Why the Language of the Left No Longer Moves Us – And What We Can Do About It

The Left’s key terms—solidarity, mutual aid, liberation—often fail to mobilize because they have been enclosed, ritualized, and detached from lived practice. While leftist organizations sustain these terms internally, they must help build outward-facing communities that integrate language into real, systemic change. This and future posts will explore how to reclaim a vocabulary of communal power.

This is not merely a problem of rhetoric. It is a symptom of deeper fractures in the Left’s capacity to create and sustain communal life. Our language has been subject to enclosures—sometimes imposed by hegemonic forces, sometimes self-inflicted through hyper-politicized subcultural discourse. The result is a set of terms that often mean less to those who use them than to those excluded from their use. This article is the beginning of a broader inquiry: How has the language of the Left been enclosed, hollowed out, or ritualized in ways that undermine its purpose? And what might it mean to reclaim a political vocabulary that moves us—one that generates real communal structures rather than merely naming them?

The Problem: When Words Cease to Build Worlds

Political language does not simply describe reality; it constructs it. Language is infrastructure—it enables coordination, orientation, and the reproduction of meaning across time and space. For a movement to be effective, its vocabulary must be alive—capable of evolving, spreading, and embedding itself in the daily experiences of those it seeks to mobilize.

Yet, many of the Left’s key terms have undergone a transformation that renders them less actionable, less felt, and less real:

The result: a language that no longer moves us because it no longer connects to felt experience. A language that feels more like a moral scaffolding for individual positioning than a set of tools for collective world-building.

The Hegemonic Trap: Outrage, Containment, and Semantic Drift

Hegemonic forces do not simply repress leftist language; they capture, redirect, and exhaust it. This happens in multiple ways:

The Limits of Walled Communities and the Fragmentation of Struggle

It is important to recognize that certain leftist organizations, such as the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), have managed to create communities in which these terms do function with greater coherence. Within their walls, words like solidarity and mutual aid are more susceptible to genuine contestation and more effective at mobilization. However, these organizations often operate as walled communities, which, although open to anyone, exact the fee of ideological commitment—becoming sites of refuge rather than engines of broad democratic world-building.

Leftist organizations like DSA must be in the business of enabling the people they want to help to build their own speech communities and communities of practice. They must be in a position to teach people how to achieve what they, to some degree, have achieved. They must do work that plants the seeds of thousands of new outward-facing cosmopolitan communities, dedicated to certain broadly common principles but each pursuing them in their unique ways and forging distinct communal identities.

Outside of these spaces, leftist efforts tend to be piecemeal rather than integrative, localized rather than systemic. They promise particular improvements rather than articulating a broadly re-conceived way of living. This leaves leftist politics fragmented, unable to present a holistic alternative to the systems it critiques. If political language is to regain its vitality, it must escape these enclosures and serve as the connective tissue of a living, communal structure rather than a subcultural dialect.

Conclusion: Toward a Vocabulary of Communal Power

Future posts will examine key leftist terms through the lens of speech communities and communities of practice, exploring how they can be reclaimed to build a real, living infrastructure of communal meaning-making. Because if the Left is to move again, it must first find words that move us.

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