•  13
    Double vowels, double fairness? Assessing the viability of diphthongs as novel strategies for gender fairness in Italian
    with Mara Floris, Daniela Ruzzante, Elena Sofia Safina, Igor Facchini, Giuseppe Di Dona, and Torrengo Giuliano
    Language Sciences 116. 2026.
    Proposals for gender-fair language in Italian include Alternative grammatical Gender Encoding Devices (AGEDs) such as the schwa (ə) or asterisk, potentially also accommodating non-binary identities. These solutions, though, often pose challenges for oral communication, accessibility, and social acceptance, as they may be perceived as external to the Italian language system. We examined the possibility of employing diphthongs—integral components of standard Italian phonology—as more internalized …Read more
  •  26
    Beyond obscuration and visibility: Thoughts on the Different Strategies of Gender-Fair Language in Italian
    with Simona Frenda, Alessandra T. Cignarella, Matteo Pellegrini, Andrea Marra, and Mara Floris
    Clic-It Conference Proceedings. 2023.
    This study focuses on the growing importance of gender-fair language and explores innovative strategies proposed also in other languages to avoid gender-specific endings. We present a set of guidelines for the annotation and reformulation of gender-(un)fair texts and their application to a corpus of 1,024 portions of university administrative documents in Italian. Overall, the guidelines presented in this study prove to be valuable both practically and theoretically. They help identify and addre…Read more
  •  44
    Generici
    Aphex 31 53-97. 2025.
    I generici esprimono affermazioni generali come “I leoni ruggiscono”, e vengono comunemente usati per esprimere stereotipi, come “Le donne sono emotive”. Queste costruzioni sono oggetto di un dibattito interdisciplinare che spazia dalla filosofia del linguaggio alla linguistica e alla psicologia. Introduciamo il tema discutendo i test che permettono di distinguere i generici, le loro proprietà linguistiche e le principali teorie sulla loro semantica. Offriamo poi una panoramica delle loro implic…Read more
  •  1
    Artificial Intelligence and Gender-Fair Language in School Books
    with Greta Persico and Simona Frenda
    Schole 62 (1): 214-229. 2024.
    This paper reflects the application in education of an autocorrector for Italian designed to make it easier to adopt gender-fair language consistently in administrative documents. Sexism in Italian produces important effects in educational contexts as confirmed, for example, by research analyzing school texts. The literature highlights how certain gendered expressions influence our cognition, and how masculine terms evoke masculine images with the effect of excluding, depowering and make invisib…Read more
  •  10
    In the light of a study of the difference between political actors and ordinary citizens as language users, and based on three moral arguments (consequence-based, recognition-based, and complicity-based), we propose that democratic representatives have an imperfect duty to use gender-fair-language in their public communication.In the case of members of the executive, such as ministries, prime ministries, and presidents, such an imperfect duty could also be justified on democratic grounds. Their …Read more
  •  79
    Generics are sentences that express generalizations about a category or about its members. They display a characteristic context-sensitivity: the same generic can express a statistical regularity, a principled connection, or a norm. Sally Haslanger (2014) argues that this phenomenon depends on the implicit content that generics carry in different contexts. I elaborate on Haslanger’s proposal, arguing that the implicit content of generics is complex and constituted by two different propositions. …Read more
  •  48
    The Harmful Feature of Generics
    Ethics Press. 2025.
    The Harmful Feature of Generics provides an in-depth investigation into the role of generics in essentialization offering a thorough examination of its roots. Generics, sentences expressing generalizations about categories or their members, are a common means to express stereotypes: we typically say "Philosophers are absent-minded" rather than "Some/Many/Most philosophers are absent-minded". The present book shows that this correlation is no coincidence. As emerged from robust empirical literatu…Read more
  •  60
    GRSelona 2: Gender, Race and Sexuality. Issues in Metaphysics
    Rivista Italiana di Filosofia Analitica Junior 5 (2): 137-150. 2014.
  • Generics express generalizations in the linguistic form «Ks are F», where K denotes a category or its members and F a property (for instance, «Tigers are striped» or «Women are emotional»). Generics seem to play a key role in fostering the belief that the members of certain categories share properties and dispositions due to a supposed common essence. It has then been argued that generics concerning discriminated social categories are especially insidious because they could favor prejudice on th…Read more
  •  498
    Linguistic Hermeneutical Injustice
    Social Epistemology 39 (4): 425-435. 2025.
    Grammatical gender languages mark gender on every noun and agreement target such as adjectives and pronouns. While the norm for personal nouns provides that the term’s grammatical gender corresponds to its referent’s gender, in certain circumstances, a discrepancy arises between the term and its referent’s gender. Taking Italian as a case study, I identify four such circumstances: reference to non-binary people, women and non-binary professionals in traditionally male-dominated fields, generic o…Read more
  •  75
    Generics
    Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy. 2025.
    Generics have been a vividly debated topic since the 1970s. Several aspects make them especially interesting, from their ubiquity to their tricky truth-conditions, from their distinctive cognitive implications to their (still debated) harmfulness in the social domain. This annotated bibliography aims to provide a guide to the massive scholarship on generics ranging through different fields. In linguistics and philosophy of language, generics are subject to inquiries for a number of reasons (see …Read more
  •  33
    Vulnerability To Disinformation In Older Age
    Phenomenology and Mind 28 180. 2025.
    Disinformation poses a significant challenge to contemporary society, as it has the potential to undermine the stability of democratic systems, put public health at risk, and undermine the credibility of science. We explore the question of whether certain groups of people are especially exposed to disinformation and, in particular, we focus on older people. We examine the purported impact of cognitive and linguistic factors, such as source amnesia and the need for consistency, the decline of pra…Read more
  •  300
    Beyond Pronouns: Gender Visibility and Neutrality across Languages
    with Iz González Vázquez and A. Klieber
    In 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
  •  79
    Which is the fairest of them all?
    Phenomenology and Mind 27 (27): 84. 2024.
    Gender-unfair language gives rise to injustice towards both women and non-binary people. Different strategies have been proposed to overcome this injustice, but which is the “best”? In this paper, I will approach this question from a normative perspective, taking into account practical and ethical aspects. I’ll first assess the feasibility and redundancy of the various strategies. Through this lens, no strategy stands out as the best, but each is best suited for specific contexts. I thus argue f…Read more
  •  1020
    In the light of a study of the di erence between political actors and ordinary citizens as language users, and based on three moral arguments (consequence-based, recognition-based, and complicity-based), we propose that democratic representatives have an imperfect duty to use gender-fair-language in their public communication. In the case of members of the executive, such as ministries, prime ministries, and presidents, such an imperfect duty could also be justi ed on democratic grounds. Their c…Read more
  •  126
    Generics and Epistemic Injustice
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 23 (5): 739-754. 2020.
    In this paper, we argue that, although neglected so far, there is a strong link between generics and testimonial injustice. Testimonial injustice is a form of epistemic injustice that “occurs when prejudice causes a hearer to give a deflated level of credibility to a speaker’s word”. Generics are sentences that express generalizations about a category or about its members without specifying what proportion of the category members possess the predicated property. We argue that generics are especi…Read more
  •  125
    The sentences that contain empty definite descriptions are sometimes perceived to be truth-valueless and sometimes perceived to be false. Strawson offered an account of this phenomenon. However, his proposal is empirically inadequate, as shown by von Fintel. von Fintel proposes an alternative account based on a mechanism of belief revision. In this paper, I argue that sentences with multiple failing presuppositions pose a problem for von Fintel’s account. Furthermore, I discuss two variants of v…Read more