The journal rated it as one of the top 12 papers published in the past 25 years.
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Replying to @alloftheponies1 @HPluckrose and
That's a stain on the journal but not on the broader field of women's and gender studies, which is vast. Would you indict epidemiology or nutrition science writ large for publishing sub-par work that doesn't hold up to subsequent scrutiny? https://www.stat.cmu.edu/~ryantibs/journalclub/ioannidis.pdf …
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Replying to @merlinc2 @HPluckrose and
It’s one of the most well respected and influential journals in the field. Where else are these fields going to inform themselves other than top tier scholarship?
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Replying to @alloftheponies1 @HPluckrose and
Again, http://retractionwatch.com Why is this field singled out, other than the authors don't like its particular politics or theoretical underpinnings? (It's not my cup of tea, either, but I think their critique is in good faith or all that clear.)
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Replying to @merlinc2 @alloftheponies1 and
It's the field of epistemology which we have expertise in. We support people with other expertise finding other problems with knowledge production in their fields - eg the current debate about whether fat has been unfairly linked to disease in service of the sugar industry.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @merlinc2 and
But we wouldn't necessarily complain if they focused their attention on that and didn't also learn about postmodernism and critical theory which drew on that and the epistemology which stems from this. Or about replication in social science. Or some debate over cold fusion.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @merlinc2 and
It is very possible to focus on a single problem which you know about and/or which affects you without asserting that there are no other problems in the world. In academia people do specialise & it is not at all suspicious if they address problems in one field and not every field
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Replying to @HPluckrose @alloftheponies1 and
That's fair (you critique what you know). But then why jump from that to broad-brush critiques of university culture (which you do in that essay you linked)?
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Replying to @merlinc2 @HPluckrose and
You take an enclave - forget how fair or unfair the critique is - and make it a synecdoche of the humanities. I think that's why your critique rubbed me the wrong way. It uses a case to make a generalization about humanistic/soc. sci inquiry, which is vast and variegated.
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Replying to @merlinc2 @alloftheponies1 and
No, we don't. PLEASE read the explanation if you want to address what we actually said. It specifically said that this does not represent the whole field of humanities and that we were afraid people would use it to claim that and asked them not to.
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Even Mother Jones supported us because we did not cast too wide a net and because we urged other people not to. https://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2018/10/cultural-studies-is-the-target-of-another-hoax-and-this-one-stings/ …pic.twitter.com/yJl4TESKdm
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