-
42Community, Diversity, and Difference: Implications for Peace (edited book)Rodopi. 2002.This book has its philosophical starting point in the idea that group-based social movements have positive implications for peace politics. It explores ways of imagining community, nation, and international systems through a political lens that is attentive to diversity and different lived experiences. Contributors suggest how groups might work toward new nonviolent conceptions and experiences of diverse communities and global stability.
-
4612'White Talk' as a Barrier to Understanding WhitenessIn George Yancy (ed.), What's It Like to Be a White Problem?, Lexington Books. pp. 37-57. 2014.My project is to explain why the question ‘How does it feel to be a white problem?’ cannot be answered in the fluttering grammar of white talk. The whiteness of white talk lies not only in its having emerged from white mouths, but also in its evasiveness—in its attempt to suppress fear and anxiety, and its consequential [if unintended] reinscription and legitimation of racist oppression. I White talk is designed, indeed scripted, for the purposes of evading, rejecting, and remaining ignorant abo…Read more
-
109Whiteness: Feminist Philosophical ReflectionsRowman & Littlefield Publishers. 1999.Written in an engaging narrative style these philosophical investigations undermine racist hierarchies along with false natualistic conceptions of the meanings of race and universalistic understandings of gender, by considering whiteness as it shapes and is infused by gender, class, sexuality, and culture. Central to this project are questions about how it is that culture and the state create such a wide range of different people who understand themselves as white. The essays collected here disc…Read more
-
127On Intersectionality, Empathy, And Feminist SolidarityJournal for Peace and Justice Studies 19 (1): 14-36. 2009.Naomi Zack’s Inclusive Feminism: A Third Wave Theory of Women’s Commonality (2005) begins with an original reading of the paradigm shift from gender essentialism to intersectionality that ended U.S. second wave feminism. According to Zack there has been a crisis in academic and professional feminism since the late 1970s. Her project is to explain the motivation behind the shift from commonality to intersectionality, to outline its harmful effects, and to reclaim the idea that all women share som…Read more
-
250Naomi Zack Women of Color and Philosophy. Malden, Mass., Blackwell Publishers, 2000 (review)Hypatia 20 (1): 220-225. 2005.Naomi Zack’s unique and important collection, Women of Color and Philosophy, brings together for the first time the voices of twelve philosophers who are women of color. She begins with the premise that the work of women of color who do philosophy in academe, but who do not write exclusively on issues of race, ethnicity, and gender, merits a collection of its own. It’s rare that women of color pursue philosophy in academic contexts; Zack counts at most thirty among the ten thousand members of th…Read more
-
350On Intersectionality and the Whiteness of Feminist PhilosophyIn George Yancy (ed.), The Center Must Not Hold: White Women Philosophers on the Whiteness of Philosophy, Lexington Books. 2011.In this paper I explore some possible reasons why white feminists philosophers have failed to engage the radical work being done by non-Western women, U.S. women of color and scholars of color outside of the discipline. Feminism and academic philosophy have had lots to say to one another. Yet part of what marks feminist philosophy as philosophy is our engagement with the intellectual traditions of the white forefathers. I’m not uncomfortable with these projects: Aristotle, Foucault, Sartre, Witt…Read more
APA Central Division
Normal, Illinois, United States of America