Difference between revisions of "Related concepts"
From Categorism.com
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* [[Dichotomism]]: Getting stuck in black and white thinking. | * [[Dichotomism]]: Getting stuck in black and white thinking. | ||
* [[Five faces of oppression]]: A model by Iris Marion Young, arguing that we should look into facets or categorism rather than foci of categorism. | * [[Five faces of oppression]]: A model by Iris Marion Young, arguing that we should look into facets or categorism rather than foci of categorism. | ||
+ | * [[Foci and abstractions of categorism]]: Explaining the difference. | ||
* [[Identity]]: How people define themselves. | * [[Identity]]: How people define themselves. | ||
* [[Internalized categorism]]: Categorism against oneself. | * [[Internalized categorism]]: Categorism against oneself. |
Revision as of 00:20, 9 September 2014
This page is (intended to grow into) a list of concepts that are related to categorism itself or to the understanding of categorism. This list does not include those concepts that are primarily facets, foci or abstractions of categorism, as these concepts are listed on those pages.
- Aspects of categorism: The three aspects are the facets, the foci and the abstractions.
- Categorism As a Dirty Weapon
- Categorization: Defining and reproducing categories.
- Cateitization: Building and reproducing identity for oneself and cateity for others.
- Cateity: Intersection of categorization and identity.
- Dichotomism: Getting stuck in black and white thinking.
- Five faces of oppression: A model by Iris Marion Young, arguing that we should look into facets or categorism rather than foci of categorism.
- Foci and abstractions of categorism: Explaining the difference.
- Identity: How people define themselves.
- Internalized categorism: Categorism against oneself.
- Narrativism: Getting stuck in storytelling.
- Mental prison: Getting trapped in one's own mind.
- Social prison: Getting trapped in social norms and structures.
- Thought-terminating cliché: A concept you use to stop thinking rather than expand your thinking.
- Universal human rights: The three ways in which human rights are universal.
- Valid struggle against categorism: A disclaimer.