Against Meritocracy Quotes

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Against Meritocracy: Culture, power and myths of mobility Against Meritocracy: Culture, power and myths of mobility by Jo Littler
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“Meritocracy offers a ladder system of social mobility, promoting a socially corrosive ethic of competitive self-interest which both legitimises inequality and damages community ‘by requiring people to be in a permanent state of competition with each other’ (Hickman 2009). The ‘fair’ neoliberal meritocratic dream rests on the idea of a level playing field, conveniently ignoring systematic inequality, social location and the head start accrued by the children of those at the top or high up the social ladder.”
Jo Littler, Against Meritocracy: Culture, power and myths of mobility
“The first problem with the contemporary meaning of meritocracy is that it endorses a competitive, linear, hierarchical system in which by definition certain people must be left behind. The top cannot exist without the bottom. Not everyone can ‘rise’.”
Jo Littler, Against Meritocracy: Culture, power and myths of mobility
“Meritocracy may seem a very contemporary idea, but, as Raymond Williams argued in a book review in 1958, the ladder is a perfect symbol of the bourgeois idea of society, for, while it undoubtedly offers the opportunity to climb, ‘it is a device that can only be used individually; you go up the ladder alone’. Such an ‘alternative to solidarity’, pointed out Williams, has dazzled many working-class leaders and is objectionable in two respects: firstly, it weakens community and the task of common betterment; and secondly, it ‘sweetens the poison of hierarchy’ by offering advancement through merit rather than money or birth, whilst retaining a commitment to the very notion of hierarchy itself (Williams 1958: 331).”
Jo Littler, Against Meritocracy: Culture, power and myths of mobility
“The neoliberal idea of meritocracy as enabling a fair system of social mobility is therefore both profoundly unfair and an ideological sleight of hand, working to justify a system based on greed and extensive structural injustice.”
Jo Littler, Against Meritocracy: Culture, power and myths of mobility
“Meritocracy contradicts the principle of equality, of an equalitarian democracy, no less than any other oligarchy. Hannah Arendt”
Jo Littler, Against Meritocracy: Culture, power and myths of mobility