Several. And their friends can see their posts and comments. Many of them have fairly restricted friends lists though, because there are corners of the discipline where people anonymously gossip and speculate about their colleagues’ sex lives, job prospects, where they copy-paste conversations, and so on. How odd!
If you don’t think someone who has been identified by others since birth as a Tetramorium can truly have been born a Pheidole, then you are a bigot and may not publish in my journal.
If you think that a Myrmica can just up and declare themselves a Pogonomyrmex by fiat one day, then boy, I don’t think I have to spell out why you’re a bigot and may not publish in my journal.
YES finally we are getting somewhere! I may not agree with your thesis, but I agree with your incorporation of ants. This is the discussion you all need, even if it’s not the one you deserve.
Lisa Guenther and Lori Gruen! They were near the top signatories on the open letter, and like Chloe Taylor said quickly and visibly attacked her. What a shitty, shitty way to treat your own student; I’ve totally lost respect for them.
Rebecca Tuval, the original criminal, who has successfully submitted a doctoral thesis at Vanderbilt University, as well as perpetrating a thought-crime at the journal Hypatia.
The Advisory Committee for her PhD thesis at Vanderbilt:
Advisor Name Title
Kelly Oliver Committee Chair
Charles Scott Committee Member
David Wood Committee Member
José Medina Committee Member
Lisa Guenther Committee Member
Lori Gruen Committee Member
Chloe Taylor, Professor at Alberta and self-confessed friend of Tuval, so clearly guilty by association; she possesses a PhD in philosophy from Toronto.
There is also a Nora Semenstain at the University of Tennessee, which I understand is a football rival of Vanderbilt.
Enzo Rossi · May 2, 2017 at 12:56 pm
OK so this is what this is about: some scholars want a methodological monopoly. They don’t want people to write about trans issues in the analytic style, at least not without lots of nods (and citations) to auto-ethnographic and/or postmodernist literature. They fear what some have called, bizarrely, “philosophical gentrification”. And they know that organising e-mobs is more effective than attacking the gentrifiers’ arguments.
Fantastic, thoughtful comment over at ‘philmetablog’ which was set up to deal with the ‘ant problem’. I thought I’d repost it here (I didn’t write it) in case the philmetablog doesn’t take off and this place remains dominant. I think one or two italicizations may have gotten lost but the original is at https://philmetablog.wordpress.com/2017/05/02/forsta-blogginlagget/#comments
anonymous
2 May, 2017
17:57
Reply
Couple more thoughts on this:
1. Deadnaming. Like (I presume) most people outside this particular academic-political ghetto, I had never heard this expression before. But it really epitomizes something. It’s just too obvious the way certain ‘conceptual’ innovations serve the interests of the group. It sounds awful, doesn’t it? You can just see the wide-eyed expression of horror. I can’t believe he deadnamed zer! It sounds a bit like murder or something. But here’s what it amounted to: Tuvel used the expression ‘Caitlyn (formerly Bruce) Jenner’. That’s it. This was one of the mob’s main examples of Tuvel’s departing so widely from ‘scholarly’ norms that her paper was awful enough to be retracted by the journal.
2. Transracial vs transgender. Ever since the Jenner and Dolezal stories came out at nearly the same time, this has been the elephant in the room for ‘activist scholars’. Didn’t we hear for decades about how race is a social construct and gender is a social construct, as if both of these were major insights, crucial to understanding all kinds of oppression? And yet here was as clear a case as one could want of race and gender being treated by our ideological overlords as if they had nothing in common whatever. This wasn’t whimsical, either: you could see how they couldn’t possibly treat the cases as remotely similar, it was too glaringly inconsistent with any number of their other irreversible ideological commitments. And yet it was just really hard to give a plausible account of what the huge, huge difference was supposed to be. In any genuine community of intellectual inquiry, this would be viewed as an opportunity to take stock, clarify concepts, question presuppositions, and so on. Compare ‘Why exactly is later-term abortion different from infanticide?’ Obviously very few ‘progressives’ have ever really taken this question at all seriously, but at least they’ve recognized that, in the context of actual philosophy, they’re obliged to pretend to.
I think that here we have the key to the extraordinarily frenzied hysteria that has greeted Tuvel’s paper. Follow the affect: it’s not because what Tuvel wrote was so implausible or hard to defend: it’s precisely because on the face of it it’s just so obvious. It’s the most clearly-marked pressure-point in their whole massive ideological edifice. What can they do when it’s attacked, if they have basically no argumentative resources? There’s no alternative to screaming bloody murder.
3. Scholarly standards. Since they have basically no counterarguments, they have to claim that the reason the article should be retracted is that is doesn’t meet fundamental standards of scholarship. (The only other option I can think of is to try to turn it into basically a health-and-safety issue; Mark Lance’s attempts to justify censorship in order to prevent ‘predictable harms’ resulting from the ‘cavalier bantering-about’ of certain ideas functions as a kind of reductio of this kind of approach.) The point at which we are asked to take this seriously is the point at which we start to feel seriously insulted. Are we supposed to believe that the activists would have regarded an article somehow defending (that is, trying to defend) the relevant orthodoxy, but exhibiting the same alleged ‘scholarly deficiencies’, as similarly requiring retraction? That this has nothing to do with content? One can’t even take seriously the idea that one’s supposed to take this seriously. And the endless cant from Amy Donahue and others about the importance of upholding scholarly standards! From these people? Have you read any ‘philosophical’ work on ‘trans*’ issues lately? (What’s with the asterisk, by the way? I mean, obviously it’s a shibboleth — Drabek uses it — but what’s it supposed to be about?)
The only good news here is that politicized ‘scholarship’ gets even more discredited, and more enemies of intellectual inquiry identify themselves by scurrying out of the woodwork to sign petitions.
Wondering if anyone knows about this…. if a journal retracts and apologizes for an article, do they still have the publication rights? Or could Tuvel now submit and get it published elsewhere? Given that the philosophy community basically seems to think that what Hypatia did is egregious and disturbing, it would probably be quite a feather in the cap of a more scholarly journal if they could give it a home.
Hold on, my friend. Tuvel’s stuff is crap, and keeps being crap despite the awful treatment she is receiving. no serious journal would publish that rubbish….
oh wait: Phil Imprint just published the Sexual Orientation by Robinoff, so sure: they will publish Tuvel’s crap as well.
I mean, if by “just” you mean over a year ago, then sure. And what makes that paper “rubbish” and/or “crap”? Try to use reason instead of your low-effort edgelord rhetoric.
2:22 here. Tuvel’s arguments are sound, sure, but are worth a chat over a beer – at least if your IQ is 130 or more. I was taking philosophy papers to be a bit deeper. but yeah, the profession is now filled with low IQ people and the platitudes of Tuvel look like a piece of good philosophy.
Nah, I think it’s probably interesting, since it hit such a nerve and was an actual inquiry, not just a moral tirade or a bit of virtue signalling. It might not be part of core analytic philosophy, but it might still be a piece of writing that, especially given the reaction, out to be published in an appropriate place.
I’ve seen a lot of people quietly take down the nastiest ad hominem comments they made against Tuvel this weekend, which I find a troubling evasion of responsibility.
Do these people stand by their comments, or not? If they do, they should leave them up. If not, they should apologize.
Putting the content of what they said aside, I don’t think it’s fair to criticize that form of behavior in itself, said one anonymous commenter to another. Though maybe they were happy to have their name on the comment when they thought it was going to score them some points.
Fair enough. Still, though, we’re just anonymous jerks posting in an online cesspool. We could be anybody, and in all probability we’re nobodies. When you castigate someone openly, you’re generally expressing the expectation that you ought to get away with it, which in turn implies a support for norms on which the person you castigate should have lower status than you (at least in the context). That’s not thing.
“Note from statement writers (added 5/1, at approximately the 520th signatory): “We acknowledge that this statement should have named anti-Blackness directly. The statement is not an exhaustive summary of the many harms caused by this article. We hope it will at least serve as a way to register that harm and issue a demand for a retraction. This is one step in the direction of seeking accountability for the harms committed by its publishing– and to begin a conversation about the larger problems with our discipline it represents. And we thank Chanda Prescod-Weinstein (and others) for pointing out the dangerous erasure of anti-Blackness and the erasure of the Black labor on which the rhetoric of our own letter is built””
lol even the statement of protest was “problematic”! HEADS MUST ROLL FOR THIS
In this post, I reproduce a comment from Mark Norris Lance on a Facebook post made by John Corvino regarding le l’affaire de Tuvel. This comment needs to be entered into disciplinary public consciousness before it vanishes from the internet.
Lance: ” I’ve put quite a few criticisms of the article out publicly. Those criticisms are correct. If you want to substantively engage with them, please do, but just announcing that everyone criticizing the paper is wrong, and arguing in bad faith suggests to me that you are not actually competent to be in this discussion because the criticisms are pretty basic.”
The sheer spectacle of self-indulgent hubris is a wonder to behold. I suppose this is what happens when one abandons realism to enter the space of reasons.
I’m glad to see that Corvino has convinced some people that they need to back off, but it’s a little sickening to see some of the leaders of the mob declare the importance of being kind without taking any public steps to remedy the situation they’ve caused. I guess now they’ll submit their letter to Hypatia to demand the retraction with kindness in their hearts and their names hidden from public view.
I know — Kukla and Lance applaud the vile open letter to Hypatia — then pose for a misty-eyed group hug, singing a hymn to kindness. It has all the conviction of the sentimental tears of Fyodor Karamazov.
Lance in particular continues to outdo himself:
But presenting this as if the main focus of critics has been an attack on Tuvel, is simply not true… [N]othing in the letter, nothing I’ve seen from prominent philosophers attacks her.
(That’s from the DN thread.) The only serious question this raises is: Is he just pretending to be stupid? As if the signing of the open letter to Hypatia by Lori Gruen and Lisa Guenther, who were both examiners of Tuvel’s PhD (just to take an especially piquant and shameful example), couldn’t possibly be interpreted as a hostile act!
Then there’s this:
Despite the point having already been made several times, person after person continues to say things like this: “Most bad scholarship goes quietly into the night unread and uncited. Why is this one viewed as a moral crime?”… That is the question being posed over and over as if it is a serious one. Well, then, I suppose a serious answer would start with the murder of trans folks on the street, their brutal treatment by police, their constant public shaming and abuse…
(I especially love the implicit appeal for sympathy — eyeroll, sigh — on account of the tedium and indignity of having to point out the obvious yet again to these benighted idiots.) Yeah, the only problem here is that, if you look at the criticisms of Tuvel, including those on the thread to which Lance is here contributing, a huge proportion of them clearly allege or imply that her paper’s ‘scholarly deficiencies’ alone warrant its retraction. There is rarely the slightest suggestion that they would not have warranted it if it weren’t for all the horrible harm the paper was contributing to. On the contrary, the ‘purely scholarly’ nature of the objections is frequently emphasized, in a risibly futile attempt to conceal their ideological motivation. Furthermore — and I want you to read this question carefully, Mark — if the real problem is the harm, why mention the scholarly nature of the ‘deficiencies’ at all? — let alone give it so much emphasis.
“I imagine that my departure from the thread will be interpreted by some as a concession to your argument. It’s not.”
Don’t worry, Justin. Only good philosophers change their credences when they can’t refute an argument with a conclusion they don’t like. And no one would ever confuse you for a good philosopher.
He also tries to refute Hellie’s argument by ad hominem reasoning: Hellie was Ludlow’s friend, therefore his argument is not valid. Weinberg is a pathetic savage clown who should be driven into the sea.
The comments are pretty juvenile. It’s not a good look to interrupt someone’s discussion with petty insults and spam. If you think the guy is wrong, let him make his feeble argument. Attacking him wildly lets people fall back on the “comments on posts about feminism justify feminism” line.
Kipnis notes many times in the book that there are legitimate Title IX claims that are handled badly. I don’t remember her saying that campus rape activists in general were *all* nuts, so I don’t know what the reports of reasonable activists are supposed to show. On Pogin, it speaks well of her that she flagged the procedural irregularity, but that hardly vindicates her, given that she filed so many absurd complaints in the first place.
One thing that’s good about Ichikawa’s post is the focus on administrative power and procedural fairness, and the overlapping consensus that these are problem areas. That hasn’t generated as much discussion here as it should have. People who are generally at odds and heavily polarized might still be able to make progress through discussion of those issues.
I would say that I can’t believe I was banned from this, the freest of blogs on the internet. But, I’ve come to accept that people don’t like ants, so they’re trying to ban ants… interesting!
Here’s something the moderator can do–let BB and his brother do their thing, and once or twice a day cull their comments from the blog. I predict that a week or two of that will discourage the guys.
But you should leave the comments from the earlier threads. Given the way the Kipnis and Hypatia malfeasances are coming into wider discussion, it will be good to have a record of how the Blanchards behaved.
Bravo. Here’s hoping the Blanchards hate-read the blog in the interim and see what’s going on. They came at a perfect time. And they’ve no doubt raised the visibility of the metablogs in the circles the traffic in.
Is the owner of PMMMB trolling everyone by claiming to “ban” someone from posting on a blog that doesn’t require comment moderation, and in a planet that has something called “The Tor Browser”?
“it will be good to have a record of how the Blanchards behaved.”
I can see the stories now. During a time when there were wide-ranging public discussions of the Kipnis and Hypatia controversies in multiple venues, there was also a blog where people (no one knows how many, could be 100, could be 10) discussed these issues anonymously, along with gossip and speculation about named people’s sex lives, assaults and assault allegations, job prospects, physical appearance, quality as scholars, etc. And do you know what the Blanchard Bros had the /gall/ to do in this anonymous forum? They came in and posted jokes about ants. Can you believe it? What kinds of monsters are these people?
It’s also obvious that they or one of their friends is responsible for the hate speech. If it were someone else, it would have been posted under their names, so that a google search would turn up JB or BB using the N word.
Right, and I’m sure you’d say the same thing if they posted two dozen inane comments a day at Feminist Philosophers. You wouldn’t say they were being disruptive.
Believable.
“Right, and I’m sure you’d say the same thing if they posted two dozen inane comments a day at Feminist Philosophers. You wouldn’t say they were being disruptive.
Believable.”
We can suppose the author’s a hypocrite for the sake of argument – but yeah, it’s pretty implausible that this is what the stories would be! Also, the description in the story hardly describes the comment threads at FP. Plus, generally the FP authors themselves are only nominally pseudonymous.
But haven’t you read people’s replies to the Blanchards? This blog is enormously important and influential. People check it when they are on search committees, they sift through the comments to figure out what’s going on, and they always believe people’s claims about who is who in the comments.
That it’s followed immediately by this is really hilarious: “just announcing that everyone criticizing the paper is wrong, and arguing in bad faith suggests to me that you are not actually competent to be in this discussion”
You shall bind them as a sign on your hand and they shall be as frontals on your forehead. You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates:
Elise Springer, Wesleyan University
Alexis Shotwell, Carleton University
Dilek Huseyinzadegan, Emory University
Lori Gruen, Wesleyan University
Shannon Winnubst, Ohio State University
B. Tamsin Kimoto, Emory University
Marie Draz, San Diego State University
Alice MacLachlan, York University
Axelle Karera, Wesleyan University
H. Rakes, Oregon State University
Tempest Henning, Vanderbilt University
Andrew Dilts, Loyola Marymount University/Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
Don Deere, Loyola Marymount University
Mairead Sullivan, Loyola Marymount University
Emily Garcia, Northeastern Illinois University
Sina Kramer, Loyola Marymount University
Claire Colebrook, Pennsylvania State University
C. Riley Snorton, Cornell University
Alison Reiheld, Southern Illinois University – Edwardsville
Verena Erlenbusch, University of Memphis
Luvell Anderson, University of Memphis
Christina Friedlaender, University of Memphis
Sami Schalk, University of Wisconsin – Madison
Che Gossett, Rutgers University
Joy Ellison, Ohio State University
Patti Duncan, Oregon State University
Lauren Freeman, University of Louisville
Aimi Hamraie, Vanderbilt University
Qwo-Li Driskill, Oregon State University
Gaile Polhaus, Jr., Miami University of Ohio
Samantha Brennan, Western University (London, Ontario, Canada)
Yannik Thiem, Villanova University
Gayle Salamon, Princeton University
David Kazanjian, University of Pennsylvania/Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
Adriel M. Trott, Wabash College
Leigh M. Johnson, Christian Brothers University
Emanuela Bianchi, New York University
Cynthia Willett, Emory University
Lisa Guenther, Vanderbilt University
Sharyn Clough, Oregon State University
Sabeen Ahmed, Vanderbilt University
Jasmine Wallace, Villanova University
Sarah Hansen, California State University Northridge
Brendan Moore, Emory University
Catherine Clune-Taylor, Princeton University
Michael Floyd, Oregon State University
Stephanie Jenkins, Oregon State University
Whitney Ronshagen, Emory University
Tarik Dobbs, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Megan Dean, Georgetown University
Arielle Amiri, DePaul University
Edward Kazarian, Rowan University
Jake Yocham, University of California, Irvine School of Law
Hannah Hjerpe-Schroeder, Emory University
Erin Grogan, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
Nishant Shahani, Washington State University
Claudia Garcia-Rojas, Northwestern University
Liam Aranda, Northwestern University
Cassie Herbert, Georgetown University
Hajjar Baban, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Sara Saba, Emory University
Hector Ramirez-Kimoto, Unaffiliated
Jared Rodríguez, Northwestern University
Sarah Kathryn Marshall, University of Memphis
Eric A. Stanley, University of California, Riverside
Joseph Stramondo, San Diego State University
Sara Ahmed, Independent Scholar
Jana McAuliffe, University of Arkansas Little Rock
M. Shadee Malaklou, Beloit College
Emma Gunderson, University of California, Irvine School of Law
Lilyana Levy, Emory University
Jessica Decker, California State University, San Marcos
Sara-Maria Sorentino, University of California, Irvine
Deniz Durmus, John Carroll University
Harold Braswell, St. Louis University
Nikki Karalekas, Washington University
Amber Kelsie, University of Pittsburgh
Nora Berenstain, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Danai Mupotsa, University of the Witwatersrand
Cori Wong, Colorado State University
Carmen Mitchell, California State University, San Marcos
Samantha Norman, Fordham University
CV Vitolo-Haddad, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Simone Kolysh, CUNY Graduate Center
Ellen Samuels, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Eli Kean, Michigan State University
Zoe Samudzi, University of California, San Francisco
Pamela Wynne Butler, University of Notre Dame
Katrina England, Binghamton University
Michael Norton, University of Arkansas Little Rock
Hex Larsen, University of Southern California
Alden Jones, University of Texas-Austin
Catherine Ross-Stroud, University of Wisconsin River Falls
Leah J. Reinert, University of Northern Colorado
Bogdan Popa, Oberlin College
Ege Selin Islekel, Loyola Marymount University
Christopher Williams, Rutgers Newark
Elizabeth Bennett Atwood, Colorado State University
Judith Rodriguez, University of California, Irvine
alithia zamantakis, Georgia State University
Sasha Klupchak, Emory University
Madeline Eller, Georgetown University
Jami Weinstein, Linköping University
T.J. Jourian, Independent Scholar
Desiree Valentine, Penn State University
Andrés Sandoval, University of California Santa Cruz
Naveen Minai, Institute of Business Administration (Pakistan)
María de la C. Salvador, DePaul University
Lauren Nuckols, Penn State University
FIona Kumari Campbell, University of Dundee, Scotland
Adam Schwartz, Oregon State University
Fanny Söderbäck, DePaul University
Justin Strong, University of California, Irvine
James South, Marquette University
Christina A. León, Oregon State University
Sara Kolmes, Georgetown University
Courtney Miller, Binghamton University
Mehra Gharibian, UC Irvine
Benita de Robillard, University of the Witwatersrand
Shouta Brown, University of Memphis
İmge Oranlı, Koç University, Istanbul
Susana L. Gallardo, San Jose State University
Celia Bardwell-Jones, University of Hawai’i at Hilo
Mijke van der Drift, Goldsmiths, University of London
Daniel Tillapaugh, California Lutheran University
Darci Doll, Delta College
Amanda Armstrong, University of Michigan
Brady Heiner, California State University, Fullerton
Joel Michael Reynolds, Emory University
Eliza Steinbock, Leiden University Center for the Arts in Society
Zara Bain, University of Bristol
Maria Bates, Pierce College
Sandeep Bakshi, University of Le Havre, France
Rachel McKinnon, College of Charleston
Emma Sheppard, Edge Hill University
Barrett Emerick, St. Mary’s College of Maryland
Nicolle Brancazio, University of Wollongong
Luana Ross, GWSS, University of Washington
J.R. Latham, University of Melbourne
Michelle N. Huang, Penn State
Kelli Potter, Utah Valley University
Sabrina Aggleton, Penn State University
Mary McGinnis, Ball State University
Daniel Allen, Villanova University
Jeanine Weekes Schroer, University of Minnesota Duluth
Max Baumkel, Vanderbilt University
Theodra Bane, Villanova University
Quin Rich, Emory University
Naomi Scheman, University of Minnesota, emerita
Rocío Zambrana, University of Oregon
Jane Dryden, Mount Allison University
Erica Rand, Bates College
Perry Zurn, University of Pennsylvania
Elena Ruiz, Michigan State University
Cáel M Keegan, Grand Valley State University
Melanie Adley , Vanderbilt University
Alyssa Hillary, University of Rhode Island
Sydney Silberman, Vanderbilt University
Austin H Johnson, Kent State University
Janine Jones, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Dana Howard, National Institutes of Health
Susana Loza, Hampshire College
Sarah Kizuk, Marquette University
Kadin Henningsen, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Robin James, UNC Charlotte
Morey Williams, Villanova University
Jason Read, University of Southern Maine
Lorna Bracewell, University of Nebraska Kearney
Adrienne Brune, Averett University
Brian Jara, Towson University
Eli R Green, Widener University, Center for Human Sexuality Studies
Chris Barcelos, University of Wisconsin Madison
Cynthia Wu, SUNY at Buffalo
Sarah Clark Miller, Penn State University
Andrew Johnson, University of California, Santa Barbara
Alfred Frankowski, Northeastern Illinois University
Amy Donahue, Kennesaw State University
C Dalrymple-Fraser, University of Toronto
Maria Peña, MPA, JDc, Baylor Law School
Karen Frost-Arnold, Hobart & William Smith Colleges
Mauro Cabral Grinspan, GATE
Andrea Pitts, UNC Charlotte
Whitney Mutch, University of Alambama, Tuscaloosa
Juno Salazar Parrenas, Ohio State University
Karen Rice, Georgetown University
Julinna Oxley, Coastal Carolina University
Lee Penn, University of Minnesota – Twin Cities
Zenzele Isoke, University of Minnesota
Shanté Paradigm Smalls, St. John’s University
Long Bui, Wesleyan University
Shaeeda Mensah, Penn State University
Erin L. Durban-Albrecht, Illinois State University
Christopher Culp, Trocaire College
Alexis Lothian, University of Maryland College Park
Cristina Serna, Colgate University
Lorena Muñoz, University of Minnesota
Elena Long, PhD, University of New Hampshire
Jessica Namakkal, Duke University
Kelsey Borrowman, Villanova University
Stephanie Kerschbaum, University of Delaware
Atticus Cameron, Baltimore City College
Holly Moore, Luther College
Abby Scribne, Emory University
GPat Patterson, Ball State University
Florence Ashley, McGill University
Matt Tierney, Penn State – University Park
Dawn Chisebe, Kenyon College
Lyn Radke, Vanderbilt University
Rachel McNealis, Marquette University
Rick Elmore, Appalachian State University
Abigail Boggs, Wesleyan University
Rose Bel, Syracuse University
Karijn van den Berg, PhD, Aberystwyth University
Cynthia Wang, Cal State LA
Clare Forstie, Northwestern University
Jenny L. Davis, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Habiba Diallo, University of London
Andrea Long Chu, New York University
Jack Leff, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Jeremy Bell, Georgia Southern University
Laura Brant, Colorado State University
Daniel Smith, Pennsylvania State University
Ephraim Das Janssen, Fordham University
Hanna Lipkind, Vanderbilt University
Patricia L. Grosse, Drexel University
Jill Gillespie, Denison University
Brenna McCaffrey, CUNY Graduate Center
Lisa Miracchi, University of Pennsylvania
Jennifer Stoever, Binghamton University
Angela Jones, Farmingdale State College, SUNY
Sabrina Aggleton, Penn State University
Mae Miller, CUNY Graduate Center
Chrystie Myketiak, University of Brighton
greg zoda, Baylor University
Sara Bijani, Michigan State University
Mark Lance, Georgetown University
Nancy McHugh, Wittenberg University
Jigna Desai, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Carleigh Morgan, King’s College London
Janet Werther, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Rebecca Carter, Virginia Commonwealth University
Nick Thuot, Iowa State University
Jason Wyckoff, Independent Scholar
Hyacinth Piel, University of Illinois at Chicago
Mike Gill, Syracuse University
Gwendolyn Beetham, Rutgers University
Ammon Allred, University of Toledo
Michael Wei-Chih LIU, National Yang-Ming University
Jason Byron, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Mary Dickman, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Jennifer Gammage, DePaul University
Peter Capretto, Vanderbilt University
Erika Brown, Villanova University
Lake Elrod, UC Santa Cruz
KJ Surkan, MIT
Zoe Brigley Thompson, The Ohio State University
Janice Dowell, Syracuse University
Jake Jackson, Temple University
Isabel Engelbert, Johnson County Community College
Forrest Deacon, The New School for Social Research
Maya Goldenberg, University of Guelph
Viki Peer, University of South Florida
Alaina L. Monts, University of Texas at Austin
M Hernandez, UNC Chapel Hill
James K. Stanescu, American University
Nancy McHugh, Wittenberg University
Chanda Prescod-Weinstein, University of Washington
Jana Clark, Indiana University Bloomington
D.E. Wittkower, Old Dominion University
Shayne Sanscartier, University of Toronto
Alina Boyden, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Tyler DeAtley, Rider University
Dave Mesing, Villanova University
Axel Mueller, Northwestern Philosophy
Melissa Johnson, Southwestern University
Séagh Kehoe, University of Nottingham
Debra Carroll-Beight, Lund University
Sarah Boeshart, University of Florida
alex cruse, unaffiliated
Beth Capper, Brown University
Katie Howard, Emory University
Eli Erlick, University of California, Santa Cruz
Myrl Bream, Virginia Commonwealth University
Nael Bhanji, York Universiry, Canada
Andrea Breau, The Ohio State University
Fiona Maeve Geist, Hampshire College
Samantha Perez, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Kathy Kiloh, OCAD University
Hilarie Ashton, CUNY Graduate Center
Lisa King, University of Tennessee
Lana Lin, The New School
Jami McFarland, Western University
Jill Gordon, Colby College
Ryan van Nood, Purdue University
Lena Palacios, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Joshua Bastian Cole, Cornell University
Saba Fatima, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
Lynne Tirrell, University of Massachusetts Boston
Dundee Lackey, Texas Woman’s University
Alisa Carse, Georgetown University
Lynne Huffer, Emory University
Thomas J Billard , University of Southern California
Ellie Anderson, Muhlenberg College
C. Fullarton, Emory University
Susan Livingston, Indiana State University
Crystal McKinnon, La Trobe University
Mimi Thi Nguyen, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Thomas J Billard, University of Southern California
Franco Barchiesi, Ohio State University
Caleb Knapp, University of Washington
Thomas J Billard, University of Southern California
R.A. Briggs, Stanford University
Amelia M. Wirts, Boston College
Mimi Khuc, University of Maryland
Margot Weiss, Wesleyan University
Talia Mae Bettcher, California State University, Los Angeles
Krista Benson, Ohio State University
Angela Carter, University of Minnesota
Isa Zuluaga, Mount Holyoke College, Posse Foundations Scholar
Francisco J. Galarte, University of Arizona
Julia Gibson, Michigan State University
Sana Rizvi, De Montfort University
Katrina Haaksma, Calvin College
Julian Long, B.A. 2004, Women’s Studies, The College of William & Mary
Victoria Dickman-Burnett, University of Cincinnati
Hannah Bacon, Stony Brook University
Mario I. Suarez, Texas A&M University, Ph.D. Student
Hilary Malatino, Penn State University
Erica Chu, University of Illinois–Chicago
Fiacha Heneghan, Vanderbilt University
Isaac West, Vanderbilt University
Janaya Crevier, Calvin College
Lori Watson, University of San Diego
Eliana Peck, Vanderbilt University
T.J. Tallie, Washington and Lee University
Sarah E Watkins, Independent Scholar
Angela Asbell, California State University, San Bernardino
Danny Khuu, University of California Santa Barbara
Naomi Greyser, University of Iowa
Darian Spearman, University of Connecticut
George Hoagland, Minneapolis College of Art & Design
Larisa Kingston, Mann Temple University
Cabell Gathman, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Yolanda Estes, Mississippi State University (Retired)
An Sasala, The University of Kansas
Sarah Tyson, University of Colorado Denver
Eden Osucha, Bates College
Jack Turner, University of Washington
Heather Stewart, University of Colorado, Boulder
Kris Gebhard, George Mason University
Marcia Ochoa, University of California, Santa Cruz
Stephen Dillon, Hampshire College
Aren Aizura, University of Minnesota
Florentien Verhage, Washington and Lee University
Sofia Huerter, University of Washington
R. Gonzalez Martin, University of Texas
V Chaudhry, Northwestern University
Julia Gibson, Michigan State University
Victoria Dickman-Burnett, University of Cincinnati
Elliott H. Powell, University of Minnesota
Taylor Edelhart, New York University
Keeli Armitage, Eckerd College
Amanda Swarr, University of Washington, Seattle
Natalie Oswin, McGill University
Priya Kandaswamy, Mills College
Brandon J. Manning, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Victoria Dickman-Burnett, University of Cincinnati
Aisha Lockridge, Saint Joseph’s University
Gilbert Caluya, University of Melbourne
Karma R. Chávez, University of Texas-Austin
Gyunghee Park, University College Cork
Juliana Hu Pegues, University of Minnesota
Alana Lentin, Western Sydney University
MaryKatherine Ramsey, The Ohio State University
Brit Schulte, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Ben Brucato, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Laine Zisman newman, University of Toronto
Zahari Richter, Incoming GWU graduate student
Kyle Shupe, University of Cincinnati
Sirin Yilmaz, New York University
Chris Taylor, University of Chicago
Edmond Y. Chang, University of Oregon
Desiree Melton, Notre Dame of Maryland University
Jessica Pabón, SUNY New Paltz
Jasmine Noelle Yarish, University of California, Santa Barbara
Salvador Vidal Ortiz, American University
Lotta Kähkönen, University of Turku
Kathryn Clancy, University of Illinois
MacRorie Dean, The Ohio State University
L. Syd M Johnson, Michigan Technological University
Juliana Martínez, American University
Jennifer Suchland, Ohio State University
Tyler A. Colwell Marquette University (Incoming)
Nat Hurley, University of Alberta
Melinda Robb, Emory University
Linda Lund, London School of Economics
Ronald Mendoza-de Jesús, University of Southern California
Eleonora Joensuu, Simon Fraser University
Corinne Mason, Brandon University, Canada
Anna Swartz, Michigan Technological University graduate student
Sade Kondelin, University of Turku
Roewan Crowe, University of Winnipeg, Canada
Deja Beamon, Ohio State University
Robin Nelson, Santa Clara University
Karen Lawford, University of Ottawa
Tiffany Florvil, University of New Mexico
Cleo Woelfle-Erskine, Feminist Studies UC Santa Cruz
Matt Franks, University of West Georgia
Anja Kanngieser, University of Wollongong
Sebastian Ramirez, Vanderbilt University PhD Student
Lindsay Blewett, York University, Toronto, Canada
Christine Manganaro, Maryland Institute College of Art
Benny LeMaster, California State University, Long Beach
Sarah Suhail, Arizona State University
Jordan Daniels, Emory University
Dana Rognlie, University of Oregon
Emily R. Douglas, McGill University
Marika Rose, University of Winchester
Suzanne Neefus, Michigan State University
Harlan Weaver, Kansas State University
Victor Szabo, University of Virginia
Erin Morris, SUNY Cortland
Tani Sebro, Miami University of Ohio
Ayanna Spencer, Michigan State University
Elisabeth Lund Engebretsen, University of Oslo
Jennifer Ellerman-Queen, University of South Florida
Noah Tamarkin, The Ohio State University
Tristan Josephson, California State University, Sacramento
Harry Gilbert, University of Southern California
Victoria Dickman-Burnett, University of Cincinnati
Kavita Maya. SOAS University of London
Krista Miranda, Middlebury College
Adrian Flores, University of Arizona
Jonathan D. Singer, DePaul University
Emi Riiko, University of Glasgow
Melissa Boshans, University of Illinois at Chicago
Julia Polyck-O’Neill, Brock University
Alice Cavanagh, McMaster University
Laura S. Logan, Hastings College
Miguel Gualdrón, DePaul University
Claudia Murphy, Minnesota State Community and Technical College
Emily Waters, Illinois State University
Wendy Christensen, William Paterson University
Elizabeth Balskus, University of Oregon
Sailakshmi Ramgopal, Trinity College
Hentyle Yapp, New York University
Dana Seitler, University of Toronto
Nirmala Erevelles, The University of Alabama
James Callahan, Emory University
Ana Ferreira, University of Indinapolis
Robert Hill, Michigan State University
Ricardo Friaz California State University, Stanislaus
Sarah Dowling, University of Washington Bothell
Jennifer Moorman, Loyola Marymount University
Cristy Yeung, CUNY Queens
Roksana Badruddoja, Manhattan College
Avery Everhart, University of Southern California
Amanda Lehr, Vanderbilt University
Bryn Buchanan, University of California, Davis
Caitlin Shanley, Temple University
Rebecca Kennedy, Denison University
Chris Nelsen, Clark College
Experience Bryon , Royal Central School of Speech and Drama London
Anthony Kim, Colorado State University
Joseph McCarthy, Marquette University Law School
Rachael Neu, Florida Atlantic University
Zack Sievers, Villanova University
Cade Johnson, Central European University
KT Pinion, Stony Brook University
Nat Raha, University of Sussex / Edinburgh College of Art
Benjamin I. J. Mintzer, Columbia University in the City of New York
Harrison Apple, University of Arizona
L. Crémier, Université du Québec à Montréal
Chase Hobbs-Morgan, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Tracy Rutler, Penn State University
Terri Vescio, Penn State University
Tiffany Tsantsoulas, Penn State
Alec Magnet, The CUNY Graduate Center and City College of New York
Bethany M. Coston, Virginia Commonwealth University
Simon D. Elin Fisher, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Clark Pignedoli, Université du Québec à Montréal
Ruben Zecena, University of Arizona
Brandon Peter Masterman, New York University
Katie Terezakis, RIT
Charis Thompson, UC Berkeley
Katie Kretsch, Hamline University
CJ Venable Schaefbauer, Kent State University
Ashley Mog, University of Kansas
Erin Vonnahme, Miami University of Ohio
Sophia Seawell, Utrecht University
Lauren Coker, University of North Carolina at Charlotte (Oppresses Black Students)
Emma Hansen, University of Toronto
Melia Erin Fritch, Kansas State University
Rebecca Kennison, Independent scholar
Carolina Alonso Bejarano, Rutgers University
Gina Schlesselman-Tarango, California State University
Gail Weiss, George Washington University
L. Ilana Turner, University of Minnesota
SA Smythe, University of California, Santa Barbara
Eli Clare, Independent writer and activist
David K. Seitz, York University
Elaine Levia, Harvard-Westlake School
Victor Mendoza, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Catriona Rueda Esquibel, San Francisco State University
Gr Keer, California State University, East Bay
Chelsea Frazier, Northwestern University
Liz Montegary, Stony Brook University
Reese C. Kelly, Dartmouth College
Katie Woolsey, Cabrillo College,
Joseph Ruanto-Ramirez, Claremont Graduate University, UC San Diego
Arianne Shahvisi, Brighton and Sussex Medical School
Kelly Fritsch, University of Toronto
Beth Twomey, North Dakota State University
Kelli Vaughn-Johnson, York University
Jae Basiliere, Grand Valley State University
Brian Ontiveros-Kersch, University of North Texas
Kimberly McKee, Grand Valley State University
Nicholas-Brie Guarriello, University of Minnesota
Melanie Yergeau, University of Michigan
Mia Fischer, University of Colorado Denver
Laura Bonella, Kansas State University
Annaleigh Curtis, Attorney
Bree Lacey, California State University, Los Angeles
Loren Cannon, Humboldt State University
Ryan C. P. Fics, Emory University, Department of Comparative Literature
Charissa Varma, University of Cambridge
Stephanie Holt, University of North Carolina Charlotte
Ade Wesley, University of Copenhagen
Vinh Nguyen, Harvard University
E. Cram, University of Iowa
Davina April Wright, La Trobe Universiry
Geoff Pfeifer, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Sam Bourcier, Lille University
Eric Flohr Reynolds, Emory University, Department of Comparative Literature
Joshua Riva, Princeton University
Gavin P. Johnson, Ohio State University
Karen Kelsky, The Professor Is In
Irene Shankar, Mount Royal University
Courtney Cuthbertson, Michigan State University
Susan Nordstrom, University of Memphis
Kalaniopua Young, University of Washington
Katka Showers-Curtis, University of Kentucky
Jina B. Kim, Mount Holyoke College
Phil McCracken, University of Miami
Melissa Aguilera, El Paso Community College
Rochel L. Gasson Duquesne University
Jun Rendich Swarthmore College
Kristi Tredway, St. Mary’s College of Maryland
Travis Lau, University of Pennsylvania
Mirranda Willette, University of Oregon
D Conner, Unaffiliated
Zachary Tuggle, University of Tennessee
Torsten Menge, University of Arkansas
Kathryn Klement, Northern Illinois University
Kandice Chuh, CUNY/Graduate Center
Sonya Onwu, Self employed academic
Danielle Sofer, Maynooth University
Meredith Lee, University of California, Irvine
Juliet Hess, Michigan State University
Tessa Gurney, High Point University
Elana Voigt, University of Washington
Nicole Dular, Syracuse University, Franklin College
Lindsay Kelley, University of New South Wales
Natalie Wright, University of Sussex
Kendall Gerdes, Texas Tech University
Rachel Lieberman, UNC Greensboro
Annie McClanahan, UC Irvine
Margaret Price, The Ohio State University
Martha C Brenckle, University of Central Florida
Jennifer Scuro, College of New Rochelle, NY
Emma Fredrick, East Tennessee State University
N. Cottone, Miami University
Jonathan Basile, Emory University Ph.D. Student
Heather Switzer, Arizona State University
Kylan Mattias de Vries, Southern Oregon University
Rebekah Sinclair, University of Oregon
Andrew Xiang, Dartmouth College
Zachary Elkins, University of Missouri, Columbia
Anita Baksh, LaGuardia Community College (CUNY)
Anna Carter, Iowa State University
Lars Mackenzie, University of Minnesota
Shawn Won, MIT
Nevada Drollinger-Smith, Arizona State University
Shiloh Theobald, Ball State
Victor J. Raymond, Madison College
Sabrina Sembiante, Florida Atlantic University
Ido Katri, University of Toronto
Clarence Hidalgo Harvey-Finley, Trinity College, Oxford University
K.R. Roberto, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Renée M Byrd, Humboldt State University
Anna Cook, University of Oregon
Kathleen Livingston, Michigan State University
Liam Hogan, University of Limerick
Ariane Prohaska, University of Alabama
Linda Stupart, University of Reading
Erica R Meiners, Northeastern Illinois University
A. Danielle Dulken, PhD student, UNC-Chapel Hill
Jess Waggoner, Indiana University, Bloomington
Mary K. Bloodsworth-Lugo, Washington State University
Yomaira C. Figueroa, Michigan State University
Miranda Joseph, University of Arizona
Jessica Ison, La Trobe University
Robert Christian Hosbach, Appalachian State University
Chloe Foisy-Marquis, University of Waterloo
Jay Garvey, University of Vermont
John P. Broome, PhD, University of Mary Washington
Natalie Ingraham, Cal State East Bay
Julie Sze, UC Davis
Carolyn D’Cruz, La Trobe University
Christopher Bennett, Queen’s University
Kathryn Medien, University of Warwick
Pierre Cloutier de Repentigny, University of Ottawa
Scott Phillips McCallum, UC Santa Cruz
Ambereen Dadabhoy, Harvey Mudd College
Jaymelee Kim, University of Findlay
Joshua Nederhood, Calvin College
Ashley Farmer, Boston University
Cornelius Reeve Gottlieb, Huxley College of the Environment
Ethel Brooks, Rutgers University
Maree Pardy, Deakin University
Emily Bosch, Concordia College – Moorhead
George Ciccariello-Maher, Drexel University
Diana Pozo, University of California, Santa Barbara
Kimberly A. Williams, Mount Royal University
Hale Konitshek, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Sarah Evans, Baylor University
Gil Morejón, DePaul University
Nicole Hernandez Froio, University of York
Denise Grollmus, University of Washington–Seattle
Chauncey Colwell, Ph.D., Retired
Laura Guidry-Grimes, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
Samuel Leyba, Kansas State University
Sean Guynes, Michigan State University
Bernadette Marie Calafell, University of Denver
Theresa Warburton, Western Washington University
Shannon Woodcock, Self employed academic
Sheila Arndt, Marquette University
Jill Drouillard, Université Paris-Sorbonne
Robert Gutierrez-Perez, University of Nevada, Reno
Scott Chappuis, Bowling Green State University
Sandra Faulkner, Bowling Green State University
Christian Exoo, St. Lawrence University
S.M. Shahwan, The George Washington University
Sharone Horowit-Hendler, University at Albany
Jesse Benn, University of Wisconsin – Madison
Eric Short, University of Minnesota
Helen Boyd Kramer, Lawrence University
Karen Barad, UC Santa Cruz
Meredith Nash, University of Tasmania
Rachel Loney-Howes, La Trobe University
Omi Salas-SantaCruz, UC Berkeley
Kit Connor, Miami University of Ohio
Blas Radi, Universidad de Buenos Aires
Brandy Simula, Emory University
Judith Butler, UC Berkeley
Holly Lewis, Texas State University
Elizabeth Freeman, University of California, Davis
Neni Panourgia, Columbia University
Tanya Serisier, Birkbeck College, University of London
Sophie Ban, Syracuse University
Marla Jaksch, The College of New Jersey
Vincenza Mazzeo, McGill University
Anne-Marie Schultz, Baylor University
Emma K. Russell, Deakin University
Charlotte O’Neill, The University of Sheffield
j wallace skelton, OISE University of Toronto
Erika Strandjord, Concordia College, Moorhead, MN
Jade Sasser, University of California, Riverside
Riki Lane, Monash University
Charl Landsberg, University of Kwa-Zulu Natal
Vanessa Angélica Villarreal, PhD Candidate at the University of Southern California
Suze Berkhout, University of Toronto
Timothy Snediker, UC Santa Barbara
Alexa Schriempf, former Managing Editor, Hypatia
Smaranda Aldea, Dartmouth College
Michael Berlin, UC, Irvine
Anna-Claire Simpson, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Emilie Uzoma Jacob, University of Toronto
Holly Goldstein, New York University
Cherod Johnson, University of California Berkeley
Jonas Weaver, Calvin College
Melissa Merin, Mills College, Oakland, CA
Eyo Ewara, The Pennsylvania State University
Molly Gray, Portland State University
Gabrielle Moser, OCAD University
Sonja Thomas, Colby College
Ahalya Satkunaratnam, Quest University Canada
Tyrone S. Palmer, Northwestern University
Rachel Berman, Ryerson University
Kaela Talley, None
Emily Symons, University of Ottawa
Mel Ferrara, University of Arizona
Kami Chisholm, Independent scholar and filmmaker
Jessica Thompson, University of Waterloo
Simone West, Stony Brook University
Megan Burke, Oklahoma State University
Rachel Schmitz, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
Wendy Brown, UC Berkeley
Iris Young, UC Berkeley
Dawn Kaczmar, University of Michigan
Kevin Jenkins, University of North Texas
Sally Wong, Massey University
Maria Nengeh Mensah, Université du Québec à Montréal
Michael Orsini, University of Ottawa
Alexandra Rodríguez, IRGT
Kyla Schuller, Rutgers University
Michelle Esther O’Brien, New York University
Amy Li, Emory University
Trung PQ Nguyen, UC Santa Cruz
Evan Pensis, University of Chicago
Sara Yaxte, The New School for Social Research
Jonathan Doucette, UC Davis
Jina B. Kim, Mount Holyoke College
Elisabeth Paquette, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Laura Tetreault, University of Louisville
Quinn Eades, La Trobe University
Rumya S. Putcha, Texas A&M University
Laura Fairley, University of Toronto
Barrie Shannon, University of Newcastle, Australia
Jafar Al-Mondhiry, New York University
Ryan Falbisaner, Unaffliated
Dawn Rae Davis, Monterey Peninsula College
Sibelle Grisé, UMass Amherst
Karina Vado, University of Florida
Elisabeth Anker, George Washington University
Timothy Laurie, University of Technology Sydney
Andrew Anastasia, Harper College
Nat Baldino, The University of Maryland
S. Charusheela, University of Washington, Bothell
Robyn Anne Franklin, University of Louisville
Angela Semple, Trent University
Damien Riggs, Flinders University
Lisa Santosa, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Meaghen-Danielle Meaney, University of Ottawa
Alyssa Adamson, Stony Brook University
Riley Talamantes, University of Wyoming
Robbie Fordyce, University of Melbourne
Sirma Bilge, Université de Montréal
April Sizemore-Barber, Georgetown University
Kristiana L. Baez, Baylor University
Justin P. Jimenez, University of Minnesota
Amie L. Zimmer, University of Oregon
Maya Steinborn, University of San Francisco
Samira Nadkarni, Independent Scholar
Colin Dayan, Vanderbilt
Cynthia Schossberger, Washington University in St. Louis
Dick Chopper, Independent scholar and activist
Jessica Hallock, Columbia University
Sahra Taylor City, University of London
Fiona MacDonald, University of the Fraser Valley
Puck Lo, Stanford University
Halena Kapuni-Reynolds, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
Dylan Hillyer, York University
Erica Saunders, Wake Forest University School of Divinity
Nicole Stark, Valencia College
Atacan Atakan, University of Arizona
Bjorn Wiffabiggun, Isafjorher University
Prerna Lal, EBCLC, a clinic of Berkeley Law
Joseph L Simonis, DAPPER Stats
Kwame Phillips, John Cabot University
Vikram Kohli, Northwestern University
Megan Sharp, University of Newcastle
Johann Gambolputty, Universität Ulm, Baden-Württemberg
Piya Chatterjee, Scripps College
Jih-Fei Cheng, Scripps College
Grace Cebrero, Mount Saint Mary’s University Los Angeles
Grietje Baars, City, University of London
J. Jeanine Ruhsam, WGSS, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Jeffrey Cisneros, Indiana University – Bloomington
Aditi Surie von Czechowski, Columbia University
K. H. Niehaus, Goldsmiths, University of London
Lori Askeland, Wittenberg University
Charlotte Karem Albrecht, University of Michigan
Teresa Stout, The New School
Kristin L. McLaughlin, University at Albany – SUNY
Jack Halberstam, Columbia University
Vern Harner, University of Washington
Ian Alan Paul, SUNY Stony Brook
EJ Gonzalez-Polledo, University of Sheffield
Matías Bascuñán, Emory University
Therí A. Pickens, Bates College
Edward OByrn, Penn State University
Emma Velez, Penn State University
Rushaan Kumar, Pomona College
Kaity Newman, Penn State University
Eric Anthony Grollman, University of Richmond
Kevin Bruyneel, Babson College
Jacqueline Vickey, University of North Texas
Lydia Pelot-Hobbs, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Samantha Langsdale, University of North Texas
Cassius Adair, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Brittnay Proctor, Northwestern University
Andrew Robbins, University of Oregon
Joseph Keady, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Christopher Munt, Purdue Universuty
Benjamin H. Brewer, Emory University
Stef Murawsky, University of Cincinnati
William Paris, Penn State University
Elisabeth Udyawar, Carnegie Mellon University
Vladimir Ulyanov, Kazan University
Emek Ergun, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Paige Hermansen, Westfield State University
Nicolás de León, University of Wisconsin at Whitewater
Heather Williams, University of North Texas
Sarah T. Hamid, Microsoft Research New England
Lucilla Pan, Emory University
Cameron Aitken, Central European University
Noel Kirsch, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Bonnie Sheehey, University of Oregon
Joe Fritsch, Emory University, Student
Chase de Saint-Félix, American University
Jacob Evoy, University of Western Ontario
Joshua Navon, Columbia University
Autumn Kent, University of Wisconsin – Madison
Carrie Sheffield, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Amanda Reyes, University of California Santa Cruz
Jennifer Schwarz, Unaffiliated (13 yr high school educator)
Joie Meier, Stony Brook University
Jinah Kim, California State University, Northridge
Regina N. Bradley, Armstrong State University
JoAnna R. Murphy, Rowan University, New Jersey
Elias Vitulli, Mount Holyoke College
Ari Stoetl, Centre for Poetics and Aesthetics, LYC
Thomas Bretz, Utah Valley University
Sandra K Soto, University of Arizona
Roy Pérez, Willamette University
Ezgi Sertler, Michigan State University
Ellen Kirkpatrick, Kingston University, London
Katie Strom, California State University East Bay
Gabriel Rockhill, Villanova University
Christoph Hanssmann, University of California, San Francisco
Kathy-Ann Tan, JFK Institute of North American Studies, Freie Universität Berlin
Gwynne Fulton, Villanova University
Ruth Pearce, University of Warwick
Jesse Carr, Beloit College
Keyvan Shafiei, Georgetown University
Not quite fair. A handful of them are semi-non-entities, which is a peg or two higher than total fucking nobodies. One or two of them may even be small potatoes, an even further step up.
I’m curious as to why the usual folks who go in for this bullshit (Jason Stanley, Kate Manne, etc.) are keeping their peace. Still waiting to find just the right bandwagon?
I’ve seen Ersatz-Barnes on FB saying we should step away from the keyboard for a few days. First she encourages online mobs for years, now when it becomes embarrassing she tells us there’s nothing to see here.
I hate to say it, but much of the comment thread to the ‘Symbolic Conscription’ post at FP is a pretty convincing impersonation of a blob of navel-gazing nitwits. One might have expected some mention of freedom of speech vs claims of harm etc… but it quickly becomes a discussion about the meanings of the epithet ‘Becky’. And it doesn’t stray much from there.
I’m not saying the topic is inherently unworthy of discussion, but it’s very hard not to read this string of forty comments that don’t mention the screamingly central issue as an extended exercise in (probably largely unconscious) misdirection and displacement. Seriously, go read it.
Interestingly, the issue is first raised, in comment 8, by one R Kukla, who as a prominent FB cheerleader for the Hypatia apology, which then quickly became the grotesque Hypatia apology clusterfuck with an audience of millions, can easily be imagined to be eager to talk about anything else that comes to hand.
That thread is incredible. Kukla complains that the author of the post seems “almost proud of” her ignorance of the opening dialogue to Sir-Mix-a-Lot’s “Baby Got Back.” This, she says, is “kind of the problem, right?” That song is “a towering, maximally mainstream icon of black culture.”
A number of things might be said about these remarkable contributions. I’ll cut to the chase: what the fuck?
Haha, brilliant. She and her fellow campaigners might have completely destroyed the career of a young female feminist philosopher for no more serious reason than their recreational righteousness-thrills… but check out the real problem: obviously, white academia’s insufficient familiarity with [cue beats] I like big butts and I can not lie…
I think these fools are trying desperately to get out of the way of the juggernaut their own cynical mob tactics has unleashed. But it’s too late. As with any Jacobin movement, the most ideologically intense are fated to wind up under the blade they have themselves erected.
The assertion that Sir Mix A Lot is an icon of black culture…is precisely what you’d expect from someone who has “mastered the literature” on race but never actually talked to any non-academic black people.
What’s that now about citing the Lived Xperiences and diverse knowledgeZ of sub-@ltern populations?
Also, let us not allow Prof Manners’ moving subsequent post,’Have Mercy’, to pass without comment:
Surely there can be more than the comically simplistic presentation of two sides here. The tendency to present these complex systemic (systemic!!!) issues as bifurcating into nameable good guys and bad guys insults us all…. It is possible to feel great concern and humanity for all who have been affected by this. It is possible to see all of the issues raised here as incredibly vexed and radically difficult to address. It is possible not to want anyone involved to suffer more or to be held up to further opprobium.
Can any human being who claims even the rudiments of a moral sense read these words without finding their finer feelings driven headlong to the very brink of tears?
OK, enough. Pop quiz: Is this post
(a) the latest exemplar of a proud FP tradition of refusing steadfastly, in the face of howsoever great a temptation to rhetorical advantage and political point-scoring, to cast complex issues in simplistic, binary, ‘us-vs-them’ terms, instead rising above the fray and awarding their laurel-wreath of moral approbation to the vindicated party, as well as, unfailingly, the golden apple of sympathetic concern and cheerful moral solicitude to those deemed to have succumbed, as all of us from time to time must, to an honest error of moral accounting, without fear, favor, or — least of all — any taint of vulgar ideological allegiance?
or
(b) a squalid, opportunistic attempt to divert attention from a paralyzed inability to take what is obviously the only decent course on a matter of clear principle and very serious consequence for a vulnerable female philosopher of precisely the sort it is their avowed mission to fight for — the paralysis having been induced over a long period by ideological toxins they have never cultivated sufficient intellectual honesty to resist, and which have increasingly presented, as symptoms, precisely the polarizing groupthink and irresponsible smearing of perceived enemies they now shamelessly purport to denounce as ‘the comically simplistic presentation of two sides’?
‘Twas ever thus. So long as they are riding high on moral self-admiration, the world is starkly Manichean: show me a concern for due process, and I’ll show you a rape apologist! But once they realize, too late, that they have thrown in their lot with a crowd of grubby narcissists and charlatans who are now exacting their pound of flesh, extorting from them a renunciation of the only feminist principles that ever made them worth taking seriously in the first place…. Why, then, it’s just all so complicated, don’t you see? Those crude oppositions — just – unjust, free-speech – censorship, scholarship – power-politics — are inevitably far too blunt to serve as instruments adequate to the infinitely nuanced complexities of the new dispensation.
A brilliant diatribe, and totally, painfully accurate. I laughed while puking in my own mouth while reading it. (By the way, my vote is for option “B”.)
Thanks; this is about as public as I care to be right now. But feel free to share. Also the screed reposted by some kind soul above at 1.50 on May 3 — that was me as well.
Seriously though, why would it be that the only one of the relevant online venues discussing an online mob’s framing, persecution, denunciation and attempted censorship of an untenured woman feminist philosopher for writing a philosophy paper arguing for feminist views, that isn’t framing the whole thing as an obviously horrible injustice against said vulnerable feminist philosopher… is a blog that calls itself Feminist Philosophers?
I honestly can’t piece together anything that might count as a usable FP response to this from the mass of mealy-mouthed, largely argument-free verbiage generated by Hypatia’s defenders over the last couple of days except:
Any putative harm done to Tuvel is dwarfed — dwarfed*, I tell you! — by the appalling violence she committed in erasing the identities of those marginalised trans* POCs who are clearly…etc etc.
But this sort of thing is just so patently absurd that I’m finding it very difficult to believe they’re even seriously pretending think this. Am I missing anything?
A choice comment from her lower down: “It’s been interesting to see how closely liberal and alt-right discourses on free speech align when black (and) trans people’s lives, perspectives, and critical analyses are on the line.” Lisa Guenther needs a remedial critical thinking course.
Guenther: “intentions do not determine or reduce impact”….sounds like…wait for it…ideal theory!!!!!
An aside: in my personal interactions with Charles Mills, I have found him to be affable, humane, and open-minded (though I reject many of his views). I wonder how he’d feel about being used as a club to beat up on a young philosopher.
Good call.
Agreed, Mills is all class, a rare case these days of a professional philosopher who is a genuine intellectual *and* a public intellectual. And, by the way, McWhorter’s academic work is very interesting, although pretty much unrelated to what he’s writing in the Beast. (That really is just “by the way”.)
I know 1:52 is trolling, but there’s surely a grain of truth in his comment. Tuvel is, by ordinary standards, an attractive woman. One has to think that played a role in the tribe’s decision to make her a ritual sacrifice.
I agree that, in some sense, treating a weaker / more vulnerable person unjustly is worse than treating a powerful / less vulnerable person unjustly.
However, seems to me that many of us may be over-emphasizing the fact that Tuvel is a woman and untenured. Seems to me that there’s a danger of slipping into (or at least suggesting that we’re slipping into) the same kinds of errors that are driving the New Consensus types. The anti-Tuvel campaign would be, in at least some important respects, just as bad (and just as nutty) were it directed against an extremely prominent man ensconced in some fantastically awesome endowed chair.
I do realize that it’s tempting to emphasize Tuvel’s sex and her untenured status because such hypocrisy by alleged defenders of the powerless is an almost irresistible target…but anyway, just sayin’.
Noted, Stealthy. But it’s also worth emphasizing (and I’m not saying you would disagree with this) that Tuvel’s genuinely vulnerable status makes the smearing significantly worse — and, more importantly, raises interesting questions about why more powerful (or, shall we say, otherwise hard to criticize) people who have said very similar things have not been persecuted in this way. It’s not just the hypocrisy: as usual, the bullies are cowards.
And I don’t have the sense that people here are implying that it would be remotely OK to go after a less vulnerable person in this way. (Again, I’m pretty sure you don’t disagree with this.)
It’s not that I’m sure that I disagree with any of that…it’s more like I think it’s important to…I dunno…say out loud that, speaking for myself anyway, it’s easy to get distracted by points (true though they are) like: *the bullies are cowards* and *it’s worse to do this to someone untenured than to someone tenured.*
I’m not unmoved by those considerations… I’m just a lot more concerned about the fact that there’s a kind of mass movement in the humanities–*and even in philosophy itself*–that comes pretty damn close to insisting that it is impermissible to conduct apolitical inquiry purely with the aim of achieving understanding. I’m inclined to say: this is virtually indistinguishable from arguing that philosophy should be abolished. I agree that the bullies are cowards. But, important though that point is, it pales in comparison to what I think is really at stake here.
Sometimes I feel better just for having said things.
More po-faced patrician prudery from Nussbaum. ‘Philosophy does not mock’??? Someone forgot to tell Nietzsche. I wonder whether noted Nietzsche scholar B Leiter will point this out?
The second Guenther post Leiter linked to is even weirder, if anything; a few bits especially deserve comment.
1. There is apparently no room both to be an intersectional feminist and think the reaction to Tuvel was excessive. Any feminism that would “struggle to figure out what it means to become an effective ally and accomplice of black (and) trans people” must be basically okay with the attack on Tuvel (or at most view it as a regrettable consequence of justified social action); the only alternative is a degenerate racist feminism that “would rather strategically ally itself with cis hetero anti-black patriarchy.”
(Good luck defending that in print.)
2. Props to Joachim Horvath for his solid but evidently futile attempts at dialogue.
3. What the fuck kind of person says “YES. Thank you for this, [so-and-so]” when someone says that worrying about the harm being done to her former thesis student “feels a bit too much like critiques of racial justice movements as mobs throwing bricks through windows.”
Nussbaum’s overrated, sure, but only in the sense that she’s conventionally taken to be a great philosopher when she’s actually just a good-to-very-good philosopher and a great writer.
I wonder who is the most overrated philosopher alive, though.
Korsgaard
Kripke (he did important work, but not nearly as much–or as important–as his ranking in BL’s polls would suggest)
McGinn
Noë (pretty much just a plagiarising blowhard)
Scruton
Stanley
I’m glad he called attention to the Butler paper, though, if only because the end now looks incredibly prescient:
“The great tragedy in the new feminist theory in America is the loss of a sense of public commitment. In this sense, Butler’s self-involved feminism is extremely American, and it is not surprising that it has caught on here, where successful middle-class people prefer to focus on cultivating the self rather than thinking in a way that helps the material condition of others. Even in America, however, it is possible for theorists to be dedicated to the public good and to achieve something through that effort.
Many feminists in America are still theorizing in a way that supports material change and responds to the situation of the most oppressed. Increasingly, however, the academic and cultural trend is toward the pessimistic flirtatiousness represented by the theorizing of Butler and her followers. Butlerian feminism is in many ways easier than the old feminism. It tells scores of talented young women that they need not work on changing the law, or feeding the hungry, or assailing power through theory harnessed to material politics. They can do politics in safety of their campuses, remaining on the symbolic level, making subversive gestures at power through speech and gesture. This, the theory says, is pretty much all that is available to us anyway, by way of political action, and isn’t it exciting and sexy?
In its small way, of course, this is a hopeful politics. It instructs people that they can, right now, without compromising their security, do something bold. But the boldness is entirely gestural, and insofar as Butler’s ideal suggests that these symbolic gestures really are political change, it offers only a false hope. Hungry women are not fed by this, battered women are not sheltered by it, raped women do not find justice in it, gays and lesbians do not achieve legal protections through it.”
“Rebecca was an awesome teacher. Really nice and helpful. Very passionate as a teacher, which kept the class engaged. Also very fair as a grader. Everyone in our class loved her.”
“Wonderful teacher, very engaging throughout the 1.5 hour class period. Assigns a lot of readings, which are absolutely vital to earning a decent grade. Kind and always willing to help. The class was largely discussion based, which made it much more interesting. I definitely recommend taking one of her classes.”
“She is a wonderful instructor – knows her material, engages great discussions to the students, very approachable. I am no philosophy major, but she made the material so interesting and clear to any of us.”
“Excellent professor! I’d recommend her by far. The class is beyond stimulating; Professor Tuvel holds wonderful discussions allowing the students to speak a great deal and clarifying along the way in order to make a wonderful class environment. She is also extremely thoughtful in her feedback on papers & more than willing to help a student improve!”
“Great course. Rebecca is a very helpful instructor and makes boring material really interesting. Her willingness to help her students impressed me. Doesn’t hesitate to help you with papers any other questions you may have. Would recommend taking a course with Rebecca!”
I just returned from a trip to New York in which I gave a paper on consciousness to a conference at Suffolk County Community College (respondent Ed Erwin); attended my friend Gregory Soros’ thirtieth birthday party (on a boat by Chelsea piers, followed by late-night ten-pin bowling); spent time with a brilliant and brave political exile (“John”) from Malaysia at Gregory’s place in Soho (we listened to a lot of Prince songs); had a long and profound dinner with Tom Nagel; and ended with a delightful lunch with George Stephanopoulos. All round a very good trip. The contrast between the people I saw in NY and the people now occupying the philosophy profession (not all of them!) was not lost on me. The business about Tuvel is just the latest in a series of outrages perpetrated by a certain type now distressingly common.
McGinn can’t stop, because he isn’t supposed to stop. One of the best philosophers since Wittgenstein was unduly ostracized. He got left empty-handed, and nobody cared about him anymore. McGinn is the philosopher we need and deserve. Hands down! Hand him a job, please. O well, I’m not creative with handjobs.
Question for people who work in philosophy language/Sellars-Studien: is Lance a serious figure that people actually read/engage with, despite his online tomfoolery?
sure. but Stanley is a big shot. definitely bigger than Lance, no surprise here.
you haven’t proved yet that Lance is a bad philosopher.
Anyway, even if Lance has the citations of Aristotle and David Lewis combined, his comments at the Daily Nous show he is an intellectual vacuum. and if intellectually vacuous people are big shots in philosophy, philosophy is dead. therefore, (academic) philosophy is dead.
I dunno, that looks pretty serious. An h of what, 15? (The first one on the list is a Marc Lange book, and *Challenging Moral Particularism* is just a collection with Lance as one of the three editors.)
It’s true that a lot of the papers are co-authored, is that what makes him seem non-serious?
always off the mark lanceless might be a poor philosopher but it is hilarious how he spreads his legs on social media and mansplains to insufficiently PC women and feminists how Tuvel’s article equals murder.
In the DN thread with over 300 comments, there is only one (by Daniel Kaufman) that calls on the APA to censure the journal, or to do anything at all. Does it surprise anyone that apparently nobody expects our main professional organization to take any action in this case? Call urgent meetings to accommodate the demands of striking hotel workers? Yes. Dole out grants to any project proposal so long as it mentions diversity and inclusion? You bet. Speak out in defense of basic academic values in the field’s journals? Meh.
At any moment I expect to get an email from Amy Ferrer about fundraising for a video series in which Rebecca Kukla explains how the use of “Becky” as an insult is one of the cornerstones of black culture.
I don’t think I want the APA involved in shit like this — not because I think they’d come in on the wrong side, but because I don’t want to see them enlisted in the struggle at all.
Also, it’s kind of our fault. We elect at least many of the APA representatives.
‘Data collected in 2013 suggest that of the 13,000 professional philosophers in the country 55 are Black women. Let that sink in. Of the 55, 30% were Ph.D students; 35% held tenured positions. I don’t have data on the representation of trans scholars, but I would expect there are even fewer.’
We must not rest until at least 20 – 40% of the profession is trans.
This also seems question-begging against poor Prof. Tuvel. After all, if it’s possible to be transracial, we presumably have no idea how many Black women are in philosophy.
In fact, it just now strikes me that we should all fervently hope that Prof. Tuvel’s hypothesis is correct. It would allow us to solve the diversity problem in philosophy overnight — we just all need to identify as Black women!
“In short, can we move the conversation away from the particular case of Prof. Tuvel’s paper and talk about how our profession can be more respectful and more innovative, how can we stop alienating and marginalizing those who are legitimately frustrated with the profession, and how we can resist the fear mongering of the current political context and build tools needed for a more just and peaceful society?”
I guess we can’t at the Daily Nous, because the comments are closed!
I would like to take this opportunity to publicly apologize to Justin Weinberg (formerly WINEberg, for drunkenness on powerplay) for my public attacks on him. I am apologizing because he has now caved to my attacks, as appropriate, with including The Daily Ant on the Heap of Links. All y’all metal bros thought you were pathetic fringes on the disciplinary boundaries – very true but it is now also true that Justin listens and he listens well.
A clean thread, ready for ants! How exciting!
Ants is obviously an academic code word for niggers.
Please take your despicable racism elsewhere.
Ok, let’s get this started: Favorite ant? Least favorite ant? Taxonomic names only, please.
Are niggers a subspecies?
David Wallace killing it as usual ❤
“To execute longtime residents of the United States for traffic violations would clearly be a violation of their human rights” — Jazz Tranley.
Really nudges my noodle.
Basically, we need a new blog. This one will have the right rules to avoid distractions about ants.
Huh… whatever happened to this, the freest blog on the internet? See, this is what happens when you don’t internalize your myrmecological self.
Have any senior philosophers spoken up on social media about the Hypatia train wreck?
Several. And their friends can see their posts and comments. Many of them have fairly restricted friends lists though, because there are corners of the discipline where people anonymously gossip and speculate about their colleagues’ sex lives, job prospects, where they copy-paste conversations, and so on. How odd!
One important service of metablog is to discourage people from keeping their narcissistic personality disorders on display.
Leiter linked to an excellent post by Jason Brennan at BHL. I sense the Maoists have finally stepped over the line that will bring some pushback.
Have any senior philosophers spoken up on social media about ants? Yes, yes they have, but all of you are ignoring this.
If you don’t think someone who has been identified by others since birth as a Tetramorium can truly have been born a Pheidole, then you are a bigot and may not publish in my journal.
If you think that a Myrmica can just up and declare themselves a Pogonomyrmex by fiat one day, then boy, I don’t think I have to spell out why you’re a bigot and may not publish in my journal.
YES finally we are getting somewhere! I may not agree with your thesis, but I agree with your incorporation of ants. This is the discussion you all need, even if it’s not the one you deserve.
Lol, the white genocide prof, George Ciccariello-Maher, signed the Hypatia open letter. Of course.
To be fair, so did Joseph Djugashvili of Tiflis College & Seminary at one point. (Alas his name has now been removed).
Nice catch!
found the PhD thesis of Tuval http://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/available/etd-07102014-161455/unrestricted/Tuvel.pdf
EPISTEMIC INJUSTICE!
ahahhahahah
They are eating their own.
Lisa Guenther and Lori Gruen! They were near the top signatories on the open letter, and like Chloe Taylor said quickly and visibly attacked her. What a shitty, shitty way to treat your own student; I’ve totally lost respect for them.
Eating your own young is right.
I think we need a cast of characters list.
Rebecca Tuval, the original criminal, who has successfully submitted a doctoral thesis at Vanderbilt University, as well as perpetrating a thought-crime at the journal Hypatia.
The Advisory Committee for her PhD thesis at Vanderbilt:
Advisor Name Title
Kelly Oliver Committee Chair
Charles Scott Committee Member
David Wood Committee Member
José Medina Committee Member
Lisa Guenther Committee Member
Lori Gruen Committee Member
Chloe Taylor, Professor at Alberta and self-confessed friend of Tuval, so clearly guilty by association; she possesses a PhD in philosophy from Toronto.
There is also a Nora Semenstain at the University of Tennessee, which I understand is a football rival of Vanderbilt.
You are free to engage in hyperbole, but you are not free to engage in ignorants, that is, ignoring the ants!
BTW Hasn’t been noted yet that Bruce Jenner is neither a woman, nor “trans,” anything. Go ahead and REEEE.
He’s a man.
Enzo Rossi · May 2, 2017 at 12:56 pm
OK so this is what this is about: some scholars want a methodological monopoly. They don’t want people to write about trans issues in the analytic style, at least not without lots of nods (and citations) to auto-ethnographic and/or postmodernist literature. They fear what some have called, bizarrely, “philosophical gentrification”. And they know that organising e-mobs is more effective than attacking the gentrifiers’ arguments.
Plese filter out the hate speech and racial epithets.
*please
Fantastic, thoughtful comment over at ‘philmetablog’ which was set up to deal with the ‘ant problem’. I thought I’d repost it here (I didn’t write it) in case the philmetablog doesn’t take off and this place remains dominant. I think one or two italicizations may have gotten lost but the original is at https://philmetablog.wordpress.com/2017/05/02/forsta-blogginlagget/#comments
anonymous
2 May, 2017
17:57
Reply
Couple more thoughts on this:
1. Deadnaming. Like (I presume) most people outside this particular academic-political ghetto, I had never heard this expression before. But it really epitomizes something. It’s just too obvious the way certain ‘conceptual’ innovations serve the interests of the group. It sounds awful, doesn’t it? You can just see the wide-eyed expression of horror. I can’t believe he deadnamed zer! It sounds a bit like murder or something. But here’s what it amounted to: Tuvel used the expression ‘Caitlyn (formerly Bruce) Jenner’. That’s it. This was one of the mob’s main examples of Tuvel’s departing so widely from ‘scholarly’ norms that her paper was awful enough to be retracted by the journal.
2. Transracial vs transgender. Ever since the Jenner and Dolezal stories came out at nearly the same time, this has been the elephant in the room for ‘activist scholars’. Didn’t we hear for decades about how race is a social construct and gender is a social construct, as if both of these were major insights, crucial to understanding all kinds of oppression? And yet here was as clear a case as one could want of race and gender being treated by our ideological overlords as if they had nothing in common whatever. This wasn’t whimsical, either: you could see how they couldn’t possibly treat the cases as remotely similar, it was too glaringly inconsistent with any number of their other irreversible ideological commitments. And yet it was just really hard to give a plausible account of what the huge, huge difference was supposed to be. In any genuine community of intellectual inquiry, this would be viewed as an opportunity to take stock, clarify concepts, question presuppositions, and so on. Compare ‘Why exactly is later-term abortion different from infanticide?’ Obviously very few ‘progressives’ have ever really taken this question at all seriously, but at least they’ve recognized that, in the context of actual philosophy, they’re obliged to pretend to.
I think that here we have the key to the extraordinarily frenzied hysteria that has greeted Tuvel’s paper. Follow the affect: it’s not because what Tuvel wrote was so implausible or hard to defend: it’s precisely because on the face of it it’s just so obvious. It’s the most clearly-marked pressure-point in their whole massive ideological edifice. What can they do when it’s attacked, if they have basically no argumentative resources? There’s no alternative to screaming bloody murder.
3. Scholarly standards. Since they have basically no counterarguments, they have to claim that the reason the article should be retracted is that is doesn’t meet fundamental standards of scholarship. (The only other option I can think of is to try to turn it into basically a health-and-safety issue; Mark Lance’s attempts to justify censorship in order to prevent ‘predictable harms’ resulting from the ‘cavalier bantering-about’ of certain ideas functions as a kind of reductio of this kind of approach.) The point at which we are asked to take this seriously is the point at which we start to feel seriously insulted. Are we supposed to believe that the activists would have regarded an article somehow defending (that is, trying to defend) the relevant orthodoxy, but exhibiting the same alleged ‘scholarly deficiencies’, as similarly requiring retraction? That this has nothing to do with content? One can’t even take seriously the idea that one’s supposed to take this seriously. And the endless cant from Amy Donahue and others about the importance of upholding scholarly standards! From these people? Have you read any ‘philosophical’ work on ‘trans*’ issues lately? (What’s with the asterisk, by the way? I mean, obviously it’s a shibboleth — Drabek uses it — but what’s it supposed to be about?)
The only good news here is that politicized ‘scholarship’ gets even more discredited, and more enemies of intellectual inquiry identify themselves by scurrying out of the woodwork to sign petitions.
The problem (for you) is that there is no “ant problem”, only the ant perspective! Which, of course, is being shut down here.
Why?
Can you give me three reasons why? If not, then your vertebrate bias is stronger than I initially realized!
Huh?
Thank you for trying to keep them on topic!
Who?
Wondering if anyone knows about this…. if a journal retracts and apologizes for an article, do they still have the publication rights? Or could Tuvel now submit and get it published elsewhere? Given that the philosophy community basically seems to think that what Hypatia did is egregious and disturbing, it would probably be quite a feather in the cap of a more scholarly journal if they could give it a home.
Hold on, my friend. Tuvel’s stuff is crap, and keeps being crap despite the awful treatment she is receiving. no serious journal would publish that rubbish….
oh wait: Phil Imprint just published the Sexual Orientation by Robinoff, so sure: they will publish Tuvel’s crap as well.
I mean, if by “just” you mean over a year ago, then sure. And what makes that paper “rubbish” and/or “crap”? Try to use reason instead of your low-effort edgelord rhetoric.
2:22 here. Tuvel’s arguments are sound, sure, but are worth a chat over a beer – at least if your IQ is 130 or more. I was taking philosophy papers to be a bit deeper. but yeah, the profession is now filled with low IQ people and the platitudes of Tuvel look like a piece of good philosophy.
I’m sure you’ve published many, many pieces of good philosophy, random anonymous person.
Tuvel’s paper is nothing but a boring version of this: https://www.commondreams.org/views/2015/06/15/jenner-dolezal-one-trans-good-other-not-so-much
but I don’t think I’ll manage to convince you.
Yeah, don’t waste your time – they ban you if they don’t like what you say!
Why?
I don’t know! You should ask them.
Who?
Even human reason cannot hold a candle to colonial decision-making processes.
Huh?
Exactly!
What?
Yes.
Why?
Nah, I think it’s probably interesting, since it hit such a nerve and was an actual inquiry, not just a moral tirade or a bit of virtue signalling. It might not be part of core analytic philosophy, but it might still be a piece of writing that, especially given the reaction, out to be published in an appropriate place.
Someone is using social media to harass some of the people who signed the petition against Tuvel’s piece. This shit really has to stop.
I’ve seen a lot of people quietly take down the nastiest ad hominem comments they made against Tuvel this weekend, which I find a troubling evasion of responsibility.
Do these people stand by their comments, or not? If they do, they should leave them up. If not, they should apologize.
Putting the content of what they said aside, I don’t think it’s fair to criticize that form of behavior in itself, said one anonymous commenter to another. Though maybe they were happy to have their name on the comment when they thought it was going to score them some points.
Fair enough. Still, though, we’re just anonymous jerks posting in an online cesspool. We could be anybody, and in all probability we’re nobodies. When you castigate someone openly, you’re generally expressing the expectation that you ought to get away with it, which in turn implies a support for norms on which the person you castigate should have lower status than you (at least in the context). That’s not thing.
An update from the statement writers:
“Note from statement writers (added 5/1, at approximately the 520th signatory): “We acknowledge that this statement should have named anti-Blackness directly. The statement is not an exhaustive summary of the many harms caused by this article. We hope it will at least serve as a way to register that harm and issue a demand for a retraction. This is one step in the direction of seeking accountability for the harms committed by its publishing– and to begin a conversation about the larger problems with our discipline it represents. And we thank Chanda Prescod-Weinstein (and others) for pointing out the dangerous erasure of anti-Blackness and the erasure of the Black labor on which the rhetoric of our own letter is built””
lol even the statement of protest was “problematic”! HEADS MUST ROLL FOR THIS
This is self-criticism as self-parody!
Yet none of it addresses myrmecological concerns! I wonder why?
In this post, I reproduce a comment from Mark Norris Lance on a Facebook post made by John Corvino regarding le l’affaire de Tuvel. This comment needs to be entered into disciplinary public consciousness before it vanishes from the internet.
Lance: ” I’ve put quite a few criticisms of the article out publicly. Those criticisms are correct. If you want to substantively engage with them, please do, but just announcing that everyone criticizing the paper is wrong, and arguing in bad faith suggests to me that you are not actually competent to be in this discussion because the criticisms are pretty basic.”
The sheer spectacle of self-indulgent hubris is a wonder to behold. I suppose this is what happens when one abandons realism to enter the space of reasons.
I’m glad to see that Corvino has convinced some people that they need to back off, but it’s a little sickening to see some of the leaders of the mob declare the importance of being kind without taking any public steps to remedy the situation they’ve caused. I guess now they’ll submit their letter to Hypatia to demand the retraction with kindness in their hearts and their names hidden from public view.
I know — Kukla and Lance applaud the vile open letter to Hypatia — then pose for a misty-eyed group hug, singing a hymn to kindness. It has all the conviction of the sentimental tears of Fyodor Karamazov.
Lance in particular continues to outdo himself:
But presenting this as if the main focus of critics has been an attack on Tuvel, is simply not true… [N]othing in the letter, nothing I’ve seen from prominent philosophers attacks her.
(That’s from the DN thread.) The only serious question this raises is: Is he just pretending to be stupid? As if the signing of the open letter to Hypatia by Lori Gruen and Lisa Guenther, who were both examiners of Tuvel’s PhD (just to take an especially piquant and shameful example), couldn’t possibly be interpreted as a hostile act!
Then there’s this:
Despite the point having already been made several times, person after person continues to say things like this: “Most bad scholarship goes quietly into the night unread and uncited. Why is this one viewed as a moral crime?”… That is the question being posed over and over as if it is a serious one. Well, then, I suppose a serious answer would start with the murder of trans folks on the street, their brutal treatment by police, their constant public shaming and abuse…
(I especially love the implicit appeal for sympathy — eyeroll, sigh — on account of the tedium and indignity of having to point out the obvious yet again to these benighted idiots.) Yeah, the only problem here is that, if you look at the criticisms of Tuvel, including those on the thread to which Lance is here contributing, a huge proportion of them clearly allege or imply that her paper’s ‘scholarly deficiencies’ alone warrant its retraction. There is rarely the slightest suggestion that they would not have warranted it if it weren’t for all the horrible harm the paper was contributing to. On the contrary, the ‘purely scholarly’ nature of the objections is frequently emphasized, in a risibly futile attempt to conceal their ideological motivation. Furthermore — and I want you to read this question carefully, Mark — if the real problem is the harm, why mention the scholarly nature of the ‘deficiencies’ at all? — let alone give it so much emphasis.
Benj Hellie and Brian Leiter team up to make mincemeat out of Justin Whineberg:
“I imagine that my departure from the thread will be interpreted by some as a concession to your argument. It’s not.”
Don’t worry, Justin. Only good philosophers change their credences when they can’t refute an argument with a conclusion they don’t like. And no one would ever confuse you for a good philosopher.
He also tries to refute Hellie’s argument by ad hominem reasoning: Hellie was Ludlow’s friend, therefore his argument is not valid. Weinberg is a pathetic savage clown who should be driven into the sea.
Less ad hominem, more ant hominem, please!
What?
Meanwhile, Itchy continues to masturbate into his own face:
http://blog.jichikawa.net/2017/05/administrators-and-snowflakes-on-sexual.html
I really do think that Kipnis’s book has driven the usual suspects to the brink of madness.
his replies to comments are on point
The comments are pretty juvenile. It’s not a good look to interrupt someone’s discussion with petty insults and spam. If you think the guy is wrong, let him make his feeble argument. Attacking him wildly lets people fall back on the “comments on posts about feminism justify feminism” line.
No, what is “juvenile” is first install larvae (not naming names). JJI is basically an alate queen!
Why?
You’ll figure it out.
How?
Finding your inner ant.
Huh?
Um, haven’t you seen Iron Fist?
Kipnis notes many times in the book that there are legitimate Title IX claims that are handled badly. I don’t remember her saying that campus rape activists in general were *all* nuts, so I don’t know what the reports of reasonable activists are supposed to show. On Pogin, it speaks well of her that she flagged the procedural irregularity, but that hardly vindicates her, given that she filed so many absurd complaints in the first place.
One thing that’s good about Ichikawa’s post is the focus on administrative power and procedural fairness, and the overlapping consensus that these are problem areas. That hasn’t generated as much discussion here as it should have. People who are generally at odds and heavily polarized might still be able to make progress through discussion of those issues.
“Meanwhile, Itchy continues to masturbate into his own face:”
Still laughing as I type this. Good one!
Meanwhile, everyone here is awkwardly avoiding discussing the formicid future!
Wh*?
Regular expressions won’t help you learn about ants! Though they may help you sort through some ant data… so actually maybe they will!
‘“Meanwhile, Itchy continues to masturbate into his own face:”
Still laughing as I type this. Good one!’
Agreed. Amazing.
I would say that I can’t believe I was banned from this, the freest of blogs on the internet. But, I’ve come to accept that people don’t like ants, so they’re trying to ban ants… interesting!
Whatever happened to free speech (and freedom of religion)? I guess pmmm wants to shut this down. Oh well, 13,000+ species of ants outlast us all.
What?
You understand! Or, if you don’t, you are are seeing but not seeing.
Huh?
“Huh?” is palantromic at least, I can give you that!
What?
Here’s something the moderator can do–let BB and his brother do their thing, and once or twice a day cull their comments from the blog. I predict that a week or two of that will discourage the guys.
But you should leave the comments from the earlier threads. Given the way the Kipnis and Hypatia malfeasances are coming into wider discussion, it will be good to have a record of how the Blanchards behaved.
I’ve banned them from posting for a week. We’ll see if that does the job.
Bravo. Here’s hoping the Blanchards hate-read the blog in the interim and see what’s going on. They came at a perfect time. And they’ve no doubt raised the visibility of the metablogs in the circles the traffic in.
Is the owner of PMMMB trolling everyone by claiming to “ban” someone from posting on a blog that doesn’t require comment moderation, and in a planet that has something called “The Tor Browser”?
Also, how does he ban Josh, when Josh hasn’t been commenting, at least not in any obvious way?
And finally, why is everyone here so myrmecophobic?
What?
“it will be good to have a record of how the Blanchards behaved.”
I can see the stories now. During a time when there were wide-ranging public discussions of the Kipnis and Hypatia controversies in multiple venues, there was also a blog where people (no one knows how many, could be 100, could be 10) discussed these issues anonymously, along with gossip and speculation about named people’s sex lives, assaults and assault allegations, job prospects, physical appearance, quality as scholars, etc. And do you know what the Blanchard Bros had the /gall/ to do in this anonymous forum? They came in and posted jokes about ants. Can you believe it? What kinds of monsters are these people?
Dear Ben or Josh: no matter how many times you post this, it still isn’t a correct characterization of the content of this blog.
(Nor is it an apt description of their behavior, for that matter.)
It’s also obvious that they or one of their friends is responsible for the hate speech. If it were someone else, it would have been posted under their names, so that a google search would turn up JB or BB using the N word.
See https://philosophymetametametablog.wordpress.com/2017/05/02/site-suggestions-thread/#comment-7947
“it still isn’t a correct characterization of the content of this blog.”
So true. Other stuff happens on this blog, too!
Right, and I’m sure you’d say the same thing if they posted two dozen inane comments a day at Feminist Philosophers. You wouldn’t say they were being disruptive.
Believable.
“Right, and I’m sure you’d say the same thing if they posted two dozen inane comments a day at Feminist Philosophers. You wouldn’t say they were being disruptive.
Believable.”
We can suppose the author’s a hypocrite for the sake of argument – but yeah, it’s pretty implausible that this is what the stories would be! Also, the description in the story hardly describes the comment threads at FP. Plus, generally the FP authors themselves are only nominally pseudonymous.
God Mark Lance is such a fucking clown
Hi guys. Any suggestions as to what can we do about the far-left threat to philosophy, apart from posting comments on this blog?
But haven’t you read people’s replies to the Blanchards? This blog is enormously important and influential. People check it when they are on search committees, they sift through the comments to figure out what’s going on, and they always believe people’s claims about who is who in the comments.
I suggest praying rosaries.
From the Mark Lance comment posted above: “Lance: ”I’ve put quite a few criticisms of the article out publicly. Those criticisms are correct.”
I didn’t realize that those criticisms are correct, thank you for pointing that out!!!!! Where can I pick up my pitchfork and torch?!
That it’s followed immediately by this is really hilarious: “just announcing that everyone criticizing the paper is wrong, and arguing in bad faith suggests to me that you are not actually competent to be in this discussion”
lol wow
You shall bind them as a sign on your hand and they shall be as frontals on your forehead. You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates:
Elise Springer, Wesleyan University
Alexis Shotwell, Carleton University
Dilek Huseyinzadegan, Emory University
Lori Gruen, Wesleyan University
Shannon Winnubst, Ohio State University
B. Tamsin Kimoto, Emory University
Marie Draz, San Diego State University
Alice MacLachlan, York University
Axelle Karera, Wesleyan University
H. Rakes, Oregon State University
Tempest Henning, Vanderbilt University
Andrew Dilts, Loyola Marymount University/Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
Don Deere, Loyola Marymount University
Mairead Sullivan, Loyola Marymount University
Emily Garcia, Northeastern Illinois University
Sina Kramer, Loyola Marymount University
Claire Colebrook, Pennsylvania State University
C. Riley Snorton, Cornell University
Alison Reiheld, Southern Illinois University – Edwardsville
Verena Erlenbusch, University of Memphis
Luvell Anderson, University of Memphis
Christina Friedlaender, University of Memphis
Sami Schalk, University of Wisconsin – Madison
Che Gossett, Rutgers University
Joy Ellison, Ohio State University
Patti Duncan, Oregon State University
Lauren Freeman, University of Louisville
Aimi Hamraie, Vanderbilt University
Qwo-Li Driskill, Oregon State University
Gaile Polhaus, Jr., Miami University of Ohio
Samantha Brennan, Western University (London, Ontario, Canada)
Yannik Thiem, Villanova University
Gayle Salamon, Princeton University
David Kazanjian, University of Pennsylvania/Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
Adriel M. Trott, Wabash College
Leigh M. Johnson, Christian Brothers University
Emanuela Bianchi, New York University
Cynthia Willett, Emory University
Lisa Guenther, Vanderbilt University
Sharyn Clough, Oregon State University
Sabeen Ahmed, Vanderbilt University
Jasmine Wallace, Villanova University
Sarah Hansen, California State University Northridge
Brendan Moore, Emory University
Catherine Clune-Taylor, Princeton University
Michael Floyd, Oregon State University
Stephanie Jenkins, Oregon State University
Whitney Ronshagen, Emory University
Tarik Dobbs, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Megan Dean, Georgetown University
Arielle Amiri, DePaul University
Edward Kazarian, Rowan University
Jake Yocham, University of California, Irvine School of Law
Hannah Hjerpe-Schroeder, Emory University
Erin Grogan, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
Nishant Shahani, Washington State University
Claudia Garcia-Rojas, Northwestern University
Liam Aranda, Northwestern University
Cassie Herbert, Georgetown University
Hajjar Baban, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Sara Saba, Emory University
Hector Ramirez-Kimoto, Unaffiliated
Jared Rodríguez, Northwestern University
Sarah Kathryn Marshall, University of Memphis
Eric A. Stanley, University of California, Riverside
Joseph Stramondo, San Diego State University
Sara Ahmed, Independent Scholar
Jana McAuliffe, University of Arkansas Little Rock
M. Shadee Malaklou, Beloit College
Emma Gunderson, University of California, Irvine School of Law
Lilyana Levy, Emory University
Jessica Decker, California State University, San Marcos
Sara-Maria Sorentino, University of California, Irvine
Deniz Durmus, John Carroll University
Harold Braswell, St. Louis University
Nikki Karalekas, Washington University
Amber Kelsie, University of Pittsburgh
Nora Berenstain, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Danai Mupotsa, University of the Witwatersrand
Cori Wong, Colorado State University
Carmen Mitchell, California State University, San Marcos
Samantha Norman, Fordham University
CV Vitolo-Haddad, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Simone Kolysh, CUNY Graduate Center
Ellen Samuels, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Eli Kean, Michigan State University
Zoe Samudzi, University of California, San Francisco
Pamela Wynne Butler, University of Notre Dame
Katrina England, Binghamton University
Michael Norton, University of Arkansas Little Rock
Hex Larsen, University of Southern California
Alden Jones, University of Texas-Austin
Catherine Ross-Stroud, University of Wisconsin River Falls
Leah J. Reinert, University of Northern Colorado
Bogdan Popa, Oberlin College
Ege Selin Islekel, Loyola Marymount University
Christopher Williams, Rutgers Newark
Elizabeth Bennett Atwood, Colorado State University
Judith Rodriguez, University of California, Irvine
alithia zamantakis, Georgia State University
Sasha Klupchak, Emory University
Madeline Eller, Georgetown University
Jami Weinstein, Linköping University
T.J. Jourian, Independent Scholar
Desiree Valentine, Penn State University
Andrés Sandoval, University of California Santa Cruz
Naveen Minai, Institute of Business Administration (Pakistan)
María de la C. Salvador, DePaul University
Lauren Nuckols, Penn State University
FIona Kumari Campbell, University of Dundee, Scotland
Adam Schwartz, Oregon State University
Fanny Söderbäck, DePaul University
Justin Strong, University of California, Irvine
James South, Marquette University
Christina A. León, Oregon State University
Sara Kolmes, Georgetown University
Courtney Miller, Binghamton University
Mehra Gharibian, UC Irvine
Benita de Robillard, University of the Witwatersrand
Shouta Brown, University of Memphis
İmge Oranlı, Koç University, Istanbul
Susana L. Gallardo, San Jose State University
Celia Bardwell-Jones, University of Hawai’i at Hilo
Mijke van der Drift, Goldsmiths, University of London
Daniel Tillapaugh, California Lutheran University
Darci Doll, Delta College
Amanda Armstrong, University of Michigan
Brady Heiner, California State University, Fullerton
Joel Michael Reynolds, Emory University
Eliza Steinbock, Leiden University Center for the Arts in Society
Zara Bain, University of Bristol
Maria Bates, Pierce College
Sandeep Bakshi, University of Le Havre, France
Rachel McKinnon, College of Charleston
Emma Sheppard, Edge Hill University
Barrett Emerick, St. Mary’s College of Maryland
Nicolle Brancazio, University of Wollongong
Luana Ross, GWSS, University of Washington
J.R. Latham, University of Melbourne
Michelle N. Huang, Penn State
Kelli Potter, Utah Valley University
Sabrina Aggleton, Penn State University
Mary McGinnis, Ball State University
Daniel Allen, Villanova University
Jeanine Weekes Schroer, University of Minnesota Duluth
Max Baumkel, Vanderbilt University
Theodra Bane, Villanova University
Quin Rich, Emory University
Naomi Scheman, University of Minnesota, emerita
Rocío Zambrana, University of Oregon
Jane Dryden, Mount Allison University
Erica Rand, Bates College
Perry Zurn, University of Pennsylvania
Elena Ruiz, Michigan State University
Cáel M Keegan, Grand Valley State University
Melanie Adley , Vanderbilt University
Alyssa Hillary, University of Rhode Island
Sydney Silberman, Vanderbilt University
Austin H Johnson, Kent State University
Janine Jones, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Dana Howard, National Institutes of Health
Susana Loza, Hampshire College
Sarah Kizuk, Marquette University
Kadin Henningsen, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Robin James, UNC Charlotte
Morey Williams, Villanova University
Jason Read, University of Southern Maine
Lorna Bracewell, University of Nebraska Kearney
Adrienne Brune, Averett University
Brian Jara, Towson University
Eli R Green, Widener University, Center for Human Sexuality Studies
Chris Barcelos, University of Wisconsin Madison
Cynthia Wu, SUNY at Buffalo
Sarah Clark Miller, Penn State University
Andrew Johnson, University of California, Santa Barbara
Alfred Frankowski, Northeastern Illinois University
Amy Donahue, Kennesaw State University
C Dalrymple-Fraser, University of Toronto
Maria Peña, MPA, JDc, Baylor Law School
Karen Frost-Arnold, Hobart & William Smith Colleges
Mauro Cabral Grinspan, GATE
Andrea Pitts, UNC Charlotte
Whitney Mutch, University of Alambama, Tuscaloosa
Juno Salazar Parrenas, Ohio State University
Karen Rice, Georgetown University
Julinna Oxley, Coastal Carolina University
Lee Penn, University of Minnesota – Twin Cities
Zenzele Isoke, University of Minnesota
Shanté Paradigm Smalls, St. John’s University
Long Bui, Wesleyan University
Shaeeda Mensah, Penn State University
Erin L. Durban-Albrecht, Illinois State University
Christopher Culp, Trocaire College
Alexis Lothian, University of Maryland College Park
Cristina Serna, Colgate University
Lorena Muñoz, University of Minnesota
Elena Long, PhD, University of New Hampshire
Jessica Namakkal, Duke University
Kelsey Borrowman, Villanova University
Stephanie Kerschbaum, University of Delaware
Atticus Cameron, Baltimore City College
Holly Moore, Luther College
Abby Scribne, Emory University
GPat Patterson, Ball State University
Florence Ashley, McGill University
Matt Tierney, Penn State – University Park
Dawn Chisebe, Kenyon College
Lyn Radke, Vanderbilt University
Rachel McNealis, Marquette University
Rick Elmore, Appalachian State University
Abigail Boggs, Wesleyan University
Rose Bel, Syracuse University
Karijn van den Berg, PhD, Aberystwyth University
Cynthia Wang, Cal State LA
Clare Forstie, Northwestern University
Jenny L. Davis, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Habiba Diallo, University of London
Andrea Long Chu, New York University
Jack Leff, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Jeremy Bell, Georgia Southern University
Laura Brant, Colorado State University
Daniel Smith, Pennsylvania State University
Ephraim Das Janssen, Fordham University
Hanna Lipkind, Vanderbilt University
Patricia L. Grosse, Drexel University
Jill Gillespie, Denison University
Brenna McCaffrey, CUNY Graduate Center
Lisa Miracchi, University of Pennsylvania
Jennifer Stoever, Binghamton University
Angela Jones, Farmingdale State College, SUNY
Sabrina Aggleton, Penn State University
Mae Miller, CUNY Graduate Center
Chrystie Myketiak, University of Brighton
greg zoda, Baylor University
Sara Bijani, Michigan State University
Mark Lance, Georgetown University
Nancy McHugh, Wittenberg University
Jigna Desai, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Carleigh Morgan, King’s College London
Janet Werther, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Rebecca Carter, Virginia Commonwealth University
Nick Thuot, Iowa State University
Jason Wyckoff, Independent Scholar
Hyacinth Piel, University of Illinois at Chicago
Mike Gill, Syracuse University
Gwendolyn Beetham, Rutgers University
Ammon Allred, University of Toledo
Michael Wei-Chih LIU, National Yang-Ming University
Jason Byron, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Mary Dickman, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Jennifer Gammage, DePaul University
Peter Capretto, Vanderbilt University
Erika Brown, Villanova University
Lake Elrod, UC Santa Cruz
KJ Surkan, MIT
Zoe Brigley Thompson, The Ohio State University
Janice Dowell, Syracuse University
Jake Jackson, Temple University
Isabel Engelbert, Johnson County Community College
Forrest Deacon, The New School for Social Research
Maya Goldenberg, University of Guelph
Viki Peer, University of South Florida
Alaina L. Monts, University of Texas at Austin
M Hernandez, UNC Chapel Hill
James K. Stanescu, American University
Nancy McHugh, Wittenberg University
Chanda Prescod-Weinstein, University of Washington
Jana Clark, Indiana University Bloomington
D.E. Wittkower, Old Dominion University
Shayne Sanscartier, University of Toronto
Alina Boyden, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Tyler DeAtley, Rider University
Dave Mesing, Villanova University
Axel Mueller, Northwestern Philosophy
Melissa Johnson, Southwestern University
Séagh Kehoe, University of Nottingham
Debra Carroll-Beight, Lund University
Sarah Boeshart, University of Florida
alex cruse, unaffiliated
Beth Capper, Brown University
Katie Howard, Emory University
Eli Erlick, University of California, Santa Cruz
Myrl Bream, Virginia Commonwealth University
Nael Bhanji, York Universiry, Canada
Andrea Breau, The Ohio State University
Fiona Maeve Geist, Hampshire College
Samantha Perez, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Kathy Kiloh, OCAD University
Hilarie Ashton, CUNY Graduate Center
Lisa King, University of Tennessee
Lana Lin, The New School
Jami McFarland, Western University
Jill Gordon, Colby College
Ryan van Nood, Purdue University
Lena Palacios, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Joshua Bastian Cole, Cornell University
Saba Fatima, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
Lynne Tirrell, University of Massachusetts Boston
Dundee Lackey, Texas Woman’s University
Alisa Carse, Georgetown University
Lynne Huffer, Emory University
Thomas J Billard , University of Southern California
Ellie Anderson, Muhlenberg College
C. Fullarton, Emory University
Susan Livingston, Indiana State University
Crystal McKinnon, La Trobe University
Mimi Thi Nguyen, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Thomas J Billard, University of Southern California
Franco Barchiesi, Ohio State University
Caleb Knapp, University of Washington
Thomas J Billard, University of Southern California
R.A. Briggs, Stanford University
Amelia M. Wirts, Boston College
Mimi Khuc, University of Maryland
Margot Weiss, Wesleyan University
Talia Mae Bettcher, California State University, Los Angeles
Krista Benson, Ohio State University
Angela Carter, University of Minnesota
Isa Zuluaga, Mount Holyoke College, Posse Foundations Scholar
Francisco J. Galarte, University of Arizona
Julia Gibson, Michigan State University
Sana Rizvi, De Montfort University
Katrina Haaksma, Calvin College
Julian Long, B.A. 2004, Women’s Studies, The College of William & Mary
Victoria Dickman-Burnett, University of Cincinnati
Hannah Bacon, Stony Brook University
Mario I. Suarez, Texas A&M University, Ph.D. Student
Hilary Malatino, Penn State University
Erica Chu, University of Illinois–Chicago
Fiacha Heneghan, Vanderbilt University
Isaac West, Vanderbilt University
Janaya Crevier, Calvin College
Lori Watson, University of San Diego
Eliana Peck, Vanderbilt University
T.J. Tallie, Washington and Lee University
Sarah E Watkins, Independent Scholar
Angela Asbell, California State University, San Bernardino
Danny Khuu, University of California Santa Barbara
Naomi Greyser, University of Iowa
Darian Spearman, University of Connecticut
George Hoagland, Minneapolis College of Art & Design
Larisa Kingston, Mann Temple University
Cabell Gathman, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Yolanda Estes, Mississippi State University (Retired)
An Sasala, The University of Kansas
Sarah Tyson, University of Colorado Denver
Eden Osucha, Bates College
Jack Turner, University of Washington
Heather Stewart, University of Colorado, Boulder
Kris Gebhard, George Mason University
Marcia Ochoa, University of California, Santa Cruz
Stephen Dillon, Hampshire College
Aren Aizura, University of Minnesota
Florentien Verhage, Washington and Lee University
Sofia Huerter, University of Washington
R. Gonzalez Martin, University of Texas
V Chaudhry, Northwestern University
Julia Gibson, Michigan State University
Victoria Dickman-Burnett, University of Cincinnati
Elliott H. Powell, University of Minnesota
Taylor Edelhart, New York University
Keeli Armitage, Eckerd College
Amanda Swarr, University of Washington, Seattle
Natalie Oswin, McGill University
Priya Kandaswamy, Mills College
Brandon J. Manning, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Victoria Dickman-Burnett, University of Cincinnati
Aisha Lockridge, Saint Joseph’s University
Gilbert Caluya, University of Melbourne
Karma R. Chávez, University of Texas-Austin
Gyunghee Park, University College Cork
Juliana Hu Pegues, University of Minnesota
Alana Lentin, Western Sydney University
MaryKatherine Ramsey, The Ohio State University
Brit Schulte, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Ben Brucato, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Laine Zisman newman, University of Toronto
Zahari Richter, Incoming GWU graduate student
Kyle Shupe, University of Cincinnati
Sirin Yilmaz, New York University
Chris Taylor, University of Chicago
Edmond Y. Chang, University of Oregon
Desiree Melton, Notre Dame of Maryland University
Jessica Pabón, SUNY New Paltz
Jasmine Noelle Yarish, University of California, Santa Barbara
Salvador Vidal Ortiz, American University
Lotta Kähkönen, University of Turku
Kathryn Clancy, University of Illinois
MacRorie Dean, The Ohio State University
L. Syd M Johnson, Michigan Technological University
Juliana Martínez, American University
Jennifer Suchland, Ohio State University
Tyler A. Colwell Marquette University (Incoming)
Nat Hurley, University of Alberta
Melinda Robb, Emory University
Linda Lund, London School of Economics
Ronald Mendoza-de Jesús, University of Southern California
Eleonora Joensuu, Simon Fraser University
Corinne Mason, Brandon University, Canada
Anna Swartz, Michigan Technological University graduate student
Sade Kondelin, University of Turku
Roewan Crowe, University of Winnipeg, Canada
Deja Beamon, Ohio State University
Robin Nelson, Santa Clara University
Karen Lawford, University of Ottawa
Tiffany Florvil, University of New Mexico
Cleo Woelfle-Erskine, Feminist Studies UC Santa Cruz
Matt Franks, University of West Georgia
Anja Kanngieser, University of Wollongong
Sebastian Ramirez, Vanderbilt University PhD Student
Lindsay Blewett, York University, Toronto, Canada
Christine Manganaro, Maryland Institute College of Art
Benny LeMaster, California State University, Long Beach
Sarah Suhail, Arizona State University
Jordan Daniels, Emory University
Dana Rognlie, University of Oregon
Emily R. Douglas, McGill University
Marika Rose, University of Winchester
Suzanne Neefus, Michigan State University
Harlan Weaver, Kansas State University
Victor Szabo, University of Virginia
Erin Morris, SUNY Cortland
Tani Sebro, Miami University of Ohio
Ayanna Spencer, Michigan State University
Elisabeth Lund Engebretsen, University of Oslo
Jennifer Ellerman-Queen, University of South Florida
Noah Tamarkin, The Ohio State University
Tristan Josephson, California State University, Sacramento
Harry Gilbert, University of Southern California
Victoria Dickman-Burnett, University of Cincinnati
Kavita Maya. SOAS University of London
Krista Miranda, Middlebury College
Adrian Flores, University of Arizona
Jonathan D. Singer, DePaul University
Emi Riiko, University of Glasgow
Melissa Boshans, University of Illinois at Chicago
Julia Polyck-O’Neill, Brock University
Alice Cavanagh, McMaster University
Laura S. Logan, Hastings College
Miguel Gualdrón, DePaul University
Claudia Murphy, Minnesota State Community and Technical College
Emily Waters, Illinois State University
Wendy Christensen, William Paterson University
Elizabeth Balskus, University of Oregon
Sailakshmi Ramgopal, Trinity College
Hentyle Yapp, New York University
Dana Seitler, University of Toronto
Nirmala Erevelles, The University of Alabama
James Callahan, Emory University
Ana Ferreira, University of Indinapolis
Robert Hill, Michigan State University
Ricardo Friaz California State University, Stanislaus
Sarah Dowling, University of Washington Bothell
Jennifer Moorman, Loyola Marymount University
Cristy Yeung, CUNY Queens
Roksana Badruddoja, Manhattan College
Avery Everhart, University of Southern California
Amanda Lehr, Vanderbilt University
Bryn Buchanan, University of California, Davis
Caitlin Shanley, Temple University
Rebecca Kennedy, Denison University
Chris Nelsen, Clark College
Experience Bryon , Royal Central School of Speech and Drama London
Anthony Kim, Colorado State University
Joseph McCarthy, Marquette University Law School
Rachael Neu, Florida Atlantic University
Zack Sievers, Villanova University
Cade Johnson, Central European University
KT Pinion, Stony Brook University
Nat Raha, University of Sussex / Edinburgh College of Art
Benjamin I. J. Mintzer, Columbia University in the City of New York
Harrison Apple, University of Arizona
L. Crémier, Université du Québec à Montréal
Chase Hobbs-Morgan, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Tracy Rutler, Penn State University
Terri Vescio, Penn State University
Tiffany Tsantsoulas, Penn State
Alec Magnet, The CUNY Graduate Center and City College of New York
Bethany M. Coston, Virginia Commonwealth University
Simon D. Elin Fisher, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Clark Pignedoli, Université du Québec à Montréal
Ruben Zecena, University of Arizona
Brandon Peter Masterman, New York University
Katie Terezakis, RIT
Charis Thompson, UC Berkeley
Katie Kretsch, Hamline University
CJ Venable Schaefbauer, Kent State University
Ashley Mog, University of Kansas
Erin Vonnahme, Miami University of Ohio
Sophia Seawell, Utrecht University
Lauren Coker, University of North Carolina at Charlotte (Oppresses Black Students)
Emma Hansen, University of Toronto
Melia Erin Fritch, Kansas State University
Rebecca Kennison, Independent scholar
Carolina Alonso Bejarano, Rutgers University
Gina Schlesselman-Tarango, California State University
Gail Weiss, George Washington University
L. Ilana Turner, University of Minnesota
SA Smythe, University of California, Santa Barbara
Eli Clare, Independent writer and activist
David K. Seitz, York University
Elaine Levia, Harvard-Westlake School
Victor Mendoza, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Catriona Rueda Esquibel, San Francisco State University
Gr Keer, California State University, East Bay
Chelsea Frazier, Northwestern University
Liz Montegary, Stony Brook University
Reese C. Kelly, Dartmouth College
Katie Woolsey, Cabrillo College,
Joseph Ruanto-Ramirez, Claremont Graduate University, UC San Diego
Arianne Shahvisi, Brighton and Sussex Medical School
Kelly Fritsch, University of Toronto
Beth Twomey, North Dakota State University
Kelli Vaughn-Johnson, York University
Jae Basiliere, Grand Valley State University
Brian Ontiveros-Kersch, University of North Texas
Kimberly McKee, Grand Valley State University
Nicholas-Brie Guarriello, University of Minnesota
Melanie Yergeau, University of Michigan
Mia Fischer, University of Colorado Denver
Laura Bonella, Kansas State University
Annaleigh Curtis, Attorney
Bree Lacey, California State University, Los Angeles
Loren Cannon, Humboldt State University
Ryan C. P. Fics, Emory University, Department of Comparative Literature
Charissa Varma, University of Cambridge
Stephanie Holt, University of North Carolina Charlotte
Ade Wesley, University of Copenhagen
Vinh Nguyen, Harvard University
E. Cram, University of Iowa
Davina April Wright, La Trobe Universiry
Geoff Pfeifer, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Sam Bourcier, Lille University
Eric Flohr Reynolds, Emory University, Department of Comparative Literature
Joshua Riva, Princeton University
Gavin P. Johnson, Ohio State University
Karen Kelsky, The Professor Is In
Irene Shankar, Mount Royal University
Courtney Cuthbertson, Michigan State University
Susan Nordstrom, University of Memphis
Kalaniopua Young, University of Washington
Katka Showers-Curtis, University of Kentucky
Jina B. Kim, Mount Holyoke College
Phil McCracken, University of Miami
Melissa Aguilera, El Paso Community College
Rochel L. Gasson Duquesne University
Jun Rendich Swarthmore College
Kristi Tredway, St. Mary’s College of Maryland
Travis Lau, University of Pennsylvania
Mirranda Willette, University of Oregon
D Conner, Unaffiliated
Zachary Tuggle, University of Tennessee
Torsten Menge, University of Arkansas
Kathryn Klement, Northern Illinois University
Kandice Chuh, CUNY/Graduate Center
Sonya Onwu, Self employed academic
Danielle Sofer, Maynooth University
Meredith Lee, University of California, Irvine
Juliet Hess, Michigan State University
Tessa Gurney, High Point University
Elana Voigt, University of Washington
Nicole Dular, Syracuse University, Franklin College
Lindsay Kelley, University of New South Wales
Natalie Wright, University of Sussex
Kendall Gerdes, Texas Tech University
Rachel Lieberman, UNC Greensboro
Annie McClanahan, UC Irvine
Margaret Price, The Ohio State University
Martha C Brenckle, University of Central Florida
Jennifer Scuro, College of New Rochelle, NY
Emma Fredrick, East Tennessee State University
N. Cottone, Miami University
Jonathan Basile, Emory University Ph.D. Student
Heather Switzer, Arizona State University
Kylan Mattias de Vries, Southern Oregon University
Rebekah Sinclair, University of Oregon
Andrew Xiang, Dartmouth College
Zachary Elkins, University of Missouri, Columbia
Anita Baksh, LaGuardia Community College (CUNY)
Anna Carter, Iowa State University
Lars Mackenzie, University of Minnesota
Shawn Won, MIT
Nevada Drollinger-Smith, Arizona State University
Shiloh Theobald, Ball State
Victor J. Raymond, Madison College
Sabrina Sembiante, Florida Atlantic University
Ido Katri, University of Toronto
Clarence Hidalgo Harvey-Finley, Trinity College, Oxford University
K.R. Roberto, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Renée M Byrd, Humboldt State University
Anna Cook, University of Oregon
Kathleen Livingston, Michigan State University
Liam Hogan, University of Limerick
Ariane Prohaska, University of Alabama
Linda Stupart, University of Reading
Erica R Meiners, Northeastern Illinois University
A. Danielle Dulken, PhD student, UNC-Chapel Hill
Jess Waggoner, Indiana University, Bloomington
Mary K. Bloodsworth-Lugo, Washington State University
Yomaira C. Figueroa, Michigan State University
Miranda Joseph, University of Arizona
Jessica Ison, La Trobe University
Robert Christian Hosbach, Appalachian State University
Chloe Foisy-Marquis, University of Waterloo
Jay Garvey, University of Vermont
John P. Broome, PhD, University of Mary Washington
Natalie Ingraham, Cal State East Bay
Julie Sze, UC Davis
Carolyn D’Cruz, La Trobe University
Christopher Bennett, Queen’s University
Kathryn Medien, University of Warwick
Pierre Cloutier de Repentigny, University of Ottawa
Scott Phillips McCallum, UC Santa Cruz
Ambereen Dadabhoy, Harvey Mudd College
Jaymelee Kim, University of Findlay
Joshua Nederhood, Calvin College
Ashley Farmer, Boston University
Cornelius Reeve Gottlieb, Huxley College of the Environment
Ethel Brooks, Rutgers University
Maree Pardy, Deakin University
Emily Bosch, Concordia College – Moorhead
George Ciccariello-Maher, Drexel University
Diana Pozo, University of California, Santa Barbara
Kimberly A. Williams, Mount Royal University
Hale Konitshek, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Sarah Evans, Baylor University
Gil Morejón, DePaul University
Nicole Hernandez Froio, University of York
Denise Grollmus, University of Washington–Seattle
Chauncey Colwell, Ph.D., Retired
Laura Guidry-Grimes, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
Samuel Leyba, Kansas State University
Sean Guynes, Michigan State University
Bernadette Marie Calafell, University of Denver
Theresa Warburton, Western Washington University
Shannon Woodcock, Self employed academic
Sheila Arndt, Marquette University
Jill Drouillard, Université Paris-Sorbonne
Robert Gutierrez-Perez, University of Nevada, Reno
Scott Chappuis, Bowling Green State University
Sandra Faulkner, Bowling Green State University
Christian Exoo, St. Lawrence University
S.M. Shahwan, The George Washington University
Sharone Horowit-Hendler, University at Albany
Jesse Benn, University of Wisconsin – Madison
Eric Short, University of Minnesota
Helen Boyd Kramer, Lawrence University
Karen Barad, UC Santa Cruz
Meredith Nash, University of Tasmania
Rachel Loney-Howes, La Trobe University
Omi Salas-SantaCruz, UC Berkeley
Kit Connor, Miami University of Ohio
Blas Radi, Universidad de Buenos Aires
Brandy Simula, Emory University
Judith Butler, UC Berkeley
Holly Lewis, Texas State University
Elizabeth Freeman, University of California, Davis
Neni Panourgia, Columbia University
Tanya Serisier, Birkbeck College, University of London
Sophie Ban, Syracuse University
Marla Jaksch, The College of New Jersey
Vincenza Mazzeo, McGill University
Anne-Marie Schultz, Baylor University
Emma K. Russell, Deakin University
Charlotte O’Neill, The University of Sheffield
j wallace skelton, OISE University of Toronto
Erika Strandjord, Concordia College, Moorhead, MN
Jade Sasser, University of California, Riverside
Riki Lane, Monash University
Charl Landsberg, University of Kwa-Zulu Natal
Vanessa Angélica Villarreal, PhD Candidate at the University of Southern California
Suze Berkhout, University of Toronto
Timothy Snediker, UC Santa Barbara
Alexa Schriempf, former Managing Editor, Hypatia
Smaranda Aldea, Dartmouth College
Michael Berlin, UC, Irvine
Anna-Claire Simpson, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Emilie Uzoma Jacob, University of Toronto
Holly Goldstein, New York University
Cherod Johnson, University of California Berkeley
Jonas Weaver, Calvin College
Melissa Merin, Mills College, Oakland, CA
Eyo Ewara, The Pennsylvania State University
Molly Gray, Portland State University
Gabrielle Moser, OCAD University
Sonja Thomas, Colby College
Ahalya Satkunaratnam, Quest University Canada
Tyrone S. Palmer, Northwestern University
Rachel Berman, Ryerson University
Kaela Talley, None
Emily Symons, University of Ottawa
Mel Ferrara, University of Arizona
Kami Chisholm, Independent scholar and filmmaker
Jessica Thompson, University of Waterloo
Simone West, Stony Brook University
Megan Burke, Oklahoma State University
Rachel Schmitz, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
Wendy Brown, UC Berkeley
Iris Young, UC Berkeley
Dawn Kaczmar, University of Michigan
Kevin Jenkins, University of North Texas
Sally Wong, Massey University
Maria Nengeh Mensah, Université du Québec à Montréal
Michael Orsini, University of Ottawa
Alexandra Rodríguez, IRGT
Kyla Schuller, Rutgers University
Michelle Esther O’Brien, New York University
Amy Li, Emory University
Trung PQ Nguyen, UC Santa Cruz
Evan Pensis, University of Chicago
Sara Yaxte, The New School for Social Research
Jonathan Doucette, UC Davis
Jina B. Kim, Mount Holyoke College
Elisabeth Paquette, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Laura Tetreault, University of Louisville
Quinn Eades, La Trobe University
Rumya S. Putcha, Texas A&M University
Laura Fairley, University of Toronto
Barrie Shannon, University of Newcastle, Australia
Jafar Al-Mondhiry, New York University
Ryan Falbisaner, Unaffliated
Dawn Rae Davis, Monterey Peninsula College
Sibelle Grisé, UMass Amherst
Karina Vado, University of Florida
Elisabeth Anker, George Washington University
Timothy Laurie, University of Technology Sydney
Andrew Anastasia, Harper College
Nat Baldino, The University of Maryland
S. Charusheela, University of Washington, Bothell
Robyn Anne Franklin, University of Louisville
Angela Semple, Trent University
Damien Riggs, Flinders University
Lisa Santosa, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Meaghen-Danielle Meaney, University of Ottawa
Alyssa Adamson, Stony Brook University
Riley Talamantes, University of Wyoming
Robbie Fordyce, University of Melbourne
Sirma Bilge, Université de Montréal
April Sizemore-Barber, Georgetown University
Kristiana L. Baez, Baylor University
Justin P. Jimenez, University of Minnesota
Amie L. Zimmer, University of Oregon
Maya Steinborn, University of San Francisco
Samira Nadkarni, Independent Scholar
Colin Dayan, Vanderbilt
Cynthia Schossberger, Washington University in St. Louis
Dick Chopper, Independent scholar and activist
Jessica Hallock, Columbia University
Sahra Taylor City, University of London
Fiona MacDonald, University of the Fraser Valley
Puck Lo, Stanford University
Halena Kapuni-Reynolds, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
Dylan Hillyer, York University
Erica Saunders, Wake Forest University School of Divinity
Nicole Stark, Valencia College
Atacan Atakan, University of Arizona
Bjorn Wiffabiggun, Isafjorher University
Prerna Lal, EBCLC, a clinic of Berkeley Law
Joseph L Simonis, DAPPER Stats
Kwame Phillips, John Cabot University
Vikram Kohli, Northwestern University
Megan Sharp, University of Newcastle
Johann Gambolputty, Universität Ulm, Baden-Württemberg
Piya Chatterjee, Scripps College
Jih-Fei Cheng, Scripps College
Grace Cebrero, Mount Saint Mary’s University Los Angeles
Grietje Baars, City, University of London
J. Jeanine Ruhsam, WGSS, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Jeffrey Cisneros, Indiana University – Bloomington
Aditi Surie von Czechowski, Columbia University
K. H. Niehaus, Goldsmiths, University of London
Lori Askeland, Wittenberg University
Charlotte Karem Albrecht, University of Michigan
Teresa Stout, The New School
Kristin L. McLaughlin, University at Albany – SUNY
Jack Halberstam, Columbia University
Vern Harner, University of Washington
Ian Alan Paul, SUNY Stony Brook
EJ Gonzalez-Polledo, University of Sheffield
Matías Bascuñán, Emory University
Therí A. Pickens, Bates College
Edward OByrn, Penn State University
Emma Velez, Penn State University
Rushaan Kumar, Pomona College
Kaity Newman, Penn State University
Eric Anthony Grollman, University of Richmond
Kevin Bruyneel, Babson College
Jacqueline Vickey, University of North Texas
Lydia Pelot-Hobbs, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Samantha Langsdale, University of North Texas
Cassius Adair, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Brittnay Proctor, Northwestern University
Andrew Robbins, University of Oregon
Joseph Keady, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Christopher Munt, Purdue Universuty
Benjamin H. Brewer, Emory University
Stef Murawsky, University of Cincinnati
William Paris, Penn State University
Elisabeth Udyawar, Carnegie Mellon University
Vladimir Ulyanov, Kazan University
Emek Ergun, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Paige Hermansen, Westfield State University
Nicolás de León, University of Wisconsin at Whitewater
Heather Williams, University of North Texas
Sarah T. Hamid, Microsoft Research New England
Lucilla Pan, Emory University
Cameron Aitken, Central European University
Noel Kirsch, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Bonnie Sheehey, University of Oregon
Joe Fritsch, Emory University, Student
Chase de Saint-Félix, American University
Jacob Evoy, University of Western Ontario
Joshua Navon, Columbia University
Autumn Kent, University of Wisconsin – Madison
Carrie Sheffield, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Amanda Reyes, University of California Santa Cruz
Jennifer Schwarz, Unaffiliated (13 yr high school educator)
Joie Meier, Stony Brook University
Jinah Kim, California State University, Northridge
Regina N. Bradley, Armstrong State University
JoAnna R. Murphy, Rowan University, New Jersey
Elias Vitulli, Mount Holyoke College
Ari Stoetl, Centre for Poetics and Aesthetics, LYC
Thomas Bretz, Utah Valley University
Sandra K Soto, University of Arizona
Roy Pérez, Willamette University
Ezgi Sertler, Michigan State University
Ellen Kirkpatrick, Kingston University, London
Katie Strom, California State University East Bay
Gabriel Rockhill, Villanova University
Christoph Hanssmann, University of California, San Francisco
Kathy-Ann Tan, JFK Institute of North American Studies, Freie Universität Berlin
Gwynne Fulton, Villanova University
Ruth Pearce, University of Warwick
Jesse Carr, Beloit College
Keyvan Shafiei, Georgetown University
I repeat, overwhelmingly a who’s who of total fucking nobodies
Not quite fair. A handful of them are semi-non-entities, which is a peg or two higher than total fucking nobodies. One or two of them may even be small potatoes, an even further step up.
Some somebodies there, the one jumping out at me being R.A. Briggs. She’s highly regarded in metaphysics and epistemology. Sad!
I’m curious as to why the usual folks who go in for this bullshit (Jason Stanley, Kate Manne, etc.) are keeping their peace. Still waiting to find just the right bandwagon?
I’ve seen Ersatz-Barnes on FB saying we should step away from the keyboard for a few days. First she encourages online mobs for years, now when it becomes embarrassing she tells us there’s nothing to see here.
Or maybe she makes distinctions between cases, and only supports causes that she thinks have clear merit.
Link? That’s amazing hypocrisy, though no doubt she thinks there’s a “distinction between cases.”
Huh, maybe these folks aren’t the homogeneous blob of idiots you took them to be.
lol clearly the least likely answer
I hate to say it, but much of the comment thread to the ‘Symbolic Conscription’ post at FP is a pretty convincing impersonation of a blob of navel-gazing nitwits. One might have expected some mention of freedom of speech vs claims of harm etc… but it quickly becomes a discussion about the meanings of the epithet ‘Becky’. And it doesn’t stray much from there.
I’m not saying the topic is inherently unworthy of discussion, but it’s very hard not to read this string of forty comments that don’t mention the screamingly central issue as an extended exercise in (probably largely unconscious) misdirection and displacement. Seriously, go read it.
Interestingly, the issue is first raised, in comment 8, by one R Kukla, who as a prominent FB cheerleader for the Hypatia apology, which then quickly became the grotesque Hypatia apology clusterfuck with an audience of millions, can easily be imagined to be eager to talk about anything else that comes to hand.
That thread is incredible. Kukla complains that the author of the post seems “almost proud of” her ignorance of the opening dialogue to Sir-Mix-a-Lot’s “Baby Got Back.” This, she says, is “kind of the problem, right?” That song is “a towering, maximally mainstream icon of black culture.”
A number of things might be said about these remarkable contributions. I’ll cut to the chase: what the fuck?
Haha, brilliant. She and her fellow campaigners might have completely destroyed the career of a young female feminist philosopher for no more serious reason than their recreational righteousness-thrills… but check out the real problem: obviously, white academia’s insufficient familiarity with [cue beats] I like big butts and I can not lie…
I think these fools are trying desperately to get out of the way of the juggernaut their own cynical mob tactics has unleashed. But it’s too late. As with any Jacobin movement, the most ideologically intense are fated to wind up under the blade they have themselves erected.
The assertion that Sir Mix A Lot is an icon of black culture…is precisely what you’d expect from someone who has “mastered the literature” on race but never actually talked to any non-academic black people.
What’s that now about citing the Lived Xperiences and diverse knowledgeZ of sub-@ltern populations?
+1,000,000
Also, let us not allow Prof Manners’ moving subsequent post,’Have Mercy’, to pass without comment:
Surely there can be more than the comically simplistic presentation of two sides here. The tendency to present these complex systemic (systemic!!!) issues as bifurcating into nameable good guys and bad guys insults us all…. It is possible to feel great concern and humanity for all who have been affected by this. It is possible to see all of the issues raised here as incredibly vexed and radically difficult to address. It is possible not to want anyone involved to suffer more or to be held up to further opprobium.
Can any human being who claims even the rudiments of a moral sense read these words without finding their finer feelings driven headlong to the very brink of tears?
OK, enough. Pop quiz: Is this post
(a) the latest exemplar of a proud FP tradition of refusing steadfastly, in the face of howsoever great a temptation to rhetorical advantage and political point-scoring, to cast complex issues in simplistic, binary, ‘us-vs-them’ terms, instead rising above the fray and awarding their laurel-wreath of moral approbation to the vindicated party, as well as, unfailingly, the golden apple of sympathetic concern and cheerful moral solicitude to those deemed to have succumbed, as all of us from time to time must, to an honest error of moral accounting, without fear, favor, or — least of all — any taint of vulgar ideological allegiance?
or
(b) a squalid, opportunistic attempt to divert attention from a paralyzed inability to take what is obviously the only decent course on a matter of clear principle and very serious consequence for a vulnerable female philosopher of precisely the sort it is their avowed mission to fight for — the paralysis having been induced over a long period by ideological toxins they have never cultivated sufficient intellectual honesty to resist, and which have increasingly presented, as symptoms, precisely the polarizing groupthink and irresponsible smearing of perceived enemies they now shamelessly purport to denounce as ‘the comically simplistic presentation of two sides’?
‘Twas ever thus. So long as they are riding high on moral self-admiration, the world is starkly Manichean: show me a concern for due process, and I’ll show you a rape apologist! But once they realize, too late, that they have thrown in their lot with a crowd of grubby narcissists and charlatans who are now exacting their pound of flesh, extorting from them a renunciation of the only feminist principles that ever made them worth taking seriously in the first place…. Why, then, it’s just all so complicated, don’t you see? Those crude oppositions — just – unjust, free-speech – censorship, scholarship – power-politics — are inevitably far too blunt to serve as instruments adequate to the infinitely nuanced complexities of the new dispensation.
Excuse me while I throw up.
I enjoyed reading this. Thanks. Funny how complicated and uncomfortable tend to overlap so perfectly for these people.
A brilliant diatribe, and totally, painfully accurate. I laughed while puking in my own mouth while reading it. (By the way, my vote is for option “B”.)
Well put. You should consider writing publicly in the coming months. The response to these monsters, idiots, and enablers needs voices like yours.
Thanks; this is about as public as I care to be right now. But feel free to share. Also the screed reposted by some kind soul above at 1.50 on May 3 — that was me as well.
Chappelle should do another round of “I Know Black People.” I think Kukla would do great.
Kukla is basically babbling at this point. It’s a Captain Queeg Moment.
Perhaps they’re just being #sobrave in private.
Rage Machine is no longer on Facebook, thank the gods. What a toxic manimal
Seriously though, why would it be that the only one of the relevant online venues discussing an online mob’s framing, persecution, denunciation and attempted censorship of an untenured woman feminist philosopher for writing a philosophy paper arguing for feminist views, that isn’t framing the whole thing as an obviously horrible injustice against said vulnerable feminist philosopher… is a blog that calls itself Feminist Philosophers?
I honestly can’t piece together anything that might count as a usable FP response to this from the mass of mealy-mouthed, largely argument-free verbiage generated by Hypatia’s defenders over the last couple of days except:
Any putative harm done to Tuvel is dwarfed — dwarfed*, I tell you! — by the appalling violence she committed in erasing the identities of those marginalised trans* POCs who are clearly…etc etc.
But this sort of thing is just so patently absurd that I’m finding it very difficult to believe they’re even seriously pretending think this. Am I missing anything?
*Sorry Shelly
The emperor has no clothes, and he is shameless about his nudity.
I would like to know how anyone is able to successfully utter the word “erasing” in that sense with a straight face.
meant as a reply to 2:05
Lisa Guenther’s ‘justification’ for shanking Tuvel (on FB, linked from Leiter). I can’t even.
I thought these people were against fucking one’s own students? I’m so confused!
A choice comment from her lower down: “It’s been interesting to see how closely liberal and alt-right discourses on free speech align when black (and) trans people’s lives, perspectives, and critical analyses are on the line.” Lisa Guenther needs a remedial critical thinking course.
I think McWhorter’s recent article on campus protests might be worth reading for insight on Guenther.
Link:http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2017/05/01/the-know-nothing-campus-protest-movement
Guenther: “intentions do not determine or reduce impact”….sounds like…wait for it…ideal theory!!!!!
An aside: in my personal interactions with Charles Mills, I have found him to be affable, humane, and open-minded (though I reject many of his views). I wonder how he’d feel about being used as a club to beat up on a young philosopher.
Good call.
Agreed, Mills is all class, a rare case these days of a professional philosopher who is a genuine intellectual *and* a public intellectual. And, by the way, McWhorter’s academic work is very interesting, although pretty much unrelated to what he’s writing in the Beast. (That really is just “by the way”.)
Wow, she is hot. Ugly Feminists must be jealous. A beautiful hot philosophy chick wasted by the continental ideology, think about that. So sad.
Fuck off
You’re just jealous of her natural beauty, right?
The cool trolls drop N bombs and make holocaust jokes now. Step your game up or leave.
I know 1:52 is trolling, but there’s surely a grain of truth in his comment. Tuvel is, by ordinary standards, an attractive woman. One has to think that played a role in the tribe’s decision to make her a ritual sacrifice.
I agree that, in some sense, treating a weaker / more vulnerable person unjustly is worse than treating a powerful / less vulnerable person unjustly.
However, seems to me that many of us may be over-emphasizing the fact that Tuvel is a woman and untenured. Seems to me that there’s a danger of slipping into (or at least suggesting that we’re slipping into) the same kinds of errors that are driving the New Consensus types. The anti-Tuvel campaign would be, in at least some important respects, just as bad (and just as nutty) were it directed against an extremely prominent man ensconced in some fantastically awesome endowed chair.
I do realize that it’s tempting to emphasize Tuvel’s sex and her untenured status because such hypocrisy by alleged defenders of the powerless is an almost irresistible target…but anyway, just sayin’.
Noted, Stealthy. But it’s also worth emphasizing (and I’m not saying you would disagree with this) that Tuvel’s genuinely vulnerable status makes the smearing significantly worse — and, more importantly, raises interesting questions about why more powerful (or, shall we say, otherwise hard to criticize) people who have said very similar things have not been persecuted in this way. It’s not just the hypocrisy: as usual, the bullies are cowards.
And I don’t have the sense that people here are implying that it would be remotely OK to go after a less vulnerable person in this way. (Again, I’m pretty sure you don’t disagree with this.)
It’s not that I’m sure that I disagree with any of that…it’s more like I think it’s important to…I dunno…say out loud that, speaking for myself anyway, it’s easy to get distracted by points (true though they are) like: *the bullies are cowards* and *it’s worse to do this to someone untenured than to someone tenured.*
I’m not unmoved by those considerations… I’m just a lot more concerned about the fact that there’s a kind of mass movement in the humanities–*and even in philosophy itself*–that comes pretty damn close to insisting that it is impermissible to conduct apolitical inquiry purely with the aim of achieving understanding. I’m inclined to say: this is virtually indistinguishable from arguing that philosophy should be abolished. I agree that the bullies are cowards. But, important though that point is, it pales in comparison to what I think is really at stake here.
Sometimes I feel better just for having said things.
Chloe Taylor is kicking some serious butt (and naming names) at DN.
Good for her, and good for philosophy. This discipline could use some sorting out of mere activists from genuine scholars.
Wow that response from Chloe Taylor is just awesome.
More po-faced patrician prudery from Nussbaum. ‘Philosophy does not mock’??? Someone forgot to tell Nietzsche. I wonder whether noted Nietzsche scholar B Leiter will point this out?
The second Guenther post Leiter linked to is even weirder, if anything; a few bits especially deserve comment.
1. There is apparently no room both to be an intersectional feminist and think the reaction to Tuvel was excessive. Any feminism that would “struggle to figure out what it means to become an effective ally and accomplice of black (and) trans people” must be basically okay with the attack on Tuvel (or at most view it as a regrettable consequence of justified social action); the only alternative is a degenerate racist feminism that “would rather strategically ally itself with cis hetero anti-black patriarchy.”
(Good luck defending that in print.)
2. Props to Joachim Horvath for his solid but evidently futile attempts at dialogue.
3. What the fuck kind of person says “YES. Thank you for this, [so-and-so]” when someone says that worrying about the harm being done to her former thesis student “feels a bit too much like critiques of racial justice movements as mobs throwing bricks through windows.”
this should’ve been upthread. mod, please delete?
Who cares what the most overrated philosopher alive has to say?
Nussbaum’s overrated, sure, but only in the sense that she’s conventionally taken to be a great philosopher when she’s actually just a good-to-very-good philosopher and a great writer.
I wonder who is the most overrated philosopher alive, though.
Alphabetically, a list of suggestions:
Korsgaard
Kripke (he did important work, but not nearly as much–or as important–as his ranking in BL’s polls would suggest)
McGinn
Noë (pretty much just a plagiarising blowhard)
Scruton
Stanley
Searle too.
Yeah, my immediate reaction was to wish that Nietzsche himself had a chance to take a swing at that bit about philosophy not mocking
Mark Lance with exactly the reaction I expected. They’ll never forget that you were mean to queen B, Martha.
I’m glad he called attention to the Butler paper, though, if only because the end now looks incredibly prescient:
“The great tragedy in the new feminist theory in America is the loss of a sense of public commitment. In this sense, Butler’s self-involved feminism is extremely American, and it is not surprising that it has caught on here, where successful middle-class people prefer to focus on cultivating the self rather than thinking in a way that helps the material condition of others. Even in America, however, it is possible for theorists to be dedicated to the public good and to achieve something through that effort.
Many feminists in America are still theorizing in a way that supports material change and responds to the situation of the most oppressed. Increasingly, however, the academic and cultural trend is toward the pessimistic flirtatiousness represented by the theorizing of Butler and her followers. Butlerian feminism is in many ways easier than the old feminism. It tells scores of talented young women that they need not work on changing the law, or feeding the hungry, or assailing power through theory harnessed to material politics. They can do politics in safety of their campuses, remaining on the symbolic level, making subversive gestures at power through speech and gesture. This, the theory says, is pretty much all that is available to us anyway, by way of political action, and isn’t it exciting and sexy?
In its small way, of course, this is a hopeful politics. It instructs people that they can, right now, without compromising their security, do something bold. But the boldness is entirely gestural, and insofar as Butler’s ideal suggests that these symbolic gestures really are political change, it offers only a false hope. Hungry women are not fed by this, battered women are not sheltered by it, raped women do not find justice in it, gays and lesbians do not achieve legal protections through it.”
No wonder Mark Lance hates it.
Mmm, mmm, good.
I have no idea (I mean, literally) whether she’s any good at Aristotle, but I’m glad she’s around.
318 comments in the DailySnooze thread on Tuvel’s harmful paper.
have you all guys finished grading? (quite envious)
“Rebecca was an awesome teacher. Really nice and helpful. Very passionate as a teacher, which kept the class engaged. Also very fair as a grader. Everyone in our class loved her.”
“Wonderful teacher, very engaging throughout the 1.5 hour class period. Assigns a lot of readings, which are absolutely vital to earning a decent grade. Kind and always willing to help. The class was largely discussion based, which made it much more interesting. I definitely recommend taking one of her classes.”
“She is a wonderful instructor – knows her material, engages great discussions to the students, very approachable. I am no philosophy major, but she made the material so interesting and clear to any of us.”
“Excellent professor! I’d recommend her by far. The class is beyond stimulating; Professor Tuvel holds wonderful discussions allowing the students to speak a great deal and clarifying along the way in order to make a wonderful class environment. She is also extremely thoughtful in her feedback on papers & more than willing to help a student improve!”
“Great course. Rebecca is a very helpful instructor and makes boring material really interesting. Her willingness to help her students impressed me. Doesn’t hesitate to help you with papers any other questions you may have. Would recommend taking a course with Rebecca!”
http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/ShowRatings.jsp?tid=1435199
that’s just because she’s white, cis & hot. implicit bias literature shows you this. but you’re not familiar with this, therefore you’re not a scholar
nice!
I wonder if Mark Lance would consider not being such an insufferable douchebag. Probably not.
We need Colin McGinn’s perspective also:
I just returned from a trip to New York in which I gave a paper on consciousness to a conference at Suffolk County Community College (respondent Ed Erwin); attended my friend Gregory Soros’ thirtieth birthday party (on a boat by Chelsea piers, followed by late-night ten-pin bowling); spent time with a brilliant and brave political exile (“John”) from Malaysia at Gregory’s place in Soho (we listened to a lot of Prince songs); had a long and profound dinner with Tom Nagel; and ended with a delightful lunch with George Stephanopoulos. All round a very good trip. The contrast between the people I saw in NY and the people now occupying the philosophy profession (not all of them!) was not lost on me. The business about Tuvel is just the latest in a series of outrages perpetrated by a certain type now distressingly common.
http://www.colinmcginn.net/new-york/#.WQtlRNqGMuU
Do we though?
It’s the perspective we deserve, but not the one we need right now.
lol McGinn just can’t stop. I hope the good Dr’s talk at SCCC included some handjob jokes
McGinn can’t stop, because he isn’t supposed to stop. One of the best philosophers since Wittgenstein was unduly ostracized. He got left empty-handed, and nobody cared about him anymore. McGinn is the philosopher we need and deserve. Hands down! Hand him a job, please. O well, I’m not creative with handjobs.
Rage Machine’s Twitter is always good for a laugh:
I love this one, and helps to explain why no one in epistemology takes her work seriously:
“But I’ve now given up on fixing philosophical concepts for the sake of ‘truth’ or some abstract bullshit like that.”
*his
Oops.
That rant is life changing indeed.
so now I have to think about how dr Rachel McKinnon tastes. Very triggering
The more often a philosopher goes by ‘dr.’ the more full of shit they are
While not a law-like generalization, that’s a very useful rule of thumb.
+1000
-10000
+ infinity ya friggin bitch]
And/or append ‘Ph.D. to the end of their names.
Question for people who work in philosophy language/Sellars-Studien: is Lance a serious figure that people actually read/engage with, despite his online tomfoolery?
No. http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=jQI_6J0AAAAJ&hl=en
well, all these citations are not bad for a philosopher.
Compare: http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=Nzby29YAAAAJ&hl=en
sure. but Stanley is a big shot. definitely bigger than Lance, no surprise here.
you haven’t proved yet that Lance is a bad philosopher.
Anyway, even if Lance has the citations of Aristotle and David Lewis combined, his comments at the Daily Nous show he is an intellectual vacuum. and if intellectually vacuous people are big shots in philosophy, philosophy is dead. therefore, (academic) philosophy is dead.
I dunno, that looks pretty serious. An h of what, 15? (The first one on the list is a Marc Lange book, and *Challenging Moral Particularism* is just a collection with Lance as one of the three editors.)
It’s true that a lot of the papers are co-authored, is that what makes him seem non-serious?
always off the mark lanceless might be a poor philosopher but it is hilarious how he spreads his legs on social media and mansplains to insufficiently PC women and feminists how Tuvel’s article equals murder.
In the DN thread with over 300 comments, there is only one (by Daniel Kaufman) that calls on the APA to censure the journal, or to do anything at all. Does it surprise anyone that apparently nobody expects our main professional organization to take any action in this case? Call urgent meetings to accommodate the demands of striking hotel workers? Yes. Dole out grants to any project proposal so long as it mentions diversity and inclusion? You bet. Speak out in defense of basic academic values in the field’s journals? Meh.
At any moment I expect to get an email from Amy Ferrer about fundraising for a video series in which Rebecca Kukla explains how the use of “Becky” as an insult is one of the cornerstones of black culture.
This is why I keep coming back.
+1
I don’t think I want the APA involved in shit like this — not because I think they’d come in on the wrong side, but because I don’t want to see them enlisted in the struggle at all.
Also, it’s kind of our fault. We elect at least many of the APA representatives.
From Haslanger at DN:
‘Data collected in 2013 suggest that of the 13,000 professional philosophers in the country 55 are Black women. Let that sink in. Of the 55, 30% were Ph.D students; 35% held tenured positions. I don’t have data on the representation of trans scholars, but I would expect there are even fewer.’
We must not rest until at least 20 – 40% of the profession is trans.
This also seems question-begging against poor Prof. Tuvel. After all, if it’s possible to be transracial, we presumably have no idea how many Black women are in philosophy.
In fact, it just now strikes me that we should all fervently hope that Prof. Tuvel’s hypothesis is correct. It would allow us to solve the diversity problem in philosophy overnight — we just all need to identify as Black women!
“In short, can we move the conversation away from the particular case of Prof. Tuvel’s paper and talk about how our profession can be more respectful and more innovative, how can we stop alienating and marginalizing those who are legitimately frustrated with the profession, and how we can resist the fear mongering of the current political context and build tools needed for a more just and peaceful society?”
I guess we can’t at the Daily Nous, because the comments are closed!
Justice Whineberg is shameless in his attempts at providing propaganda masquerading as debate, as usual. These people are nothing on Gobbels.
Happiness
Yes, correct! Happiness is a synonym for “myrmecology”, which is really an 11-letter word for enlightenment.
I would like to take this opportunity to publicly apologize to Justin Weinberg (formerly WINEberg, for drunkenness on powerplay) for my public attacks on him. I am apologizing because he has now caved to my attacks, as appropriate, with including The Daily Ant on the Heap of Links. All y’all metal bros thought you were pathetic fringes on the disciplinary boundaries – very true but it is now also true that Justin listens and he listens well.
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