mohsin Hamid’s new novel The Last White Man, a line that deliberately echoes […]

Categories: Culture & Books, Race & Immigration • Tags: critical race theory, derrick bell, franz kafka, identity politics, mohsin hamid, racism, ta-nehisi coates, the last white man, viktor orban, white identity, whiteness

THE ENDS OF EDUCATION

August 4, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the working class and the meaning of education, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 31 July 2022, under the headline “If education is all about getting a job, the humanities are left just to the rich”. “We rented a garret, for which we paid (I think) 25s a year, bought a few second-hand forms and desks, borrowed a few chairs from the people in the house, bought a shilling’s worth of coals… and started our […]

Categories: Britain, Class, Culture & Books • Tags: browne report, david runciman, diversity, education, education cuts, humanities, jonathan rose, robbins report, universities, working class

1

CLASS AND POWER IN CONTEMPORARY BRITAIN

July 28, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on class, power the different social meanings of “regulation”, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 24 July 2022, under the headline “Worship the rich, neglect the poor? Adam Smith’s words still capture how power works”. If you want to see how class and power operate in Britain today, look at the different ways in which “regulation” is applied to working-class people and businesses. In the one case, it is about imposing ever-tighter restrictions, making it increasingly […]

Categories: Britain, Class, Justice & Liberties • Tags: adam smith, anti-union laws, conservative party, grenfell fire, grenfell tower, strikes, trade unions

2

ON DIVERSITY AND ITS LIMITS

July 21, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on diversity and the Tory leadership campaign, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 17 July 2022, under the headline “Give me a pale male PM with great policies over a ‘diverse’ one reinforcing inequality”. It is not the British version of the Obama moment, when the election in 2008 of an African American to the White House appeared to mark a significant moment in American history. The magnitude of slavery in US history, the memory of […]

Categories: Britain, Politics, Race & Immigration • Tags: conservative party, diversity, identity politics, racism

1

YE ARE MANY – THEY ARE FEW

July 13, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the legacy of Percy Bysshe Shelley 200 years after his death, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 10 July 2022, under the headline “Long gone, but speaking clearly to our age – Shelley, the poet of moral and political corruption”. “Shall rank corruption pass unheeded by, Shall flattery’s voice ascend the wearied sky; And shall no patriot tear the veil away Which hides these vices from the face of day? Is public virtue dead? – […]

Categories: Culture & Books, Justice & Liberties • Tags: freedom struggles, mary shelley, peterloo, poetry, queen mab, richard holmes, romanticism, shelley, the masque of anarchy, working class

THE DRIP OF FAR RIGHT IDEAS INTO MAINSTREAM THINKING

July 6, 2022 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the seeping of far-right ideas into mainstream thinking, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 3 July 2022, under the headline “It’s not just the far right that should worry us. It’s their ideas seeping into the mainstream”. It is not often that the election of deputy speakers to a parliament can be described as portentous. The appointment last week of vice-presidents (the equivalent of deputy speakers) of the French national assembly was almost unnoticed outside […]

Categories: International, Politics • Tags: alain de benoist, communist party, douglas murray, emmanuel macron, far right, france, front national, gerald darmien, great replacement theory, immigration, marine le pen, pcf, racism, rassemblement national

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WELCOME TO PANDAEMONIUM

Kenan Malik

I am a writer, lecturer and broadcaster. My latest book is Not So Black and White: A History of Race from White Supremacy to Identity Politics.

Pandaemonium is a place for my writings, talks and photography. I also have a separate photography website called Light Infusion. You can (occasionally) find me on Twitter, Bluesky and Instagram. And you can contact me by email.

Kenan Malik

MY LATEST BOOK

“A precious provocation… Malik unsettles the absurdities, pieties and default settings of contemporary race-talk.” Paul Gilroy

“A brilliant book… Malik writes with great clarity and a profound sense of purpose. If you want to read just one book on modern racism, this is the one.” Vivek Chibber

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From my photography website Light Infusion

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