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Denialism and its consequences: the epistemic injustice of national narratives
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Marsoobian, A.T. (Author)
Title
Denialism and its consequences: the epistemic injustice of national narratives
Abstract
An analysis of how national narratives are inevitably forms of epistemic injustice, depriving individuals of epistemic and moral agency. Denying access to knowledge about the past is a tool of all autocratic regimes, commonly used for the purpose of retaining power and exerting dominance over individuals or groups subordinate to the ruling elite. Yet such narratives and the falsifications used to buttress them, are not the exclusive instruments of autocracies but can be found to pervade the national narratives of what we often nominally label as democracies. The denial of crimes against humanity and genocide are the most egregious examples of the harms perpetrated against victims and survivors. Miranda Fricker’s writings on epistemic injustice are employed in the analysis. Turkish and Azerbaijani genocide denial of the Armenian Genocide are used to illustrate how epistemic injustice lies at the heart of denialism. © 2024 Central European Pragmatist Forum. All rights reserved.
Publication
Pragmatism Today
Date
2024
Volume
15
Issue
2
Pages
46-54
Citation Key
marsoobianDenialismItsConsequences2024
Archive
Scopus
Short Title
Denialism and its consequences
Library Catalog
Scopus
Citation
Marsoobian, A. T. (2024). Denialism and its consequences: the epistemic injustice of national narratives. Pragmatism Today, 15(2), 46–54. Scopus.
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