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‘Through a glass darkly’: Dyslexic identity and hermeneutic injustice
This article is written by four dyslexic disability scholars who reject dyslexia as an explanatory account. Instead, we adopt Lexism – the Othering of dyslexics by normative practices and assumptions of literacy (Collinson, 2012, 2022, 2023).
Craig Collinson
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The Elusiveness of Hermeneutic Injustice in Psychiatric Categorizations
Social EpistemologyMiriam Solomon
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Language as a Source of Epistemic Injustice in Organisations
Although there is now a substantial body of literature exploring the effects of language diversity in international management contexts, little attention has been paid to the ethical dimensions of language diversity at work.
Natalie Victoria Wilmot
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A Critique of Hermeneutical Injustice
Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society (Hardback), 2011Recent work at the junction of epistemology and political theory focuses on the notion of epistemic injustice , the injustice of being wronged as a knower. Miranda Fricker (2007) identifies two kinds of epistemic injustice. I focus here on hermeneutical injustice in an attempt to identify a difficulty for Fricker's account.
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2007
Abstract This chapter identifies the second kind of epistemic injustice: hermeneutical injustice, wherein someone has a significant area of their social experience obscured from understanding owing to prejudicial flaws in shared resources for social interpretation. Systematic and incidental cases are distinguished.
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Abstract This chapter identifies the second kind of epistemic injustice: hermeneutical injustice, wherein someone has a significant area of their social experience obscured from understanding owing to prejudicial flaws in shared resources for social interpretation. Systematic and incidental cases are distinguished.
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Hermeneutical Injustice and Animal Ethics: Can Nonhuman Animals Suffer from Hermeneutical Injustice?
Journal of Animal Ethics, 2018Abstract Miranda Fricker (2007) explains that hermeneutical injustice occurs when an area of one’s social experience is obscured from collective understanding. However, Fricker focuses only on the injustice suffered by those who cannot render intelligible their own oppression. I argue that there is another side to hermeneutical injustice
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Varieties of hermeneutical injustice
Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Reihe ...Bratu, Christine, Hänel, Hilkje
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Hermeneutical Injustice and Liberatory Education
The Southern Journal of Philosophy, 2018AbstractHermeneutical injustice occurs when there is a gap in the interpretive resources available to members of a society due to the marginalization of members of a social group from sense‐making practices. In this paper, I address two questions about hermeneutical injustice that are undertheorized in the recent literature: (1) what do we mean when we
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Blackness and Hermeneutical Injustice in Frantz Fanon
2023This article offers a critical review of Miranda Fricker’s notion of hermeneutical injustice based on two elements of Frantz Fanon’s work: 1) that social categories have a cultural load that is productive, which calls into question the definition of hermeneutical injustice as the absence or misrepresentation of categories; 2) how the latter is ...
de Oto, Alejandro, Jerade, Miriam
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