Upcoming Events
For a calendar of events, scroll to the bottom of the page!
Reading Group
Join MAP McGill as we embark on a close reading of Rosalind Hampton's Black Racialization and Resistance at an Elite University.
The presence and experiences of Black people at elite universities have been largely underrepresented and erased from institutional histories. This book engages with a collection of these experiences that span half a century and reflect differences in class, gender, and national identifications among Black scholars. By mapping Black people’s experiences of studying and teaching at McGill University, this book reveals how the "whiteness" of the university both includes and exceeds the racial identities of students and professors. It highlights the specific functions of Blackness and of anti-Blackness within society in general and within the institution of higher education in particular, demonstrating how structures and practices of the university reproduce interlocking systems of oppression that uphold racial capitalism, reproduce colonial relations, and promote settler nationalism. Critically engaging the work of Black learners, academics, organizers, and activists within this dynamic political context, this book underscores the importance of Black Studies across North America. (https://utorontopress.com/ca/black-racialization-and-resistance-at-an-elite-university-4)
The group will be meeting every two weeks, on Wednesday and if you'd like to join, send us an email at map.philosophy@mcgill.ca!
Past Events
MAP Info Session
Wondering what MAP is all about? Want to meet other McGill philosophy students? Interested in issues of equity in philosophy? Looking to get involved with the organizing committee? Or even just looking to hang out with some rad peeps? Drop by our 2021 (virtual) information session!
Grad School Applications
Workshop & Info-session
Are you a 3rd of 4th year undergraduate student? Are you a Masters student? Are you considering applying to Grad School? Come to this event and ask about what you've always wanted to know about Grad School (but were maybe too afraid to ask!). Get advice and tips that we as PhD students wish someone had told us!
​
After the session, we invite attendees to take down our emails and get individual mentorship in looking over your application material and also answering any other questions you might have!
4th February
Talk by Dr. Sridhar Venkatapuram
N.B. DATE CHANGE
ABSTRACT: If we start from the point that all theories of justice have a metric (primary goods) and rule (distribution), we can identify an ever-growing range of metrics, rules, and combinations. Perhaps the one person that can be given credit for this recent flourishing of theories of justice is John Rawls. Yet, Rawls's theory, along with others have been criticized for neglecting, that is, not doing justice to, girls and women, foreigners, people with disabilities, non-human animals and so forth. And I would argue, like others, Rawls does not handle health very well either. In this paper, I argue that theorizing social justice changes when health is more convincingly handled, and that this is preferable to extending the ethical principles of bioethics beyond the clinic and research site to the social surroundings.
Visit our event page at https://fb.me/e/TBQtpAv9.
The event will go live on zoom at the following link: https://mcgill.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZAkc-GoqjIrHt0eKOpsam7wykEbut2s1cDg
​