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Diversity Reading List

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

An Intersectional Feminist Theory of Moral Responsibility

Posted on November 30, 2021May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

This book develops an intersectional feminist approach to moral responsibility. It accomplisheses four main goals. First, it outlines a concise list of the main principles of intersectional feminism. Second, it uses these principles to critique prevailing philosophical theories of moral responsibility. Third, it offers an account of moral responsibility that is compatible with the ethos of intersectional feminism. And fourth, it uses intersectional feminist principles to critique culturally normative responsibility practices.

This is the first book to provide an explicitly intersectional feminist approach to moral responsibility. After identifying the five principles central to intersectional feminism, the author demonstrates how influential theories of responsibility are incompatible with these principles. She argues that a normatively adequate theory of blame should not be preoccupied with the agency or traits of wrongdoers; it should instead underscore, and seek to ameliorate, oppression and adversity as experienced by the marginalized. Apt blame and praise, according to her intersectional feminist account, is both communicative and functionalist. The book concludes with an extensive discussion of culturally embedded responsibility practices, including asymmetrically structured conversations and gender- and racially biased social spaces.

An Intersectional Feminist Approach to Moral Responsibility presents a sophisticated and original philosophical account of moral responsibility. It will be of interest to philosophers working at the crossroads of moral responsibility, feminist philosophy, critical race theory, queer theory, critical disability studies, and intersectionality theory.

Posted in Critical Race Theory, Feminism: Disability, Intersectionality, Metaethics, Moral Responsibility, Philosophy of Gender Race and Sexuality, Philosophy of Race, Value TheoryTagged blame, injustice, moral responsibility, oppression, praiseLeave a comment

Banal Skepticism and the Errors of Doubt: On Ephecticism about Rape Accusations

Posted on November 30, 2021May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Ephecticism is the tendency towards suspension of belief. Epistemology often focuses on the error of believing when one ought to doubt. The converse error—doubting when one ought to believe—is relatively underexplored. This essay examines the errors of undue doubt.

I draw on the relevant alternatives framework to diagnose and remedy undue doubts about rape accusations. Doubters tend to invoke standards for belief that are too demanding, for example, and underestimate how farfetched uneliminated error possibilities are. They mistake seeing how incriminating evidence is compatible with innocence for a reason to withhold judgement.

Rape accusations help illuminate the causes and normativity of doubt. I propose a novel kind of epistemic injustice, for example, wherein patterns of unwarranted attention to farfetched error possibilities can cause those error possibilities to become relevant. Widespread unreasonable doubt thus renders doubt reasonable and makes it harder to know rape accusations. Finally, I emphasise that doubt is often a conservative force and I argue that the relevant alternatives framework helps defend against pernicious doubt-mongers.

Posted in Epistemologies of Ignorance, Epistemology, Epistemology of Testimony, Ethics of Belief, Feminist Epistemology, Metaphysics & Epistemology, Topics in Feminist PhilosophyTagged doubt, rape accusations, relevant alternatives theory, skepticismLeave a comment

Asia as Method: Toward Deimperialization

Posted on November 4, 2021May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Centering his analysis in the dynamic forces of modern East Asian history, Kuan-Hsing Chen recasts cultural studies as a politically urgent global endeavor. He argues that the intellectual and subjective work of decolonization begun across East Asia after the Second World War was stalled by the cold war. At the same time, the work of deimperialization became impossible to imagine in imperial centers such as Japan and the United States. Chen contends that it is now necessary to resume those tasks, and that decolonization, deimperialization, and an intellectual undoing of the cold war must proceed simultaneously. Combining postcolonial studies, globalization studies, and the emerging field of “Asian studies in Asia,” he insists that those on both sides of the imperial divide must assess the conduct, motives, and consequences of imperial histories.

Chen is one of the most important intellectuals working in East Asia today; his writing has been influential in Taiwan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, and mainland China for the past fifteen years. As a founding member of the Inter-Asia Cultural Studies Society and its journal, he has helped to initiate change in the dynamics and intellectual orientation of the region, building a network that has facilitated inter-Asian connections. Asia as Method encapsulates Chen’s vision and activities within the increasingly “inter-referencing” East Asian intellectual community and charts necessary new directions for cultural studies.

Posted in Colonialism and Postcolonialism, Social and Political Philosophy, Value TheoryTagged colonialism and postcolonialism, critiques of western systems of knowledge, decentering Europe, decolonisation, deimperialisation, legacies of colonialismLeave a comment

The Re-Enchantment of Humanism: An Interview with Sylvia Wynter

Posted on November 4, 2021June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Sylvia Wynter is a radical Jamaican theorist influenced, among others, by Frantz Fanon. This well known interview is often considered to be the best introduction to her thinking about the question of human in the aftermath of 1492 and the consequent racialisation of humanity.
Wynter rethinks dominant concepts of being human, arguing that they are based on a colonial and racialized model that divides the world into asymmetric categories such as “the selected and the dysselected”, center and periphery, or colonizers and colonized. Against this Wynter proposes a new humanism. According to Katherine McKittrick Wynter develops a “counterhumanism”, that breaks from the classification of humans in static, asymmetric categories.

Posted in Colonialism and Postcolonialism, Philosophy of Gender Race and Sexuality, Postcolonial Feminism, Social and Political Philosophy, Value TheoryTagged anti-colonialism, colonialism and postcolonialism, critical historiography, Humanism, legacies of colonialismLeave a comment

Provincializing Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference

Posted on November 4, 2021May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

First published in 2000, Dipesh Chakrabarty’s influential Provincializing Europe addresses the mythical figure of Europe that is often taken to be the original site of modernity in many histories of capitalist transition in non-Western countries. This imaginary Europe, Dipesh Chakrabarty argues, is built into the social sciences. The very idea of historicizing carries with it some peculiarly European assumptions about disenchanted space, secular time, and sovereignty. Measured against such mythical standards, capitalist transition in the third world has often seemed either incomplete or lacking. Provincializing Europe proposes that every case of transition to capitalism is a case of translation as well – a translation of existing worlds and their thought-categories into the categories and self-understandings of capitalist modernity. Now featuring a new preface in which Chakrabarty responds to his critics, this book globalizes European thought by exploring how it may be renewed both for and from the margins.

Posted in Colonialism and Postcolonialism, Social and Political Philosophy, Value TheoryTagged colonialism and knowledge, critical historiography, European thought, historicism, political modernityLeave a comment

Decolonising Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples

Posted on November 4, 2021May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

To the colonized, the term ‘research’ is conflated with European colonialism; the ways in which academic research has been implicated in the throes of imperialism remains a painful memory. This essential volume explores intersections of imperialism and research – specifically, the ways in which imperialism is embedded in disciplines of knowledge and tradition as ‘regimes of truth.’ Concepts such as ‘discovery’ and ‘claiming’ are discussed and an argument presented that the decolonization of research methods will help to reclaim control over indigenous ways of knowing and being.

Now in its eagerly awaited second edition, this bestselling book has been substantially revised, with new case-studies and examples and important additions on new indigenous literature, the role of research in indigenous struggles for social justice, which brings this essential volume urgently up-to-date.

Posted in Colonialism and Postcolonialism, Philosophy of Education, Philosophy of Race, Philosophy of Social Science, Science Logic & Mathematics, Social and Political Philosophy, Value TheoryTagged anti-colonial resistance, colonialism and postcolonialism, critiques of methodology, critiques of western systems of knowledge and knowledge-production, legacies of colonialism, research knowledge and imperialismLeave a comment

Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity

Posted on November 2, 2021May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

One of the most talked-about scholarly works of the past fifty years, Judith Butler’s Gender Trouble is as celebrated as it is controversial. Arguing that traditional feminism is wrong to look to a natural, ‘essential’ notion of the female, or indeed of sex or gender, Butler starts by questioning the category ‘woman’ and continues in this vein with examinations of ‘the masculine’ and ‘the feminine’. Best known however, but also most often misinterpreted, is Butler’s concept of gender as a reiterated social performance rather than the expression of a prior reality. Thrilling and provocative, few other academic works have roused passions to the same exten

Posted in Continental Philosophy, Critical Theory, Identity Politics, Philosophical Traditions, Philosophy of Gender Race and Sexuality, Value TheoryTagged binary, Foucault, Freud, gender, QueernessLeave a comment

Black Feminist Thought

Posted on November 2, 2021May 13, 2025 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 book that provided the first synthetic overview of Black feminist thought and its canon.

Posted in Black Feminism, Philosophy of Gender Race and Sexuality, Value TheoryTagged black feminism, epistemology, intersectionality, standpoint theoryLeave a comment

Feminism and the Mastery of Nature

Posted on November 2, 2021May 13, 2025 by Simon Fokt

Two of the most important political movements of the late twentieth century are those of environmentalism and feminism. In this book, Val Plumwood argues that feminist theory has an important opportunity to make a major contribution to the debates in political ecology and environmental philosophy. Feminism and the Mastery of Nature explains the relation between ecofeminism, or ecological feminism, and other feminist theories including radical green theories such as deep ecology. Val Plumwood provides a philosophically informed account of the relation of women and nature, and shows how relating male domination to the domination of nature is important and yet remains a dilemma for women.

Posted in Ecofeminism, Philosophy of Gender Race and Sexuality, Value TheoryTagged deep ecology, ecology, radical feminismLeave a comment

Moral transformation and the love of beauty in Plato’s symposium

Posted on July 15, 2021June 26, 2025 by Simon Fokt

This paper defends an intellectualist interpretation of Diotima’s speech in Plato’s Symposium. I argue that Diotima’s purpose, in discussing the lower lovers, is to critique their erōs as aimed at a goal it can never secure, immortality, and as focused on an inferior object, themselves. By contrast, in loving the form of beauty, the philosopher gains a mortal sort of completion; in turning outside of himself, he also ceases to be preoccupied by his own incompleteness.

Posted in Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy, History of Western Philosophy, Plato, Plato: Beauty, Plato: Eros, Plato: Ethics, Plato: HappinessTagged eros, immortality, love, PlatoLeave a comment

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