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E-raamat: Sexual Solipsism: Philosophical Essays on Pornography and Objectification [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
  • Formaat: 424 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Jan-2009
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199247066
  • Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud
  • Raamatu hind pole hetkel teada
  • Formaat: 424 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Jan-2009
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199247066
Rae Langton here draws together her ground-breaking work on pornography and objectification, and shows how both involve a kind of solipsism, a failure to treat women as fully human. She argues that pornography is a speech act that subordinates and silences women, and that, given certain liberal principles, women have rights against it. She explores the traditional Kantian idea that there is something wrong with treating a person as a thing, and highlights an additional epistemological dimension to objectification: it is through a kind of self-fulfilling projection of beliefs about women as subordinate that women are treated as things. These controversial essays include three new pieces written especially for the volume. They will make stimulating reading for anyone interested in feminism's dialogue with moral and political philosophy.
Acknowledgements v
Note on the Essays ix
Introduction 1(1)
Solipsism
1(2)
Pornography
3(7)
Objectification
10(9)
Afterthoughts and Aspirations
19(6)
Speech Acts and Unspeakable Acts
25(40)
`Pornography Subordinates'
32(15)
`Pornography Silences'
47(15)
Concluding Remarks
62(3)
Dangerous Confusion? Response to Ronald Dworkin
65(10)
Freedom of Illocution? Response to Daniel Jacobson
75(14)
Jennifer Hornsby
Illocution
76(4)
The Allegation of Confusion
80(4)
Freedom of Illocution
84(5)
Pornography's Authority? Response to Leslie Green
89(14)
The Constructive Power of Authoritative Speech
93(3)
Authority and its Jurisdiction
96(4)
A Surprise Ending
100(3)
Pornography's Divine Command? Response to Judith Butler
103(14)
Does Pornography Subordinate Women?
104(7)
Does Pornography Silence Women?
111(6)
Whose Right? Ronald Dworkin, Women, and Pornographers
117(48)
Theoretical Framework
120(5)
Dworkin on Civil Rights
125(7)
Dworkin on Pornography
132(5)
Pornography and Civil Rights: A Feminist Response
137(5)
A New Start
142(16)
Concluding Remarks
158(7)
Equality and Moralism: Response to Ronald Dworkin
165(8)
Scorekeeping in a Pornographic Language Game
173(24)
Caroline West
Introduction
173(6)
Saying, and What Pornography Says
179(6)
Saying, Subordinating, and Silencing
185(4)
Fictional Saying
189(4)
Concluding Remarks
193(4)
Duty and Desolation
197(26)
Strategy and Friendship
197(12)
Duty and Desolation
209(7)
Shipwreck
216(2)
Strategy For the Kingdom's Sake
218(4)
Coda
222(1)
Autonomy-Denial in Objectification
223(18)
Treating as an `Object'
225(6)
`Treating' as an Object
231(6)
Autonomy-denial in Pornography
237(4)
Projection and Objectification
241(26)
Autonomy and Projection in Feminist Philosophy
241(4)
How Projection Helps Sexual Objectification
245(16)
How Projection Hides Sexual Objectification
261(6)
Feminism in Epistemology: Exclusion and Objectification
267(22)
Introduction
267(3)
Knowledge and How Women Might Be Left Out
270(7)
Knowledge and How Women Might Be Hurt
277(12)
Speaker's Freedom and Maker's Knowledge
289(22)
Introduction
289(3)
Speaker's Freedom
292(3)
A Knowledge Argument against Pornography?
295(3)
A Knowledge Argument for Pornography?
298(3)
Maker's Knowledge
301(4)
Maker's Knowledge and Harm
305(6)
Sexual Solipsism
311(46)
Introduction
311(7)
Escape From Solipsism
318(7)
The Solipsism of Treating People as Things
325(21)
Two Sexual Solipsisms, and Their Possible Connection
346(8)
Concluding Reflections
354(3)
Love and Solipsism
357(26)
Solipsism and Escape
357(8)
The Object of Sexual Love: Two Interpretations
365(4)
Invasive Sexual Love
369(14)
Bibliography 383(16)
Index 399
Rae Langton is Professor of Philosophy at MIT. She has been affiliated with Monash University, the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University, Sheffield University, and the University of Edinburgh.