Don’t hit us, hit her
Hypatia’s statement on Facebook:
To our friends and colleagues in feminist philosophy,
We, the members of Hypatia’s Board of Associate Editors, extend our profound apology to our friends and colleagues in feminist philosophy, especially transfeminists, queer feminists, and feminists of color, for the harms that the publication of the article on transracialism has caused. The sources of those harms are multiple, and include: descriptions of trans lives that perpetuate harmful assumptions and (not coincidentally) ignore important scholarship by trans philosophers; the practice of deadnaming, in which a trans person’s name is accompanied by a reference to the name they were assigned at birth; the use of methodologies which take up important social and political phenomena in dehistoricized and decontextualized ways, thus neglecting to address and take seriously the ways in which those phenomena marginalize and commit acts of violence upon actual persons; and an insufficient engagement with the field of critical race theory. Perhaps most fundamentally, to compare ethically the lived experience of trans people (from a distinctly external perspective) primarily to a single example of a white person claiming to have adopted a black identity creates an equivalency that fails to recognize the history of racial appropriation, while also associating trans people with racial appropriation. We recognize and mourn that these harms will disproportionately fall upon those members of our community who continue to experience marginalization and discrimination due to racism and cisnormativity.
It is our position that the harms that have ensued from the publication of this article could and should have been prevented by a more effective review process. We are deeply troubled by this and are taking this opportunity to seriously reconsider our review policies and practices. While nothing can change the fact that the article was published, we are dedicated to doing what we can to make things right. Clearly, the article should not have been published, and we believe that the fault for this lies in the review process. In addition to the harms listed above imposed upon trans people and people of color, publishing the article risked exposing its author to heated critique that was both predictable and justifiable. A better review process would have both anticipated the criticisms that quickly followed the publication, and required that revisions be made to improve the argument in light of those criticisms.
But here they are adding to the “heated critique” the author was exposed to, and holding her up for more stoning.
In addition, to reconsidering our review policies, we are drafting a policy on name changes that will govern review of all work considered for publication in the journal from this point forward. We wish to express solidarity with our trans colleagues in our condemnation of deadnaming. It is unacceptable that this happened, and we are working to ensure that it never happens again. We also wish to express solidarity with our colleagues of color (understanding that gender and race are entangled categories) in our condemnation of scholarship about racial identity that fails to reflect substantive understanding of and engagement with critical philosophy of race. We are working to develop additional advisory guidelines to ensure that feminist theorists from groups underrepresented in our profession, including trans people and people of color, are integrated in the various editorial stages. This does not mean that we want to place future responsibility solely on transfeminists and feminists of color. We are committed to improving our review process and practice in order to make the best decision about publication and to prevent similar mistakes in the future.
Hypatia is a journal committed to pluralist feminist inquiry and has been an important site for the publication of scholarship long-considered marginal in philosophy. Too many of us are still characterized as “not real” philosophers by non- and anti-feminist colleagues. As a feminist journal, Hypatia is committed to providing mentorship to all who submit articles by encouraging substantive feedback on essays submitted for consideration. Clearly there was a mistake along the line in the review process, and we are doing our best to figure out a way forward.
So when the mentorship goes wrong they hold the non-mentored author up for people to stone.
Several further types of responses have been suggested to us, including issuing a retraction and setting up a blog or website for further conversation about how to move forward and improve our process. We continue to consider those responses and all of their potential ramifications thoughtfully. We welcome more feedback and suggestions, as we intend to learn from this mistake and do our best to be accountable and worthy of the trust of all feminist scholars.
Finally, we want to recognize that following the publication of the article, there was a Facebook post from the Hypatia account that also caused harm, primarily by characterizing the outrage that met the article’s publication as mere “dialogue” that the article was “sparking.” We want to state clearly that we regret that the post was made.
We sincerely thank all who have expressed criticism of the article’s publication and who have called on us to reply. Working through conflicts, owning mistakes, and finding a way forward is part of the crucial, difficult work that feminism does. As members of Hypatia’s editorial board we are taking this opportunity to make Hypatia more deeply committed to the highest quality of feminist scholarship, pluralism, and respect. The words expressed here cannot change the harm caused by the fact of the article’s publication, but we hope they convey the depth and sincerity of our commitment to make necessary changes to move forward and do better.
Sincerely,
A Majority of the Hypatia’s Board of Associated Editors
A contemptible display.
Cowards.
If ever there was proof of “Male brain” vs. “Female brain”, it is how some trans activists insist that women bow to their every whim and how easily many women, “feminists” included, are willing to fall on their knees and grovel before them.
I think I just became a Trump voter.
Ok, no, not really, but this kind of thing does have that effect on people. I’ve seen it happen.
Wicked cowards…
I’m not in philosophy, but I am in science, and in my field am an editorial manager for one journal and on the editorial board of two others. From that perspective, the behavior of these editors looks to be just breathtakingly unprofessional.
The criteria for withdrawing a paper in our journals are falsification, fabrication, or plagiarism. I suppose fabrication doesn’t really apply here. Plagiarism does, and I guess falsification in this case would mean making provably false assertions of fact. No one seems to have accused the author of either falsification or plagiarism. In that case, the proper response to whatever shortcomings people see in the paper should be other papers or letters to the editor. The editors here have thrown a junior, pre-tenure (and female, is that just a coincidence?) colleague under a bus in order to stay in the good graces of a bunch of randos on social media (at least one philosopher I’ve read says that the majority of the open letter signatories are not academic philosophers). This just seems like shameful, cowardly conduct.
Thank you. I just wrote a post wondering about exactly that – the retraction and especially the Facebook post seem grotesquely unprofessional to me, but I don’t have the insider knowledge.
This really is nauseating.
AcadmicLurker:
Yes, absolutely, seconded. Don’t start a firestorm on social media demanding the article be retracted and dragging the author through the mud. Write your own article rebutting her arguments.
Tangentially, this drives me up a wall:
Social and political phenomena do not “commit acts of violence upon actual persons.” People commit acts of violence upon actual persons. People may be inspired by social and political phenomena to commit acts of violence. People may use social and political phenomena to condone or justify acts of violence. Social and political phenomena should be examined, criticized and dismantled when they are used by people to justify or condone physical violence. But “social and political phenomena” is an abstract concept, and abstract concepts cannot commit actual physical violence against people!
I guess philosophers have to study and work extra hard to be able to commit such gasping category errors. Is that why they can appear so eager and proud to present them?
I too confirm AcademicLurker’s statement.
Having peer reviewed numerous (scientific) papers, let me just add my own dismay at how “breathtakingly unprofessional” all this is. Academic Lurker said it well.
Well, blow me down with a non-gendered, non race-specific feather! I seem to have missed the redefining of both ‘violence’ and ‘harm’.