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Diversity Reading List

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

Logic: A Feminist Approach

Posted on March 11, 2023December 3, 2024 by Franci Mangraviti

This chapter asks whether there is any such thing as feminist logic. It defines feminism and logic, and then goes on to present and evaluate four possible views, introducing and critiquing the work of Andrea Nye, Val Plumwood, and Susan Stebbing. It argues that Stebbing’s approach—on which feminism is one among many political applications of logic—is correct, but that feminist logic could do more, by providing a formal framework for the study of social hierarchies, much as it presently provides a formal framework for the study of numbers and similarity rankings among possible worlds.

Posted in Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Logic and MathematicsTagged andrea nye, classical negation, feminist logic, philosophy of logic, social hierarchy, susan stebbing, val plumwoodLeave a comment

Privilege and Position: Formal Tools for Standpoint Epistemology

Posted on March 4, 2023December 3, 2024 by Franci Mangraviti

How does being a woman affect one’s epistemic life? What about being black? Or queer? Standpoint theorists argue that such social positions can give rise to otherwise unavailable epistemic privilege. “Epistemic privilege” is a murky concept, however. Critics of standpoint theory argue that the view is offered without a clear explanation of how standpoints confer their benefits, what those benefits are, or why social positions are particularly apt to produce them. But this need not be so. This article articulates a minimal version of standpoint epistemology that avoids these criticisms and supports the normative goals of its feminist forerunners. With this foundation, we develop a formal model in which to explore standpoint epistemology using neighborhood semantics for modal logic.

Posted in Logic and Mathematics, Metaepistemology, Standpoint EpistemologyTagged epistemic logic, neighborhood semantics, standpoint epistemologyLeave a comment

The Politics of Reason: Towards a Feminist Logic

Posted on March 4, 2023December 3, 2024 by Franci Mangraviti

The author argues that there is a strong connection between the dualisms that have strengthened and naturalized systematic oppression across history (man/woman, reason/emotion, etc.), and “classical” logic. It is suggested that feminism’s response should not be to abandon logic altogether, but rather to focus on the development of alternative, less oppressive forms of rationality, of which relevant logics provide an example.

Posted in Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Logic and MathematicsTagged dualism, feminist logic, relevant logicLeave a comment

Sacred Truths, Fables, and Falsehoods: Intersections between Feminist and Native American Logics

Posted on March 4, 2023December 3, 2024 by Franci Mangraviti

From the newsletter’s introduction: “Lauren Eichler […] examines the resonances between feminist and Native American analyses of classical logic. After considering the range of responses, from overly monolithic rejection to more nuanced appreciation, Eichler argues for a careful, pluralist understanding of logic as she articulates her suggestion that feminists and Native American philosophers could build fruitful alliances around this topic.”

Posted in Ethics and Socio-Politics of Philosophy, Logic and Mathematics, Philosophical Media and MethodologyTagged bi-culturalism, feminist logic, native american logicLeave a comment

The Methodological is Political: What’s the Matter with ‘Analytic Feminism’?

Posted on January 30, 2023December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

A core insight of some important second wave feminist writings is that, in order to qualify as truly ‘feminist’, a movement has to be politically radical. For example, there is a powerful articulation of this theme, to mention one noteworthy site, in the work of bell hooks. A guiding preoccupation of hooks’ thought, as far back as the early eighties, is to underline the pernicious and intellectually flawed character of the supposedly ‘feminist’ postures of ‘bourgeois white women’ in the U.S. whose efforts are directed toward the politically superficial goal of claiming the social privileges of bourgeois white men. hooks shows that there is no way to ‘overcome barriers that separate women from one another’ without ‘confronting the reality of racism’. She describes how the forms of gender-based subordination experienced by privileged white women are inextricable from racist and classist social mechanisms that elevate these women above women who are non-white and poor, and how the sexist obstacles that poor and non-white women encounter are in turn permeated by racism and classism. hooks concludes that if ‘feminism’ is to be dedicated to identifying and resisting sexist oppression, it needs to – in her words – ‘direct our attention to systems of domination and the interrelatedness of sex, race and class oppression.

Posted in Ethics and Socio-Politics of Philosophy, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Philosophical Media and MethodologyTagged analytic feminism, lived experience, methodological conservatism, methodological radicalismLeave a comment

Doing Non-Ideal Theory About Gender in the Global Context

Posted on January 30, 2023December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

This paper elaborates and renders explicit some of the views about political philosophical methodology that underlie the author’s arguments in Decolonizing Universalism: A Transnational Feminist Ethic. It shows how the author’s stances on autonomy, individualism, intersectionality, human rights, the coloniality of gender, and the oppression of genders besides man and woman grow out of a commitment to scrutinizing our normative views in light of transnational criticism and empirical information from the qualitative social sciences.

Posted in Equality, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, JusticeTagged decolonial feminism, global justice, nonideal theory, oppression, postcolonial feminism, transnational feminismLeave a comment

Debunking Sapphire: Toward a Non-Racist and Non-Sexist Social Science

Posted on January 30, 2023December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

The term “Sapphire” is frequently used to describe an age-old image of Black women. The caricature of the dominating, emasculating Black woman is one which historically has saturated both the popular and scholarly literature. The purpose of this paper is debunk the “Sapphire” caricature as it has been projected in American social science. By exposing the racist and sexist underpinnings of this stereotype, it is hoped that more students and scholars might be sensitized and encouraged to contribute to the development of a nonracist and non-sexist social science.

Posted in Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Race, SociologyTagged Black women, institutions, oppression, racism, Sapphire stereotype, sexism, social sciencesLeave a comment

Venus in Two Acts

Posted on January 30, 2023December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

This essay examines the ubiquitous presence of Venus in the archive of Atlantic slavery and wrestles with the impossibility of discovering anything about her that hasn’t already been stated. As an emblematic figure of the enslaved woman in the Atlantic world, Venus makes plain the convergence of terror and pleasure in the libidinal economy of slavery and, as well, the intimacy of history with the scandal and excess of literature. In writing at the limit of the unspeakable and the unknown, the essay mimes the violence of the archive and attempts to redress it by describing as fully as possible the conditions that determine the appearance of Venus and that dictate her silence.

Posted in Culture, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, RaceTagged archive, historical evidence, marginalised people, oppressionLeave a comment

Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment

Posted on January 30, 2023December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

In spite of the double burden of racial and gender discrimination, African-American women have developed a rich intellectual tradition that is not widely known. In Black Feminist Thought, originally published in 1990, Patricia Hill Collins set out to explore the words and ideas of Black feminist intellectuals and writers, both within the academy and without. Here Collins provides an interpretive framework for the work of such prominent Black feminist thinkers as Angela Davis, bell hooks, Alice Walker, and Audre Lorde. Drawing from fiction, poetry, music and oral history, the result is a superbly crafted and revolutionary book that provided the first synthetic overview of Black feminist thought and its canon.

Posted in Class, Culture, Equality, Freedom and Rights, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, RaceTagged black feminism, controlling images, oppression, stereotypesLeave a comment

The Black Woman’s Role in the Community of Slaves

Posted on January 30, 2023December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Introduction: The paucity of literature on the black woman is outrageous on its face. But we must also contend with the fact that too many of these rare studies must claim as their signal achievement the reinforcement of fictitious cliches. They have given credence to grossly distorted categories through which the black woman continues to be perceived.

Posted in Equality, Forms of Government, Freedom and Rights, Law and Public PolicyTagged black feminism, empirical methods, Marxism, matriarch stereoptype, oppression, slaveryLeave a comment

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