In conjunction with the Humanities Research Group (HRG)’s SALON event – The First Annual HRG Tribute, Justice and Argument: The Legacy of Catherine E. Hundleby – Leddy Library is pleased to share a full-text bibliography of Dr. Hundleby’s works.
Dr. Hundleby had an impressive publishing career and did pioneering work in feminist argumentation. She was also active in exploring issues of injustice (argumentative and epistemic injustice) and was deeply committed to advocating for equity. As she wrote in a 2013 paper, “Oppression pervades social institutions from formal organizations such as schools and the law to informal institutions such as politeness, marriage, and even the discipline of philosophy. Oppression shapes the people in those institutions and influences their argumentation practices and the reception of their arguments.”
In the bibliography, readers can see that Dr. Hundleby’s scholarship spanned a vast array of publishers and mediums. Her scholarship appeared in such places as Informal Logic – an open access journal hosted on the University of Windsor’s Open Journal Systems platform – as well as the journals Women & Politics, Hypatia, Social Epistemology, and Argumentation (licensed by the Leddy Library), to name but a few. Readers will also find books and book chapters from Dr. Hundleby in this bibliography, such as Reasonable Responses: The Thought of Trudy Govier and “Introduction: Reasonable Responses”, which were published by Windsor Studies in Argumentation and hosted on the University’s Open Monograph Press instance. Dr. Hundleby’s thesis, conference proceedings, a video, and a blog post are also linked there.
Leddy Library is pleased to collect her impressive scholarship in one place, and to celebrate the inimitable and greatly missed Dr. Cate Hundleby. Dr. Hundleby passed away in 2023.
Dr. Hundleby had an impressive publishing career and did pioneering work in feminist argumentation. She was also active in exploring issues of injustice (argumentative and epistemic injustice) and was deeply committed to advocating for equity. As she wrote in a 2013 paper, “Oppression pervades social institutions from formal organizations such as schools and the law to informal institutions such as politeness, marriage, and even the discipline of philosophy. Oppression shapes the people in those institutions and influences their argumentation practices and the reception of their arguments.”
In the bibliography, readers can see that Dr. Hundleby’s scholarship spanned a vast array of publishers and mediums. Her scholarship appeared in such places as Informal Logic – an open access journal hosted on the University of Windsor’s Open Journal Systems platform – as well as the journals Women & Politics, Hypatia, Social Epistemology, and Argumentation (licensed by the Leddy Library), to name but a few. Readers will also find books and book chapters from Dr. Hundleby in this bibliography, such as Reasonable Responses: The Thought of Trudy Govier and “Introduction: Reasonable Responses”, which were published by Windsor Studies in Argumentation and hosted on the University’s Open Monograph Press instance. Dr. Hundleby’s thesis, conference proceedings, a video, and a blog post are also linked there.
Leddy Library is pleased to collect her impressive scholarship in one place, and to celebrate the inimitable and greatly missed Dr. Cate Hundleby. Dr. Hundleby passed away in 2023.
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