Imagine a successful woman professional named Marilyn. Marilyn judges—and has long judged—her assertiveness valuable, even attributing her professional success in part to this feature of herself, which she understands as integral to who she is. She finds assertive women admirable, and though she is familiar with the fact that women who comport themselves assertively in the workplace risk seeming less likable and suffering professional consequences, she judges it worthwhile, even important, to as…
Read moreImagine a successful woman professional named Marilyn. Marilyn judges—and has long judged—her assertiveness valuable, even attributing her professional success in part to this feature of herself, which she understands as integral to who she is. She finds assertive women admirable, and though she is familiar with the fact that women who comport themselves assertively in the workplace risk seeming less likable and suffering professional consequences, she judges it worthwhile, even important, to assert herself in her workplace. Now imagine that after a meeting in which she offered a frank, critical opinion on a colleague’s proposal, she finds herself feeling ashamed of her assertiveness. Saturated with shame, she wonders why she did not sit in the meeting, stay quiet, and leave the talking to others. Marilyn is surprised and disappointed to notice herself feeling this way, since even when gripped by this feeling, she judges assertiveness one of her most valuable traits. Still, the feeling persists. It is clear that Marilyn’s shame is a recalcitrant emotion. But it is a peculiar kind of recalcitrant emotion. Specifically, her shame is an obstinately self-deprecating social emotion, a distinctive species of emotional recalcitrance with significant ethical import. In this paper, I develop an account of obstinately self-deprecating social emotions and offer examples of this species of emotional recalcitrance. After presenting this account, I then argue that such emotions—which both disrupt the agent’s ability to self-determine and impede a form positive self-regard required for individual flourishing—constitute a unique and undertheorized ethical harm.