Epistemic injustice in a settler nation: Canada’s history of erasing, silencing, marginalizing

2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 240-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine M. Koggel
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurence Roulleau-Berger

AbstractFor several centuries, the history of the West has merged with the history of the world. The global economy of knowledge is structured around epistemic inequalities, hegemonies, and dominations. A clear division of scientific practices has developed among academic “peripheries,” “semi-peripheries,” and “core.” The question of epistemic injustice, which includes the indigenization of knowledge, was posed very early in the twentieth century in China, Japan, and Korea without being linked to coloniality, which was the case in Indian sociology. Based on the production of an epistemology shared with Chinese sociologists, we proposed a Post-Western sociology to enable a dialogue—on a level footing—addressing common concepts. This sociology also addresses concepts situated in European and Asian theories that consider the modes of creating continuities and discontinuities as well as the conjunctions and disjunctions between the knowledge spaces situated in different social contexts. We aim to fill the gaps between these social contexts. We will describe an ecology of knowledge in the Western-West, the non-Western-West, the semi-Western West, the Western East, the Eastern East, and the re-Easternized East situated on an epistemological continuum. While Chinese sociology has constantly oscillated between indigenization and universalism, and while epistemic autonomies are diverse, Chinese sociologists agree that Western sociologies should not be considered hostile to Chinese sociology. We will offer a definition of Post-Western sociology and demonstrate how it can be theoretically and methodologically applied. We will then identify some transnational theories, theoretical discontinuities and continuities, and common knowledge situated in Western and non-Western contexts.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (36) ◽  
pp. 76
Author(s):  
María L. Christiansen

Este artículo propone una reflexión crítica acerca de los procesos de formación monocultural bajo el influjo actual de nuevas formas de racismo. Suscribiendo a varios de los planteamientos de Judith Butler sobre la performatividad del lenguaje injuriante (antesala de los denominados discursos de odio), se traza un recorrido por diferentes aspectos filosóficos a considerar en torno al problema del racismo. En primer lugar, se vindica la necesidad de prestar atención a las relecturas que los teóricos críticos de la raza han realizado en las últimas décadas sobre la historia de la filosofía moderna occidental. En segundo lugar, se aborda la cuestión de la desaparición de saberes (“epistemicidios”) como condición de una racionalidad supremacista, así como los diversos efectos de prácticas sociales que Miranda Fricker ha caracterizado como “injusticia epistémica”. El artículo tiene como eje tres casos ilustrativos de la lógica del desprecio que subyace a las actitudes de odio: “ser negro”, “ser migrante”, “ser pobre”. This article proposes a critical reflection on monocultural formation processes under the current influence of new forms of racism. By subscribing to several of Judith Butler´s approaches to the performativity of insulting language (a prelude to so-called hate speech), a journey through different philosophical aspects to consider around the problem of racism is traced. First, it vindicates the need to pay attention to the re-readings that critical theorists of race have made in recent decades on the history of modern Western philosophy. Second, the question of the disappearance of knowledge (“epistemicides”) as a condition of a supremacist rationality is addressed, as well as the various effects of social practices that Miranda Fricker has characterized as “epistemic injustice”. The article focuses on three illustrative cases of the logic of contempt that underlies hateful attitudes: “being black”, “being a migrant”, “being poor”.


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