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38This chapter explores how deadnaming, the practice of calling a trans person by a name they have discarded, can be harmful. Using resources due to Ishani Maitra and Talia Mae Bettcher (and others), we argue that deadnaming functions to subordinate its targets. We explore how the practice can both cause and constitute this subordination, and argue that it often distinctively draws its ability to do so from broader societal transphobia. We enrich our view by highlighting some important differences…Read more
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65Epistemic Challenges Faced by Non-native English Speakers in Philosophy: Evidence from an International SurveyReview of Philosophy and Psychology 16 (4). 2025.The widespread use of English in the field of philosophy facilitates international collaboration but may also pose significant challenges in understanding, analyzing, or producing information for both native (NES) and non-native English speakers (NNES). These challenges have not yet been systematically investigated. We conducted an international survey of philosophers (_N_ = 1,615), comparing NES and NNES, while controlling for their academic position (e.g., student, staff, etc.) and other relev…Read more
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2552Epistemic Challenges Faced by Non-native English Speakers in Philosophy: Evidence from an International SurveyReview of Philosophy and Psychology 1-37. forthcoming.The widespread use of English in the field of philosophy facilitates international collaboration but may also pose significant challenges in understanding, analyzing, or producing information for both native (NES) and non-native English speakers (NNES). These challenges have not yet been systematically investigated. We conducted an international survey of philosophers (N = 1,615), comparing NES and NNES, while controlling for their academic position (e.g., student, staff, etc.) and other relevan…Read more
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115Silent DogwhistlesJournal of Social Philosophy. forthcoming.Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
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54Conversational silence, reconsideredTheoria 90 (6): 652-668. 2024.In ‘Conversational Pressure. Normativity in Speech Exchanges’ (2020), Sanford Goldberg discusses the significance of conversational silence, arguing that, absent certain defeating conditions, we have a general entitlement to assume that somebody who remains silent in a conversation doesn't reject what was said. Call this ‘No‐Silent‐Rejection’ (NSR). I reconsider Goldberg's account of conversational silence by arguing that silence cannot be explained via a universal claim like NSR: I show that th…Read more
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308Beyond Pronouns: Gender Visibility and Neutrality across LanguagesIn Ernest Lepore & Luvell Anderson (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Applied Philosophy of Language, Oxford University Press. pp. 320-346. 2024.The aim of this paper is to explore some trans and feminist concerns about the gendered aspects of languages beyond English, focusing in particular on Spanish, Italian, and German. Historically, discussions about gendered language have often challenged the ways in which language can make women (in)visible by addressing the implicit and explicit androcentrism and sexism in our language. We call this the visibility project. Recently, questions surrounding trans-inclusiveness and the possibility of…Read more
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101Silencing Conversational SilencesHypatia. 2024.This paper aims to extend the discussion of silencing beyond the realm of speech and to the domain of conversational silences – that is, silences that have communicative functions in our conversational exchanges. I argue that, insofar as we can use silences to communicate, we can also be prevented from doing things with these silences. Alongside a three- fold taxonomy I show the different ways in which this can happen, utilizing and extending Maitra’s (2009) account of silencing to illustrate th…Read more
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104On the Epistemology of Trigger WarningsFeminist Philosophy Quarterly 7 (4). 2021.Trigger warnings have been the flashpoints of many discussions in recent years. A prominent claim among those arguing against trigger warnings is what I will call the “coddling argument”, according to which trigger warnings coddle by allowing people to avoid ideas that they disagree with or find difficult. In this paper, I try to both make sense of and refute the coddling argument from a vice epistemological perspective. As I argue, CA is best understood as an expression of concern about the enc…Read more