The Center Must Not Hold : White Women Philosophers on the Whiteness of Philosophy.
In this collection, white women philosophers engage boldly in critical acts of exploring ways of naming and disrupting whiteness in terms of how it has defined the conceptual field of philosophy. Focuses on the whiteness of the epistemic and value-laden norms within philosophy itself, the text dares...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Lexington Books
2012.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication Page; Table of Contents; Foreword; Acknowledgments; Introduction: Troublemaking Allies; Chapter 1: White Ignorance and the Denials of Complicity: On the Possibility of Doing Philosophy in Good Faith; Chapter 2: Reading Black Philosophers in Chronological Order; Chapter 3: On Intersectionality and the Whiteness of Feminist Philosophy; Chapter 4: The Man of Culture: The Civilized and the Barbarian in Western Philosophy; Chapter 5: Whiteness and Rationality: Feminist Dialogue on Race in Academic Institutional spaces.
- Chapter 6: Appropriate Subjects: Whiteness and the Discipline of PhilosophyChapter 7: Color in the Theory of Colors? Or: Are Philosophers' Colors All White?; Chapter 8: The Secularity of Philosophy: Race, Religion, and the Silence of Exclusion; Chapter 9: Philosophy's Whiteness and the Loss of Wisdom; Chapter 10: Against the Whiteness of Ethics: Dilemmatizing as a Critical Approach; Chapter 11: The Whiteness of Anti-Racist White Philosophical Address; Chapter 12: Colonial Practices/Colonial Identities: All the Women are Still White; Chapter 13: Is Philosophy Anything if it Isn't White?; Index.