Microaggressions, attributional ambiguity, and signaling failures

Bouke de Vries
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Abstract

Being the victim of a microaggression, that is, a relatively minor act of hostility that targets someone's (marginalized) social identity, can be distressing, but so can merely being in doubt over whether one has been the victim of such aggression. To address this last problem, Regina Rini has proposed a novel understanding of microaggressions that is meant to eliminate such doubts. On her “Ambiguous Experience Account,” whenever members of marginalized groups believe they might have been subjected to a microaggression, a microaggression will have been committed even if the would‐be perpetrator was not motivated by prejudiced aggression. This article challenges this account on grounds of being incompatible with people's lived experiences, including those of the would‐be victims, and argues that we should instead accept the conventional account on which microaggressive acts must be consciously or unconsciously motivated by prejudiced aggression. At the same time, it shows that those falsely suspected of having committed microaggressions will still merit blame sometimes for having failed to signal that their behavior was respectful of others, which lessens the concerns that Rini's conceptual engineering seeks to address. I conclude by drawing out some implications for the debate on microaggressions and attributional ambiguity.
微侵害、归因模糊和信号传递失败
成为微侵害(即针对某人(边缘化)社会身份的相对轻微的敌意行为)的受害者可能令人痛苦,但仅仅对自己是否是此类侵害的受害者产生怀疑也可能令人痛苦。为了解决最后一个问题,雷吉娜-里尼(Regina Rini)提出了一种对微小侵害的新理解,旨在消除这种疑虑。根据她的 "模糊经验说",只要边缘化群体的成员认为自己可能遭受了微侵害,那么即使潜在的施害者并非出于偏见侵害的动机,微侵害也已经发生了。这篇文章对这种说法提出了质疑,因为它与人们的生活经验(包括可能的受害者的生活经验)不符,并认为我们应该接受传统的说法,即微侵害行为必须是有意识或无意识地受到偏见侵害的驱使。与此同时,它还表明,那些被错误地怀疑为实施了微冒犯行为的人有时仍会因未能表明其行为是尊重他人而受到指责,这就减轻了里尼的概念工程所要解决的问题。最后,我总结了微冒犯和归因模糊性辩论的一些意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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