Abstract
Epistemic injustice is a widely discussed phenomenon in many sub-disciplines (including epistemology, ethics, feminist philosophy, social and political philosophy). Yet, there is very little literature on its connection to the philosophy of sports. Here I explore the intersection between epistemic injustice and sports, focusing on testimonial injustice. I argue that there exist clear-cut cases of testimonial injustice in sport that arise when athletes attempt to communicate information.
After highlighting the theoretical connections between various cases, I explore the more ambitious claim that sport performances themselves carry linguistic content, and that the biased negative judgment of such performances, illustrated paradigmatically by the case of figure-skater Surya Bonaly, constitute a further form of testimonial injustice. I conclude by explaining why it is philosophically fruitful to understand these wrongs through the lens of testimonial injustice.
After highlighting the theoretical connections between various cases, I explore the more ambitious claim that sport performances themselves carry linguistic content, and that the biased negative judgment of such performances, illustrated paradigmatically by the case of figure-skater Surya Bonaly, constitute a further form of testimonial injustice. I conclude by explaining why it is philosophically fruitful to understand these wrongs through the lens of testimonial injustice.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | Sports, Ethics and Philosophy |
Early online date | 9 May 2023 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 9 May 2023 |
Keywords
- testimonial injustice
- epistemic injustice
- performance
- sport