Abstract
In this dialogue, authors collectively reflect upon their experiences of being feminist philosophers. They diffract their personal and embodied experiences, philosophical reflections, and critiques of institutions in order to consider how and where a “vulnerable academic performance” is possible. In particular, the authors address matters of voice and silence within academia by asking the following questions: How are voices distributed and materialized in academia? Whose voice is heard and listened to vis-à-vis exisiting philosophical canons, classifications, and regimes of citationality? Bringing to the fore both personal and affective registers, the authors address the standards of legitimacy, hierarchies of voices and precarious labor conditions in academia as factors that render voices un/heard. With this in mind, they suggest a move towards vulnerability as a potent source of collective empowerment that is capable of disturbing academic power structures and canons.
Highlights
In this dialogue, authors collectively reflect upon their experiences of being feminist philosophers
Female-identified philosophers are dropping out – one by one – from academia, discontinuing their academic careers, facing being ridiculed on social media, and becoming objects of hate speech and censorship
For a feminist philosopher to remain working within the field of academic philosophy means that she must commit herself to an abiding quest for spaces in which she can perform
Summary
Authors collectively reflect upon their experiences of being feminist philosophers. A vulnerable academic performance calls in the embodied, the experiential, the excitable, and the personal aspects of our existence and, disturbs, if only momentarily, the rigorous norms of speaking in academia.
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