Beyond the conversation: The pervasive danger of slurs
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ISSN: 1335-0668
E-ISSN: 2585-7150
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Slovak Academy of Sciences
Abstract
Although slurs are conventionally defined as derogatory words, it has been widely noted that not all of their occurrences are derogatory. This may lead us to think that there are “innocent” occurrences of slurs, i.e., occurrences of slurs that are not harmful in any sense. The aim of this paper is to challenge this assumption. Our thesis is that slurs are always potentially harmful, even if some of their occurrences are nonderogatory. Our argument is the following. Derogatory occurrences of slurs are not characterized by their sharing any specific linguistic form; instead, they are those that take place in what we call uncontrolled contexts, that is, contexts in which we do not have enough knowledge of our audience to predict what the uptake of the utterance will be. Slurs uttered in controlled contexts, by contrast, may lack derogatory character. However, although the kind of context at which the utterance of a slur takes place can make it nonderogatory, it cannot completely deprive it of its harmful potential. Utterances of slurs in controlled contexts still contribute to normalizing their utterances in uncontrolled contexts, which makes nonderogatory occurrences of slurs potentially harmful too.
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Moreno, A. & Pérez-Navarro, E. (2021). Beyond the conversation: The pervasive danger of slurs. Organon F, 28(3), 708-725
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https://doi.org/10.31577/orgf.2021.28311Sponsors
This paper has been funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation under the research project “Disagreement in Attitudes: Normativity, Affective Polarization and Disagreement” (PID2019-109764RB-I00), by the Regional Government of Andalusia under the research projects “Public Disagreements, Affective Polarization and Immigration in Andalusia” (B-HUM-459-
UGR18) and “The Inferential Identification of Propositions: A Reconsideration
of Classical Dichotomies in Metaphysics, Semantics and Pragmatics” (P18-FR2907), and by the University of Granada under a “Contrato Puente” fellowship
and the excellence unit FiloLab-UGR (UCE. PPP2017.04). The authors would
also like to thank Alex Davies, María José Frápolli, Andrés Soria, Neftalí Villanueva, Dan Zeman, and two anonymous reviewers for Organon F, as well as
audiences at EvalLang-2019, FiloLab International Summer School 2019, Epistemological and Cognitive Analyses of Cognition, Beliefs and Knowledge, and
the IX Meeting of the Spanish Society for Analytic Philosophy, for their helpful
comments and suggestions.
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This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International Public License (CC BY-NC 4.0).








