Online Conference: Non-Canonical Women in the Histories of Philosophy

Donnerstag, 16. März 2023 um 14:00 Uhr

16.-17.- März 2023, Universität Hildesheim, online

Online Conference

March 16th and 17th 2023
 

Presented by Koselleck Project
Histories of Philosophy in a Global Perspective
Organized by Namita Herzl
 

Information and Registration: herzl@uni-hildesheim.de

Download Poster
 

Speakers

Un-sunn Lee (Sejong University)
Betty Wambui (State University of New York)
Priyanka Jha (Banaras Hindu University)
Khimaja Connell (University of the West Indies)


Conference Abstract

For many centuries the discipline of philosophy maintained a tradition that denied intellectual abilities of women. As practices and processes of colonization supported the dissemination of philosophical works almost exclusively written by male philosophers, ideas and theories written by female thinkers have been ignored. This institutional ignorance started to change since the movement of women’s rights in the 19th century. But especially the rise of feminism in the 1960s caused a rapidly growing interest in the works of female philosophers within academic philosophy. Nonetheless, women that are being discussed are mainly of European origin. This shows that colonial relations of power continue to persist in our present. While white women philosophers have criticized the oppression of the female gender, they lacked the awareness of situating themselves within the system of white domination. As it is the responsibility of academic philosophy to overcome such dynamics of suppression and destructive enmeshment on a global level, an interinstitutional shift must happen in order to avoid further oppressive practices in the future.  We want to establish a theoretical foundation by examining the structural causes that have led to the exclusion of non-European women thinkers, in order to overcome a tradition that has denied the intellectual competence of women in the system of domination throughout the history of colonization. Our goal  is to find sources to reconstruct the knowledge of marginalized women philosophers who have been excluded from the canon until today. Looking into standard histories of philosophies of all regions of the world, raised naturally the question: Where are the women philosophers and their contributions? Why are they rarely or not at all included? It is also striking that if philosophical works by women were mentioned, their achievements were often ridiculed. It was often doubted whether works originated at all from the women who claimed to be authors.

Regarding this process of revealing blind spots of the history of philosophy, our first attempt is to overcome a tradition that denied intellectual competence of women in the system of domination throughout the history of colonization. Secondly, the structural causes that led to the exclusion of non-European women thinkers shall be examined. In this discussion, our final aim is to find sources for reconstructing the knowledge of women philosophers that have been excluded from the canon until today.

 

All times listed are local time CET (Central European Time). 

16th of March

14:00-14:20 Introduction
by Namita Herzl (University of Hildesheim)

Chair: Lara Hofner

14:30-15:30 Defying Canons: Amy Jacques Garvey and Edna Manley as Caribbean Women Philosophers
by Khimaja Connell (University of the West Indies)

15:45-16:45 Seeing. Hearing. Women Philosophers, African Intellectual Traditions
by Betty Wambui (State University of New York)

 

17th of March

Chair: Namita Herzl 

10:30-11:30 The Crisis of Modernity, Confucianism and life-giving and rearing Women of Korean Confucianism
by Un-sunn Lee (Sejong University)

11:45-12:45 The Life as a Canon: Reclaiming foundational anchors for the History of Thought through Indian Women Lives
by Priyanka Jha (Banaras Hindu University)

13:00-13:30 Final Discussion

 

Abstracts

Defying Canons: Amy Jacques Garvey and Edna Manley as Caribbean Women Philosophers
by Khimaja Connell (University of the West Indies)

In this paper, I argue that ideally, Caribbean philosophy represents a moving away from epistemic dependency to epistemic liberation which requires the conscious and active inclusion of women’s intellectual contribution. Caribbean philosophy as a nonconformist tradition, varies from Western standards, and even in this space, there are non-canonical voices. The contribution of Amy Jacques Garvey and Edna Manley will be considered as non-canonical Caribbean women philosophers who embodied the idea of epistemic liberation.

Much like the philosophies of other traditions, Caribbean philosophy is reflective of the existential reality from which it emerges. The region’s identity is said to be creolised. To be creolised is to have no fixed quality but to change in response to the challenges and requirements of the context—which is also not fixed. That is, there is no subjective or dependent variable outside of the objective or independent variable and vice versa. Through this description is revealed a unique epistemological ecology, with the inseparability of being, knowing and doing. This is observable in people’s expressions of their lived experience. This work highlights the conscious role women play in the unfolding of the Caribbean’s intellectual project. Filling critical intellectual voids in the representation and interpretation of contributors to Caribbean intellectualism is necessary for understanding its uniqueness. This is explored in the work of Garvey and Manley, two phenomenal women who portrayed an epistemology of liberation in their work as journalist and artist, respectively

 

The Crisis of Modernity, Confucianism and life-giving and rearing Women of Korean Confucianism
by Un-sunn Lee (Sejong University)

In this research, I want to reinterpret the lives of traditional Korean Confucian women and try to find some meaning for our civilizational crisis facing humanity in the 21st century. It can be said that it is another non-normative study in the sense that it is related to the thought of 'Korea', not China or Japan, which have been used as norms among Northeast Asian countries. And considering that Western tradition and masculine modernity usually divide philosophy and religion, thinking and daily life, learning and morals/ethics, and analytical intellectual inquiry and integrated spiritual pursuit, the meanings derived from the lives and thoughts of women in the Confucian tradition are mainly the latter.

Exploring the lives, values and meanings of Korean Confucian women becomes the subject of this study, and it is an Asian study, which has been marginalized and neglected in the intellectual world until today, an examination of Korean Confucianism, which was usually understood as philosophy or politics in a narrow sense. It will be to examine how Confucianism, understood as a spiritual pursuit and ‘lay religiosity’ sanctifying every area of life, has played a role in the lives and thoughts of traditional Korean women.

 

The Life as a Canon: Reclaiming foundational anchors for the History of Thought through Indian Women Lives
by Priyanka Jha (Banaras Hindu University)

The foundational anchors in the shaping of the history of Thought, whether International, Political, Social, Economic, Literary or others have been the ‘Canon’. A closer engagement with each strand of Thought tradition, one realises that women thinkers are either missing, absent or invisible. The searching question across histories of Ideas and Thought has been the quest for the reconstitution of the Idea of the canon. In this reconstitution, it becomes equally important to trace the non-canonical sources, which is where the women thinkers and their ideas lie. Inspired by the women's histories and gendered Intellectual History of Ideas, this presentation attempts to recover ‘Life’ as a canon.

Exploring through the life of the three key women thinkers from Modern India, Pandita Ramabai Saraswati (1858-1922), Annie Besant (1847-1933) and Kamla Devi Chattopadhyay (1903-1988), present her story of their lives, ideas and politics of emancipation and treating their lives as Canon in themselves. The central question is then, what happens when life is treated as a Canon, Do we find alternative ways of tracing the history of thought of myriad kinds? As a serious intervention, the presentation draws its distinction from how the history of Political thought of Modern India, is undertaken over many years. The attempt is to bring to the audience lives and ideas, that could not be privileged as the Canon but possessed all the criteria for being one.