Rido
The politics of dignity (Spanish: la política de la dignidad; French: la politique de la dignité; Arabic: سياسة الكرامة siyāsat al-karāma) refers to a set of sociological, philosophical, and cultural analyses that examine how claims to dignity—and violations of it through humiliation or misrecognition—shape collective behavior, political mobilization, and institutional life. Though the term includes “politics,” its use extends across anthropology, social theory, affect studies, literary criticism, and normative philosophy. Building on arguments such as Charles Taylor’s account of equal dignity as a modern political value and misrecognition as a social harm, scholars explore how dignity-based grievances emerge when individuals or groups perceive their worth, status, or belonging to be denied. These frameworks have been applied to contexts ranging from populist resentment and authoritarian grievance-crafting to decolonial and postcolonial movements, where dignity serves as a central organizing principle for demands for recognition or structural justice.
Scholars note that the politics of dignity intersects with, but is not reducible to, the politics of resentment or grievance politics. Whereas grievance-based frameworks emphasize perceived slights, injustices, or status injuries, the politics of dignity focuses on claims for the restoration, protection, or recognition of a group’s social or moral standing. In this context the term is normatively neutral, that is, as a descriptive analytic category rather than a judgment about the moral worth of any particular use of dignity claims. Appeals to dignity can be mobilized on behalf of pluralistic, egalitarian, or emancipatory movements, but they can also be activated within exclusionary, nationalist, or authoritarian projects. Because perceived violations of dignity often take the form of collective resentments or humiliations, dignity-centered appeals frequently overlap with grievance narratives, even as they serve different political aims.
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