Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Cirsium

(4,213 posts)
81. Saida Grundy nails it
Sun Jun 21, 2026, 02:35 PM
17 hrs ago

Let's recognize and acknowledge the author: Saida Grundy. The Guardian has published a number of excellent articles she wrote.

https://www.theguardian.com/profile/saida-grundy

Saida Grundy is a feminist sociologist of race & ethnicity and Associate Professor of Sociology, African American & Black Diaspora Studies, and Women’s and Gender Studies at Boston University. Her research to date has focused upon formations and ideologies of gender and racialization within the Black middle class–specifically men. Using in-depth interviews, her current work examines graduates of Morehouse College, the nation’s only historically Black college for men. Quite simply, this work asks how, in light of an ongoing national climate and discourse about young Black men “in crisis,” the men of Morehouse experience racialization and the process of “making” manhood at an institution that frames Black male elites as the solution to the crisis and the rightful representatives of the racial agendas. Her most recent book, Respectable: Politics and Paradox in Making the Morehouse Man (University of California Press, 2022), expands upon this work.

Saida’s research interests currently span examinations of masculinity and “social justice capitalism,” racialized rape culture, and bridging hegemonic masculinity theories to our understandings of campus sexual assault. Her work has been supported by the Boston University Center for the Humanities, the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, the Social Science research Council, and the Andrew Mellon Foundation.

https://www.bu.edu/afam/profile/saida-grundy/

Recommendations

2 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Kick dalton99a 22 hrs ago #1
Thank you for posting this. It's the plain truth. n/t Mister Ed 22 hrs ago #2
The American Civil War NEVER ENDED. NoMoreRepugs 22 hrs ago #3
Had I been in power in 1865 lonely bird 1 hr ago #115
Yup. Ocelot II 22 hrs ago #4
White Working Class includes a lot of others now--given the devastating economy-- so... hlthe2b 22 hrs ago #5
It's a long article, worth the read. yardwork 20 hrs ago #44
I agree that it is about racism, but economics are also a factor. wnylib 18 hrs ago #67
Democrats did lose 30% of the young, male, black vote. questionseverything 18 hrs ago #70
In part because Democrats are now defending gay and trans people. Wednesdays 17 hrs ago #84
I venture to guess many/most DUers are "working class" and a lot are White. Are they all to be lumped in hlthe2b 16 hrs ago #88
In a sense, "access to power over other racial groups" is still viewed by lower class whites as an economic advantage. sop 21 hrs ago #6
+1 dalton99a 21 hrs ago #11
Great OP malaise 21 hrs ago #7
"I may get screwed over, but the Other, the 'They', they get screwed over even more." ck4829 21 hrs ago #8
I'm white working class. I am not MAGA! I am not racist! Please stop stereotyping. Doodley 21 hrs ago #9
You're right. It would be more accurate to add the modifier "some" before "white working class." sop 21 hrs ago #13
I live in a "working class" neighborhood in metro Detroit. Kid Berwyn 21 hrs ago #22
+1 Auggie 20 hrs ago #32
This message was self-deleted by its author yardwork 20 hrs ago #45
Geez. Nobody is stereotyping. yardwork 20 hrs ago #46
Not sure that "strong majority" of white working class still holds true. Not all white working class KPN 18 hrs ago #65
I don't know a single Trump voter who says they regret their vote. yardwork 17 hrs ago #77
I've never heard one say, "I think Trump is terrible, I regret voting for him, I think I'll vote 'D' next time." sop 13 min ago #116
We cannot discuss race without someone being offended Keepthesoulalive 19 hrs ago #49
As a white person I just don't understand the defensiveness. yardwork 19 hrs ago #60
Race is an uncomfortable subject Keepthesoulalive 18 hrs ago #64
A lot of Americans cling to our mythology. yardwork 17 hrs ago #73
It's classic bean souping... meadowlander 6 hrs ago #106
24% of black men voted for Trump. Why? It isn't as simple as black versus white. Yes, you need modifiers unless you Doodley 1 hr ago #113
I'm white working-class male and I Dr. T 19 hrs ago #51
Good for you Cirsium 17 hrs ago #76
What are you talking about? Doodley 1 hr ago #114
Spot on ABC123Easy 21 hrs ago #10
Bill Clinton had a chance to change this when he was in the White House FakeNoose 21 hrs ago #12
I can remember a picture of Clinton & Gore with a credit-card type card that would be your access card to Universal NBachers 20 hrs ago #27
Yeah, Clinton's eight years of peace and prosperity comradebillyboy 20 hrs ago #38
If not President Clinton MorbidButterflyTat 17 hrs ago #78
That's not what I implied, but thanks for sharing your thoughts FakeNoose 17 hrs ago #87
The majority of white people have voted republican since LBJ Keepthesoulalive 20 hrs ago #39
They started leaving way before Bill Clinion DFW 20 hrs ago #40
LBJ knew he was going to lose the southern racists by signing the Civil Rights Act FakeNoose 16 hrs ago #89
Read the essay linked in the OP. yardwork 20 hrs ago #47
No. White working class left in post-civil rights era after the two parties diverged on race, cultural changes. betsuni 19 hrs ago #55
Fox News and hate radio push a steady diet of anti-Black, anti-immigrant messaging. yardwork 19 hrs ago #58
At the gym yesterday .. justsomeguy01 19 hrs ago #62
From the Right: "liberals hate white people," other direction: "Dem establishment ignores white working class betsuni 18 hrs ago #66
...to his credit.. thomski64 7 min ago #117
Not true Cirsium 17 hrs ago #75
I would hate to see anyone here take what the author said personally. ShazzieB 5 hrs ago #109
How do you "install" universal healthcare? LisaM 13 hrs ago #103
Myth there are simple solutions for everything but corrupt establishment stops it. betsuni 6 hrs ago #107
Clinton wasn't the only thing happening when white working class started leaving MadameButterfly 1 hr ago #112
While often true, it's not a universal, absolute truth Fiendish Thingy 21 hrs ago #14
But will they continue to vote for the party of progress Keepthesoulalive 18 hrs ago #68
The paradigm has shifted Fiendish Thingy 17 hrs ago #86
I wish I could share your enthusiasm Keepthesoulalive 16 hrs ago #91
The evidence indicates the billionaires are losing Fiendish Thingy 15 hrs ago #98
They will control the House for a generation. mr715 16 hrs ago #94
I think it is important to note that West Virginia mr715 16 hrs ago #92
But why Keepthesoulalive 16 hrs ago #93
White, working class voters. mr715 16 hrs ago #95
West Virginia is one of the most beautiful states Keepthesoulalive 15 hrs ago #97
Republicans told people Democratic environmental regulations would take all their jobs. betsuni 5 hrs ago #108
"centrist, neoliberalism and triangulation, deregulation of energy" -- for example? Blame Democrats! betsuni 4 hrs ago #110
That's true. Janbdwl72 6 hrs ago #105
Worth reading, and here's the money shot... TygrBright 21 hrs ago #15
When I hear him say make Americkkka great again it's really make racism great again! kimbutgar 21 hrs ago #16
great read. mopinko 21 hrs ago #17
I worked in Greenville MS back in 1989 when Boeing had a plant there KS Toronado 21 hrs ago #18
There is in group discussion Keepthesoulalive 19 hrs ago #59
Really wish more on DU would understand this reality. rogue emissary 21 hrs ago #19
It's a shallow combination of ownership within class identity and fear of unknown competition haele 19 hrs ago #50
Yes, artificial and unnecessary division based on falsehood that Democrats "ignore the working class." betsuni 18 hrs ago #71
And these beliefs and preferences are very difficult to counter, even with the "right messaging" Redleg 21 hrs ago #20
The story of the white sharecropper poisoning his black sharecropper neighbor's mule come to mind. Squaredeal 21 hrs ago #21
Jeezus. Humans need a reboot. Joinfortmill 21 hrs ago #25
Not all white sharecroppers were racist pieces of crap. MerryBlooms 13 hrs ago #102
Republicans understand this. SamuelAdams 21 hrs ago #23
dumb, dumber, dumbest Joinfortmill 21 hrs ago #24
I think they need somebody to look down on. zanana1 20 hrs ago #26
I wonder if there's not some of that going on with "us" TheProle 19 hrs ago #57
Sounds like the older part of my family....MAGATs all BeneteauBum 20 hrs ago #28
This is a "duh" headline..white working class vote their hate for "the other"... agingdem 20 hrs ago #29
Not really "duh" since we aren't used to seeing this from the media, at least in the U.S. Redleg 20 hrs ago #30
The Guardian is British paper...our papers/MSM are so terrified of MAGA agingdem 20 hrs ago #35
... Solly Mack 20 hrs ago #31
Worked in an auto plant just West of Detroit. multigraincracker 20 hrs ago #33
We need to go back to colorblind (if we still can) gulliver 20 hrs ago #34
Yes, this is central to understanding the American project and why it has failed. nt Blasphemer 20 hrs ago #36
"Mississippi Burning" duckworth969 20 hrs ago #37
A great movie- I doubt it would be made today, given the kow-towing to Trump Redleg 20 hrs ago #43
It's because of racism we can't have the nice things that folks have in other rich countries. Fil1957 20 hrs ago #41
And yet...guys like Graham Platner, Zohran Mamdani, Abdul El Sayed biocube 20 hrs ago #42
Post removed Post removed 19 hrs ago #48
And what about brown men with "foreign-sounding names" like Mamdani and El Sayed? biocube 19 hrs ago #54
American Arabs are white adjacent in the minds of many. yardwork 19 hrs ago #56
That's just great. MorbidButterflyTat 17 hrs ago #82
What rhetoric is Platner using that signals he is a racist? I find your attack on him to be problematic at best. He is Celerity 16 hrs ago #90
What is the point? Cirsium 17 hrs ago #79
Ive pushed back on this for decades Cosmocat 19 hrs ago #52
yes, like Black people have known since forever yobrault1 19 hrs ago #53
While I agree to a point, but it's waaay more complicated than that. paleotn 19 hrs ago #61
We enable that to happen, by ... Bluetus 19 hrs ago #63
Noooooo! We Just Need To UNDERSTAND THEM! TALK With Them! Really.....! ColoringFool 18 hrs ago #69
I live in Pennsylvania and I know plenty of people like that. Alice B. 18 hrs ago #72
I grew up in rural Ohio and I hear it often from people I grew up with. yardwork 17 hrs ago #74
People start framing things like, the "Obama Library" MorbidButterflyTat 17 hrs ago #83
Which is why we will never see a black Republican presidential nominee in our lifetimes. Wednesdays 17 hrs ago #80
Saida Grundy nails it Cirsium 17 hrs ago #81
The ruling class uses racism orthoclad 17 hrs ago #85
All American racists love Trump and would never vote for anyone else. Martin68 16 hrs ago #96
Wish i could JustAnotherGen 14 hrs ago #99
Some eyes are being opened here Keepthesoulalive 8 hrs ago #104
Yes, has The Guardian stamp of progressive approval, no shooting the messenger. All data says same thing. betsuni 4 hrs ago #111
We have made progress in the face of racist forces manipulated by corrupt wealth. We will again. pat_k 14 hrs ago #100
Keeping it sinple and visual. usonian 13 hrs ago #101
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»The Guardian nails it: W...»Reply #81