Has feminist philosophy changed philosophy?

September 7, 2012 - September 8, 2012
University of Iceland

Reykjavík
Iceland

View the Call For Papers

Organisers:

Eyja M. Brynjarsdóttir
University of Iceland
Salvör Nordal
University of Iceland
Ásta Sveinsdóttir
San Francisco State University
Sigríður Þorgeirsdóttir
University of Iceland

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Feminist philosophy has emerged in the last decades as a vibrant field within Western philosophy. It has resulted in questioning canons of philosophy as well as core concepts of the philosophical curriculum. Feminist epistemology, ethics, aesthetics and metaphysics have contributed to a richer understanding of the epistemic, ethical, perceiving and embodied subject. The pastand the present of philosophy as an academic discipline appear in a different light. Despite this, philosophy still has one of the lowest proportion of women and minorities among students and faculty when compared to other disciplines within the humanities and the sciences as a whole.  Does that have to do with the lack of acceptance of feminist work within philosophy? Or is it necessary to dig deeper in order to understand the resistance of philosophy towards change in this respect? The keynote speakers at this conference, Sally Haslanger and Linda Martín Alcoff, have gained widespread attention for their writings on the institutional culture, content and styles of philosophy, as well as for their initiatives on improving the situation of women and minorities in philosophy. The NNWP calls for papers that discuss if, and if so how feminist philosophy has changed philosophy.

Contact: [email protected].

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University of Oslo

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