Abstract
The recent literature on epistemic injustice has convincingly showed that injustice is often self-concealing,
because those who suffer it lack the hermeneutical resources to talk about it. How, then, are the
victims of epistemic injustice capable of denouncing and resisting it? The article seeks an answer to
this question by inquiring into what Judith Shklar calls the “sense of injustice.” Following Shklar, I
argue that the identification and critique of injustice relies on feeling rather than established moral
values. In order to clarify how feelings can be the source of universal claims, I turn to an interpreta -
tion of Kant’s analysis of the feeling of the sublime developed by Jean-François Lyotard. According to
this interpretation, any act of communication generates a silence that calls to be expressed. Following
this view, I argue that epistemic injustice leads to a universalist act of epistemic resistance on the basis
of the feeling that silenced voices ought to be head.