MORALIZED OBJECTIFICATION: MISOGYNY , REACTIVE ATTITUDES, AND THE SPECTRUM OF AGENCY RECOGNITION
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Abstract
This thesis critiques and amends an account of misogyny by examining the
relationship between objectification and moral recognition. Recent philosophical
discussions, particularly in the work of Kate Manne, argue that misogyny should be
understood primarily as a system of social control rather than as a form of
dehumanization or objectification. While this approach successfully challenges overly
simplistic accounts of misogyny, it risks overlooking ways in which failures of moral
recognition remain central to misogynistic practices. Drawing on P. F. Strawson’s theory
of reactive attitudes, this thesis proposes a spectrum model of agency recognition that
captures the gradations through which individuals may be partially acknowledged as
moral agents while still being treated in objectifying or oppressive ways.
The project first examines the conceptual limitations of strictly anti-humanist
approaches to misogyny. It then develops a revised framework that situates
objectification within a broader spectrum of moral recognition, allowing for forms of
partial recognition that coexist with domination, control, or degradation. This framework
is applied to several cases—including mass sexual violence, pornography, and testimonial
injustice—to demonstrate how misogynistic practices can involve both moral recognition
and its distortion. By conceptualizing misogyny through a spectrum of agency
recognition rather than a binary opposition between recognition and dehumanization, the
thesis provides a more nuanced account of how misogynistic attitudes operate and why
they remain socially resilient.
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Keywords
Misogyny, Oppression
