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Feeling, Knowledge, Self-Preservation: Audre Lorde's Oppositional Agency and Some Implications for Ethics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2020

CALEB WARD*
Affiliation:
STONY BROOK [email protected]

Abstract

Throughout her work, Audre Lorde maintains that her self-preservation in the face of oppression depends on acting from the recognition and valorization of her feelings as a deep source of knowledge. This claim, taken as a portrayal of agency, poses challenges to standard positions in ethics, epistemology, and moral psychology. This article examines the oppositional agency articulated by Lorde's thought, locating feeling, poetry, and the power she calls ‘the erotic’ within her avowed project of self-preservation. It then explores the implications of taking seriously Lorde's account, particularly for theorists examining ethics and epistemology under nonideal social conditions. For situations of sexual intimacy, for example, Lorde's account unsettles prevailing assumptions about the role of consent in responsibility between sexual partners. I argue that obligations to solicit consent and respect refusal are not sufficient to acknowledge the value of agency in intimate encounters when agency is oppositional in the way Lorde describes.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © American Philosophical Association 2020

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Footnotes

This project benefited enormously from comments by Megan Craig, Kris Sealey, Hannah Bacon, Anne O'Byrne, Stephen Darwall, and two anonymous reviewers, as well as discussions with Eva Kittay, Andrea Warmack, Michèle Leaman, and Lori Gallegos de Castillo. Special thanks to Sara Haq for early encouragement. Thanks also to audiences at philoSOPHIA, Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, and Stony Brook University, as well as to the Stony Brook Philosophy Department and Graduate School for generous travel grants.

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