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Resisting Reality - Social Construction and Social Critique (Hardcover)
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Resisting Reality - Social Construction and Social Critique (Hardcover)
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Contemporary theorists use the term "social construction" with the
aim of exposing how what's purportedly "natural" is often at least
partly social and, more specifically, how this masking of the
social is politically significant. In these previously published
essays, Sally Haslanger draws on insights from feminist and
critical race theory to explore and develop the idea that gender
and race are positions within a structure of social relations. On
this interpretation, the point of saying that gender and race are
socially constructed is not to make a causal claim about the
origins of our concepts of gender and race, or to take a stand in
the nature/nurture debate, but to locate these categories within a
realist social ontology. This is politically important, for by
theorizing how gender and race fit within different structures of
social relations we are better able to identify and combat forms of
systematic injustice.
Although the central essays of the book focus on a critical social
realism about gender and race, these accounts function as case
studies for a broader critical social realism. To develop this
broader approach, several essays offer reworked notions of
ideology, practice, and social structure, drawing on recent
research in sociology and social psychology. Ideology, on the
proposed view, is a relatively stable set of shared dispositions to
respond to the world, often in ways that also shape the world to
evoke those very dispositions. This looping of our dispositions
through the material world enables the social to appear natural.
Additional essays in the book situate this approach to social
phenomena in relation to philosophical methodology, and to specific
debates in metaphysics, epistemology, and philosophy of language.
The book as a whole explores the interface between analytic
philosophy and critical theory.
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