Why overt or even subtle acts of adornment-based rebellion against cisnormativity make things better for everyone. Continue reading

October 8, 2021
by Aesthetics for Birds
1 Comment
October 8, 2021
by Aesthetics for Birds
1 Comment
Why overt or even subtle acts of adornment-based rebellion against cisnormativity make things better for everyone. Continue reading
August 19, 2021
by Aesthetics for Birds
3 Comments
Reading star signs does not reliably lead to knowledge, so why read them? Because it’s fun. Continue reading
November 13, 2014
by Aesthetics for Birds
9 Comments
Meena Krishnamurthy is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Manitoba. She works in political philosophy. Her current work focuses on exploitation, coercion, oppression, and gossip. Issues that lie at the intersection of philosophy of language and political philosophy have recently come to fascinate her. There are many aspiring photographers who take photographs of vulnerable people, people who are down on their luck, often poor and homeless, and label their images as “street photography.” There are many things that might be morally suspect about street photography that involves vulnerable people. One idea that I would that like to develop here, using Robin Jeshion’s recent discussion of slurs, is that these types of pictures are dehumanizing of their subjects.