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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Toxic Speech and Damaged Bodies | Composite Bodies with Lynne Tirrell
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SUMMARY:Toxic Speech and Damaged Bodies | Composite Bodies with Lynne Tirrell
DESCRIPTION:<h2>	<drupal-media data-entity-type="media" data-entity-uuid="960156a7-e0d8-4a40-8976-119f21edaaf5"></drupal-media></h2><h2>	<a href="internal:/composite-bodies" title="">COMPOSITE BODIES</a></h2><h2>	Speaker: Lynne Tirrell, University of Connecticut</h2><p class="os-button">	<a href="http://bit.ly/composite-bodies-02-03">REGISTER FOR ZOOM LINK</a></p><p>	What does it matter if our speech practices abandon truth, license violence, instill fear? Toxic speech has the power not only to shape the social body—our very practices of being and interacting—but also to injure individual bodies. When a political or cult leader, for example, licenses his followers to commit violent crimes against those deemed Other, we see an overt case of speech engendering physical harm. More insidious and ubiquitous are the everyday speech practices that generate harms ranging from physical violence to social exclusion and damaged health. Using tools from both epidemiology and philosophy of language, we can better understand how speech practices can create detrimental social climates and harm individual health.<!--break--></p><h3>	About the Speakers</h3><p>	<strong><a data-url="https://lynne-tirrell.uconn.edu" href="https://lynne-tirrell.uconn.edu" title="">Lynne Tirrell</a></strong> is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Connecticut. Her research addresses the ways in which linguistic practices influence or shape social justice or facilitate injustice, and how these practices enhance or violate human rights. <span><span style="sans-serif"><span style="caret-color:#000000"><span style="color:#000000"><span><span style="sans-serif"><span style="color:#202020">Her forthcoming book, <em>Toxic Speech</em> (under contract with Oxford University Press), develops an epidemiology of discursive toxicity using theories from philosophy of language and social epidemiology. This grows from recent work on the role of language in genocidal development and execution, and in their aftermath.<u1:p></u1:p></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p>	<strong><a href="https://wgs.fas.harvard.edu/people/caroline-light" title="">Caroline Light</a></strong> is Senior Lecturer on Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality at Harvard University</p><p>	<strong><a href="https://www.northeastern.edu/law/faculty/directory/williams-p.html" title="">Patricia Williams</a></strong> is University Distinguished Professor of Law and Humanities at Northeastern University</p><h3>	About the Series</h3><p>	In a moment where our collective health depends on technological innovation – including “contact tracing” through the collection and storage of cell phone data – visual, biometric, and other forms surveillance collect us as pinpoints of data. Composite Bodies takes up questions of technology, surveillance, embodiment, and power from an intersectional feminist lens. Through critical engagements with law, philosophy, art, history, bioethics, criminology, and advocacy, this series will address how the machine measurement and tracking of bodies are reconceptualizing notions of privacy while complicating the boundaries of the body as an integrated whole, reproducing and reinforcing biases based on race, class, gender, and other historically disabling taxonomies.</p><p>	Composite Bodies is a partnership between the Mahindra Humanities Center, the <a href="https://cssh.northeastern.edu/humanities/">Northeastern University Humanities Center</a>, and <a href="https://wgs.fas.harvard.edu/">Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality</a> at Harvard. It is convened by <a href="https://wgs.fas.harvard.edu/people/caroline-light" title="">Caroline Light</a> (Senior Lecture on Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality, Harvard University) and <a href="https://www.northeastern.edu/law/faculty/directory/williams-p.html" title="">Patricia Williams</a> (University Distinguished Professor of Law and Humanities, Northeastern University).</p>
LOCATION:Zoom Webinar
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20210203T220000Z
DTEND:20210203T220000Z
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