Beyond Epistemic Injustice, Toward Epistemic Outrage: On Saskia Sassen’s Analytical Destabilizations

The Pluralist 8 (3):96-100 (2013)
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Abstract

In the Work that she presented at the 40th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy, 7 March 2013, in Galloway, New Jersey, Sassen most tellingly began her keynote with a reflection on method. She spoke of “Before Method.” She spoke of the need to step back, and suspend our extant methods. Emergent social orders, or what she called, in her massive and transformational text Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages, the emergence of new assemblages, requires that we rethink our old categories, or that we try to assess their usefulness or allow ourselves to countenance their obsolescence. The “before method,” and the invitation to step back, to bracket, or to ..

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Eduardo Mendieta
Pennsylvania State University

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