
New Books in Philosophy Jill Stauffer, "Ethical Loneliness: The Injustice of Not Being Heard" (Columbia UP, 2015)
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Apr 19, 2019 Jill Stauffer, an Associate Professor and Director of Peace, Justice, and Human Rights at Haverford College, discusses her book, "Ethical Loneliness: The Injustice of Not Being Heard." She explores how survivors of injustice suffer further harm when their stories go unheard, a concept she terms "ethical loneliness." Stauffer critiques traditional justice systems for failing to account for survivor narratives and emphasizes the necessity of attentive listening. The conversation also covers the complexities of forgiveness, resentment, and the urgent need for reform in the criminal justice system.
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Hannah Resists A Resilience Narrative
- Stauffer recounts Hannah's Holocaust interviews where interviewers steered her toward resilience narratives.
- Hannah resisted because parts of her self did not survive and she wanted that acknowledged.
Limits Of Legal Remedies
- Trials and truth commissions can uncover facts and sometimes punish, but they always leave much undone.
- Stauffer argues transformative repair needs long-term social change beyond legal culpability.
Reparative Hearing Opens Revision
- Reparative hearing stays open to surprise and revision rather than confirming what we already suspect.
- This openness lets listeners recognize failures of hearing and imagine different futures.


