id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_nbnlrkozsje3xalhrdtjzqyhke Paul STANDISH Social Justice in Translation : Subjectivity, Identity, and Occidentalism 2011.0 11 .pdf application/pdf 6796 320 55 Social Justice in Translation: Subjectivity, Identity, and Occidentalism affect thinking about education: John Rawls' notion of justice as fairness and "Social justice" is a phrase that recurs with some force in contemporary political and academic discussion, and in many respects this is understandable. My discussion begins by examining social justice in terms of the ways that as an idea it has become emphasised by turning to a topic that, although it may seem a digression, goes to the heart of thinking in philosophy and social science: the nature of subjectivity, in translation (section 4). liberal society, where justice is understood in terms of fairness. notions of identity.2 In the same way subjects are apt to become shukan in confronting cultural difference insofar as, in this process, the other is objectified. my critique of dominant conceptions of social justice and the way these play out in educational ./cache/work_nbnlrkozsje3xalhrdtjzqyhke.pdf ./txt/work_nbnlrkozsje3xalhrdtjzqyhke.txt