I mean people opposed to identity politics generally. Left-liberals, centrists, conservatives (tho they're inclined to conflate Marxism & postmodernism), libertarians. Nonfeminists or liberal feminists. My readership, essentially. I'm not talking abt radfems.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @PhilosophyExp
Yes, but your readership is not necessarily the academic world. You might want to look at Susan Hekman's postmodernist critique of Standpoint theory and the subsequent debate on that paper. The paper, "Truth and Method: Feminist Standdpont Theory Revisited" was published...
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Replying to @MacDworkin @PhilosophyExp
That seems like a non-sequitur. You are right that my readership is not predominantly academic and so this is unlikely to interest them as much as the ideas which are travelling into activism, leftist social conscience and wider society. The ones they see.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @PhilosophyExp
Yes, I suspect my own sources, which are academic sources, are not ones that your average Twitter activist would have bother reading.
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Replying to @MacDworkin @PhilosophyExp
No, and yet the ideas which are affecting them are academic in origin so this is my reading. But I am reading Crenshaw, Butler, Applebaum, Medina, Dotson etc to address primarily intersectionality which is dominant now in feminism.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @PhilosophyExp
I disagree that Crenshaw and those you mention are dominant in feminism: at least not in the elite universities. Radical feminists have that privilege. .Consider those such as the highly regarded (in the feminist world) Rae Langton at Cambridge, Miranda Crocker at CUNY etc.
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Replying to @MacDworkin @PhilosophyExp
There are certainly some radfems holding strong in academia but politically not so much. I did a small survey of them recently. I didn't mean to, actually. I asked to hear from female academics who felt silenced by intersectionality & most were radfems. Well, gender critical.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @PhilosophyExp
But how did you carry out your survey? If you asked on Twitter, then you are back to the problem of you replacing your Twitter followers for what's going on out there.
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Replying to @MacDworkin @PhilosophyExp
No, I posted in on various academic sites. The fact that the radfem responses came in altogether makes me think it got posted on one of their sites. They are certainly not representative of my followers.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @PhilosophyExp
Yes, such sampling methods are hardly scientific, but I strongly suspect you know that. I accept that you might not have had budget or the will for something more scientific.
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And it's very small. 76 people. I stressed this at the beginning and the end.
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