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  1. Schools don’t care: Rearticulating care ethics in education.Liz Jackson - forthcoming - Educational Philosophy and Theory.
    Schools self-identify as caring communities and teach young children to be caring for each other. But schools also teach other contradictory and competing messages, such as individualism and self-reliance, rationalist concepts of justice and meritocracy, and other neoliberal approaches to life and community. Furthermore, while endorsements of care are commonly found in educational institutions, caring is not always (or even often) practiced or regarded as a major aim in schools, in contrast with human capital approaches to youth development. This essay (...)
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  • Post-everything: An intellectual history of post-concepts.Herman Paul & Adriaan van Veldhuizen (eds.) - 2021 - Manchester University Press.
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  • The smiling philosopher: Emotional labor, gender, and harassment in conference spaces.Liz Jackson - 2019 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (7):693-701.
    Conference environments enable diverse roles for academics. However, conferences are hardly entered into by participants as equals. Academics enter into and experience professional environments differently according to culture, gender, race, ethnicity, class, and more. This paper considers from a philosophical perspective entering and initiating culturally into academic conferences as a woman. It discusses theories of gender and emotional labor and emotional management, focusing on Arlie Hochschild’s foundational work, and affect in gendered social relations, considering Sara Ahmed’s theorization of the feminist (...)
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  • Reading Together: “Communitarian Reading” and Women Readers in Colonial Bengal.Swati Moitra - 2017 - Hypatia 32 (3):627-643.
    In this article, I seek to consider this practice of “communitarian” reading—reading aloud, reading together—as a defining aspect of the cultures of reading among Bengali women in the nineteenth century. I wish to contest the privileging of “silent” reading as a “modern” mode of reading and the subsequent celebration of the protean incorporeality of the “silent” reader, in the works of prominent scholars of readership, arguing that the privileging of “silent” reading as the predominant “modern” mode of reading does not (...)
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  • Rethinking Identity and Feminism: Contributions of Mapuche Women and Machi from Southern Chile.Ana Mariella Bacigalupo - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (2):32-57.
    I analyze how machi discourse and practice of gender and identity contribute to feminist debates about gendered indigenous Others, and the effects that Western notions of Self and Other and feminist rhetoric have on Mapuche women and machi: people who heal with herbal remedies and the help of spirits. Machi juggling of different worlds offers a particular understanding of the way identity and gender are constituted and of the relationship between Self and Other, theory and practice, subject and object, feminism (...)
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  • Whence Muslim Women? A Response to Alia Al-Saji’s “The Racialization of Muslim Veils: A Philosophical Analysis”.Namita Goswami - 2012 - Symposia on Gender, Race, and Philosophy 9 (1):875-902.
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  • Rethinking Identity and Feminism: Contributions of Mapuche Women and Machi from Southern Chile.Ana Mariella Bacigalupo - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (2):32 - 57.
    I analyze how machi discourse and practice of gender and identity contribute to feminist debates about gendered indigenous Others, and the effects that Western notions of Self and Other and feminist rhetoric have on Mapuche women and machi: people who heal with herbal remedies and the help of spirits. Machi juggling of different worlds offers a particular understanding of the way identity and gender are constituted and of the relationship between Self and Other, theory and practice, subject and object, feminism (...)
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