
Question2mo
Do people come to know themselves and the world in relative and deterministic ways based on what class position and identity locations combine to form the person you call yourself? In other words, do class and identity work to make a person who they are and to shape their way of understanding the world? That is to say experiences with class and identity categories (like race, gender, so on). I tend to think yes in general with space for variation of response to those experiences which are structurally and personally defining of selfhood.
Comments