Book signing with Juliette Sperenza, a doctor of philosophy, author and teacher-researcher at INSEI.
What if the emergence of a minority were not a threat but a sign of a healthy society? Juliette Speranza went out to meet people who are in a minority, to help us change the way we look at things. Fat people, black people, disabled people, old people, transgender people. Each person's story turns our perceptions on their head. To get us out of the absurd woke/antiwoke debate, the philosopher denounces the ravages of a social fixism that we have more to fear than a so-called communitarianism. Far from wanting to secede, minorities are regulatory movements that produce knowledge and social cohesion. We are all liable to become minorities, so the history of minorities is a universal history...
What if the emergence of a minority were not a threat but a sign of a healthy society? Juliette Speranza went out to meet people who are in a minority, to help us change the way we look at things. Fat people, black people, disabled people, old people, transgender people. Each person's story turns our perceptions on their head. To get us out of the absurd woke/antiwoke debate, the philosopher denounces the ravages of a social fixism that we have more to fear than a so-called communitarianism. Far from wanting to secede, minorities are regulatory movements that produce knowledge and social cohesion. We are all liable to become minorities, so the history of minorities is a universal history...



