
Arts & Ideas Finding my tribe
Sep 26, 2025
Featuring Kit Davis, an anthropology professor, Lynsey Hanley, an insightful writer on class, Alistair Fraser, a criminology expert, Isabel Hardman, a political journalist, and Rebecca Earle, a historian specializing in food and identity, this discussion explores the complexities of belonging. They dive into the fluidity of social tribes, the impact of social media on group identity, and the nuanced relationship between class experiences and online communities. The guests also reflect on the cultural significance of food and its role in forming tribal connections.
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Algorithms Amplify Tribal Extremes
- Adele Walton explains algorithms amplify content that hooks attention, pushing users toward extremes.
- Users either find gateways out of ideologies or get deeper trapped by engagement-maximising design.
Tribe Became An Ethnographic Object
- Kit explains anthropology shifted from fixed 'tribe' taxonomy to studying how people use 'tribe' as a social tool.
- Modern anthropology follows practices and identities as mobile, strategic phenomena.
Gangs Are Fluid Community Identities
- Alistair Fraser found gangs were fluid identities tied to community and urban fault lines, not closed units.
- Boundaries matter, but groups adapt and change across time and place.












