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Diversity Reading List

Helping you include authors from under-represented groups in your teaching

Identities: Feminism, Multiculturalism, Sexuality

Posted on November 27, 2017December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Summary: Goldberg provides a richly illustrated historical account of the intimate connection between identity and performance art. Starting from the feminist art of the 1960’s, the recognition and assertion of identity was a fundamental bid for social visibility. The next frontier was social recognition, which concerned ethnic and sexual minorities as much as it did women. The final frontier – political equality – is one that is still out of reach. Still, according to Goldberg, performance art continues to chart new territories of identification. In fact, while at the outset performance art used early feminist writing as inspiration, Goldberg recognizes a gradual reversal – today’s feminists are as likely to chart new philosophical directions as they are to follow the exploratory charge of their performance art counterparts.

Posted in Class, Culture, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Individual Arts and Crafts, RaceTagged feminism, identity, performance artLeave a comment

Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence Against Women of Color

Posted on November 27, 2017December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Summary: The concept of intersectionality is Crenshaw’s rich contribution to our embattled understanding of identity politics. To illustrate the danger of traditional identity groupings, Crenshaw turns our attention to the complexity of inhabiting two such distinct categories at the same time as a black woman. While it is true that a black woman can hardly be considered essentially black (on account of the primacy of men of color over women of color) or essentially a woman (on account of the primacy of white women over non-white ones), intersectionality does not aim to dismantle these general categories altogether. Instead, it seeks to introduce an ethical and political pragmatics of identity. The way Crenshaw proposes this should be done in the case of black women is by treating the two inherent identity categories – black and female – conjunctively rather than disjunctively as it has always been done. The resulting approach promises to improve our sense of the reality of “social location” and is thus of great value to all agents and processes of social health and justice.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Class, Culture, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Law and Public Policy, RaceTagged gender, identity politics, intersectionality, raceLeave a comment

Approaching Abjection

Posted on November 27, 2017December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Summary: The abject – expressed through the grotesque, the gross and the physically challenging – has long been a source of innovation and scandal in the art world. For Kristeva abjection accounts for much of the complexity of the human condition. She understands abjection to encompass various aspects of our humanity that are often seen as conceptually and/or experientially disparate – emotion, embodiment, affect, repression, criminality, hygiene etc. Kristeva’s guiding intuition is that the abject helps arbitrate between our perception of ourselves as subject and object. In the liminal space between the two, the “I” is experienced in its full heterogeneity to the frequent detriment of traditional ethical, aesthetic, and scientific considerations. This has direct bearing on performance art, whose history is marked by the deliberate departure from beauty and, concurrently, the constant renegotiation of identity between the extremes of subject and object.

Posted in Language and Mind, Mental States and Processes, Personal and Social IdentityTagged affect, embodiment, emotion, perception of selfLeave a comment

Whose Culture Is It, Anyway?

Posted on November 27, 2017December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Summary: In this chapter, Appiah offers a cosmopolitan critique of the concept of cultural property/patrimony. By emphasizing the common features of our humanity and the tenuousness of certain cultural identity claims, he puts pressure on conceptions of cultural property that would exclude others, particularly those that have a nationalist character. He raises important philosophical questions about cultural continuity over time, and explores how the location of art can best facilitate its value for humanity. In general, he supports a cosmopolitan/internationalist approach to cultural property that promotes the exchange of cultural products around the world.

Posted in Culture, JusticeTagged cosmopolitanism, cultural identity, cultural property, cultureLeave a comment

Epistemologies of Ignorance: Three types

Posted on July 20, 2017December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Summary: In this chapter, the author considers three main arguments for the epistemology of ignorance, where this thinks of ignorance not as being a feature of a neglectful epistemic practice, yet as being a substantive epistemic practice itself. The author considers the relationship between these three different arguments that, although differing in the way they present the nature of ignorance, she takes to be jointly compatible. In conclusion, she argues that ignorance is not only a problem related to the justificatory practice, yet also to the ontology of truth.

Posted in Culture, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Mental States and Processes, Race, Theoretical EpistemologyTagged epistemology, feminism, ignoranceLeave a comment

Justice and the Politics of Difference

Posted on July 20, 2017December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s note: In this classic work of feminist political thought, Iris Marion Young challenges the prevailing reduction of social justice to distributive justice. It critically analyzes basic concepts underlying most theories of justice, including impartiality, formal equality, and the unitary moral subjectivity. The starting point for her critique is the experience and concerns of the new social movements about decision making, cultural expression, and division of labor–that were created by marginal and excluded groups, including women, African Americans, and American Indians, as well as gays and lesbians. Iris Young defines concepts of domination and oppression to cover issues eluding the distributive model. Democratic theorists, according to Young do not adequately address the problem of an inclusive participatory framework. By assuming a homogeneous public, they fail to consider institutional arrangements for including people not culturally identified with white European male norms of reason and respectability. Young urges that normative theory and public policy should undermine group-based oppression by affirming rather than suppressing social group difference. Basing her vision of the good society on the differentiated, culturally plural network of contemporary urban life, she argues for a principle of group representation in democratic publics and for group-differentiated policies.

Posted in Class, Culture, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Law and Public Policy, RaceTagged cultural pluralism, oppression, political participation, social institutions, social justiceLeave a comment

Eros Unveiled: Plato and the God of Love

Posted on November 24, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s note: This unique book challenges the traditional distinction between eros, the love found in Greek thought, and agape, the love characteristic of Christianity. Focusing on a number of classic texts, including Plato’s Symposium and Lysis, Aristotle’s Ethics and Metaphysics, and famous passages in Gregory of Nyssa, Origen, Dionysius the Areopagite, Plotinus, Augustine, and Thomas Aquinas, the author shows that Plato’s account of eros is not founded on self-interest. In this way, she restores the place of erotic love as a Christian motif, and unravels some longstanding confusions in philosophical discussions of love.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Deities and their Attributes, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Mental States and Processes, Metaethics, Moral Psychology, Normative EthicsTagged ancient philosophy, ethics, love, philosophy of loveLeave a comment

White Ignorance

Posted on June 3, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

<strong>Abstract:</strong> The development of social epistemology in recent decades is a welcome turn away from Cartesian individualism. But the centrality of oppression to societies in general is still insufficiently recognized in this literature. This chapter looks at “white ignorance” as an example of a particular kind of systemic group-based miscognition that has been hugely influential over the past few hundred years. After a ten-point clarification of the concept, it turns to an examination of white ignorance as it plays itself out in the complex interaction of Eurocentric perception and categorization, white normativity, social memory and social amnesia, the derogation of non-white testimony, racial group interests, and motivated irrationality.

Posted in Culture, Mental States and Processes, Metaethics, Race, Social EpistemologyTagged bias, Eurocentrism, ignorance, social epistemology, white domination, whitenessLeave a comment

Musing: A Black Feminist Philosopher: Is that Possible?

Posted on June 3, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Summary: The author argues that black feminist philosophy exists, but “it exists elsewhere in other spaces, on the pages of journals that professional philosophers do not read, in the contexts of conferences where professional philosophers do not go”.

Posted in Ethics and Socio-Politics of Philosophy, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, RaceTagged black, feminism, raceLeave a comment

Epistemic Injustice: Power and the Ethics of Knowing

Posted on May 23, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: In this exploration of new territory between ethics and epistemology, Miranda Fricker argues that there is a distinctively epistemic type of injustice, in which someone is wronged specifically in their capacity as a knower. Justice is one of the oldest and most central themes in philosophy, but in order to reveal the ethical dimension of our epistemic practices the focus must shift to injustice. Fricker adjusts the philosophical lens so that we see through to the negative space that is epistemic injustice. The book explores two different types of epistemic injustice, each driven by a form of prejudice, and from this exploration comes a positive account of two corrective ethical-intellectual virtues. The characterization of these phenomena casts light on many issues, such as social power, prejudice, virtue, and the genealogy of knowledge, and it proposes a virtue epistemological account of testimony. In this ground-breaking book, the entanglements of reason and social power are traced in a new way, to reveal the different forms of epistemic injustice and their place in the broad pattern of social injustice.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Class, Culture, Disability, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Race, Social EpistemologyTagged fairness, justice, knowledge, theory of ethicsLeave a comment

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