The Panpsycast Philosophy Podcast

Episode 124, ‘Narrative Critique’ with Rachel Fraser (Part I – Disrupting Ideology)

Nov 19, 2023
Rachel Fraser, an Associate Professor at the University of Oxford, explores the power of personal narratives in challenging societal ideologies. She discusses how storytelling, as seen in movements like #MeToo, fosters empathy and critiques harmful ideologies surrounding issues like sexual violence and reproductive rights. Fraser emphasizes that narratives reveal moral truths often missed by data and statistics, urging that to confront inequality, we must share our stories and revise outdated narrative scripts that shape our perceptions of trauma and grief.
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INSIGHT

Narrative Shapes Knowledge

  • Much of our thought and talk exhibits narrative structure rather than isolated propositions.
  • Rachel Fraser argues that narrative structure significantly changes information's cognitive profile.
INSIGHT

Ideology Is More Than Belief

  • Ideology can be described without immediately condemning it, or defined evaluatively as inherently bad.
  • Fraser prefers a descriptive, non-doxastic account that includes non-belief cognitive gadgets and social practices.
INSIGHT

Patriarchy Distorts Facts About Harm

  • Patriarchal ideologies sustain false, harmful beliefs about sexual violence and abortion.
  • Fraser gives examples like 'women who dress provocatively deserve assault' and false statistics about who seeks abortions.
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