2020
DOI: 10.1177/0090591720984724
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Counterspeech and Ordinary Citizens: How? When?

Abstract: Central to the still-nascent normative literature on counterspeech is the widespread belief that citizens should engage discursively with haters and the effects of hate speech. It is also increasingly clear that discursive engagement with intolerant members of society should be understood as a continuous and extended series of different and connected actions. Much less has been said about the ways that attempts in persuasion and direct responses to hate speech relate to one another and about when specific coun… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…This article does not capture several of such considerations. I recognise that other variables, such as reduction in the authority of speakers (Wilson and Kiper 2020: 99), receptiveness of the audience (Lepoutre 2019;Fumagalli 2021), and audience capacity to deal with the negative effects of hate speech (Tirrell 2018), should go into assessing the effectiveness of containment practices. Without studying the context of speech, it remains difficult to predict how soft and harsh containment practices can in themselves empower the audience and, therefore, lead to a reduction in the number of people supporting (and advocating for) hateful viewpoints.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This article does not capture several of such considerations. I recognise that other variables, such as reduction in the authority of speakers (Wilson and Kiper 2020: 99), receptiveness of the audience (Lepoutre 2019;Fumagalli 2021), and audience capacity to deal with the negative effects of hate speech (Tirrell 2018), should go into assessing the effectiveness of containment practices. Without studying the context of speech, it remains difficult to predict how soft and harsh containment practices can in themselves empower the audience and, therefore, lead to a reduction in the number of people supporting (and advocating for) hateful viewpoints.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Philosophical defences of soft containment in the Rawlsian tradition echo arguments for counterspeech, understood as discursive actions that citizens, and, as we have just seen, states, take in the first person to undermine offensive or dangerous communicative acts and the proliferation of hateful viewpoints (Fumagalli 2021;Howard 2021). Seen through such lenses, continuous discursive engagement with citizens who support hateful viewpoints is meant to alter the conversational context to the point that it becomes difficult for hateful viewpoints to be transmitted from one citizen to another.…”
Section: Soft Containmentmentioning
confidence: 97%
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