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Women and the Ethos of Philosophy: Shedding Light on Mentoring and Competition

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-22, 00:39 authored by Poltera, J
The ethos of philosophy is notoriously hostile to women. Highly skilled female thinkers leak out at all stages of the pipeline, and philosophy remains one of the most male-dominated disciplines in the humanities. I have two main aims here. First, I explain why we should not take for granted that senior women will be supportive mentors to junior women and thereby plug leaks in the pipeline. More importantly, we should not inadvertently place the onus on them to do so. Second, I argue that we need to consider the possibility that some women contribute to the hostile ethos. Women are as susceptible as men to employing gender schemas. It is a mistake to presuppose that women philosophers are somehow immune from discriminating against other women, competing with them, and deterring them from entering the field. These facets of the problem form a relatively small but significant contribution to the hostile ethos that we need to acknowledge in our efforts to attract and retain women. Accepting this claim does not detract from the seriousness of longstanding gender discrimination against women, or from a widespread lack of recognition by men of women's needs and accomplishments in philosophy.

History

Publication title

Hypatia-A Journal of Feminist Philosophy

Volume

26

Pagination

419-428

ISSN

0887-5367

Department/School

School of Humanities

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.

Place of publication

United States

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Other culture and society not elsewhere classified

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