Epistemic Injustice and the Philosophy of Recognition

Epistemic Injustice and the Philosophy of Recognition

Giladi, Paul; McMillan, Nicola

Taylor & Francis Ltd

08/2022

354

Dura

Inglês

9781138351714

15 a 20 dias

866

Descrição não disponível.
Preface, Lucius Turner Outlaw Jr.

Introduction, Nicola McMillan

Part I: Recognition Theory and Critical Social Epistemology in Conversation

Axel Honneth, Two Interpretations of Social Disrespect: A Comparison Between Epistemic and Moral Recognition
Danielle Petherbridge, A Fourth Order of Recognition? Accounting for Epistemic Injustice in Recognition Theory
Cynthia R. Nielsen & David Utsler, Gadamer, Fricker, and Honneth: Testimonial Injustice, Prejudice, and Social Esteem
Lois McNay, Recognising Disempowerment: Taking the 'Merely Experienced' Seriously
Kelly Oliver, Gaslighting: Pathologies of Recognition and the Colonisation of Psychic Space
Paul Giladi, Epistemic Exploitation and Ideological Recognition
Ezgi Sertler, Calling Recognition Bluffs: Structural Epistemic Injustice and Administrative Violence
Mari Mikkola, Ideal Theory, Epistemologies of Ignorance, and (Mis)Recognition
Part II: Making Sense of Contemporary Social-Epistemic Struggles

Katherine O'Donnell, Commission to Inquire into Ireland's Mother & Baby Homes: An Epistemology of Ignorance
Rebecca Tsosie, Constitutional Law and Epistemic Injustice: Hate Speech, Stereotyping, and Recognition Harm
Debra L. Jackson, Male Sexual Victimisation, Failures of Recognition, and Epistemic Injustice
Lauren Freeman & Heather Stewart, The Problem of Recognition, Erasure, and Epistemic Injustice in Medicine: Harms to Transgender and Gender Non-Binary Patients - Why We Should Be Worried
Wendy Carlton & Katrina Hutchison, Epistemic Injustice and Misrecognition in the Sphere of Work: The Case of Women in Surgery
Paul Giladi;Miranda Fricker;Matt Congdon;Nicola McMillan;Axel Honneth;Lois McNay;Cynthia Nielsen;Kelly Oliver;Lucius Turner Outlaw Jr;Danielle Petherbridge;Rocio Zambrana;Lorraine Code;Lauren Freeman;Katrina Hutchison;Mari Mikkola;Katherine O'Donnell;Ezgi Sertler;Rebecca Tsosie;epistemic injustice;recognition theory;feminist epistemology;feminist philosophy;critical race theory;critical race epistemology;exclusion;silencing;social groups;misrecognition;recognition injustice;hate speech;idealization procedure;Charles Mills;bell hooks;hermeneutical injustice;gaslighting;identity prejudice;invisibilization;Nancy Fraser;transgender medicine;Magdalene Laundries;stereotyping;recognition harm