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Feminist Standpoint Theory and The Formation of Gender Archaeology: What Knowers Know Well

por Leila Costa - publicado 09/09/2013 15:15 - última modificação 02/12/2013 12:30

Detalhes do evento

Quando

de 14/10/2013 - 09:30
a 14/10/2013 - 12:30

Onde

Auditório 2 do IAG, Rua do Matão, 1226 - Cidade Universitária, São Paulo, SP

Nome do Contato

Telefone do Contato

(11) 3091 1681

Participantes

Alison Wylie (Universidade de Washington), Kelly Koide (IEA) e Hugh Lacey (Swarthmore College e IEA).

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“Gender research” in archaeology has been a vigorously growing field since the early 1990s, but despite its roots in a set of recognizably feminist critiques of disciplinary androcentrism and sexism, many of its practitioners explicitly deny that they are engaged in feminist scholarship or influenced by feminist politics. In taking up neglected questions about women and gender their motivation is to create new understandings of the cultural past that are more empirically robust, explanatorily incisive, and practically useful as a consequence of being gender-inclusive. This raises a number of philosophical questions about the role of situated interests and normative commitments in science, specifically where ideals of objectivity are concerned. I make a case for recognizing that an explicitly critical/constructionist feminist standpoint on knowledge production can serve as a crucial epistemic resource for empirical research, and I use this as the basis for reconceptualizing ideals of objectivity. Alison Wylie (Universidade de Washington)

Evento ministrado em inglês, sem tradução simultânea.

Assista à conferência de Alison Wylie

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Organização

Grupo de Pesquisa Filosofia, História e Sociologia da Ciência e da Tecnologia

Local

Auditório 2 do IAG, Rua do Matão, 1226 - Cidade Universitária, São Paulo, SP
Mapa de localização