In After Identify Politics by Ross Posnock, he focuses reader by towering in a cosmopolitan indifference for demands for racial “authenticity” and solidarity. Posnock’s breakdown starts from the observation that fixing identity in African American Society. Posnock looking deeper into racial authenticity and solidarity, he interestingly looks at odds with the identity politics and multicultural movements of our day. By looking at Du Bois’s tradition, Posnock identifies a universalism inseparable from the particular and open to culture an approach with the power to take us beyond the insularity of postmodern states. Even though Posnock agree with Du Bois points in the identifying insularity postmodernism, Posnock attacks the interpretation of