Politics of Difference Quizzes with answers:
QUIZ 1 6/10:
1Translation of covid claim by Habermas:
Laws mandating vaccination for covid run contrary to the principle of civil liberty
and the right of people to conscientiously object to participation in governmental
health programs o
2Iris Marion Young: “exclusionary implications of the deliberative model”
How the speech of specific marginalized groups are systematically excluded by
seemingly neutral decision-making processes o
3Ethnographic research may be distinguished by its ability, through rich qualitative
techniques, to best capture and represent:
An emic perspective, which is that of a hypothetical ‘insider’ o
4The distinction between the public and private sphere as discussed in Lectures 1-3
primarily refers to:
A historically constituted distinction between two categories of social interaction o
5”Police uniforms will be neutral […] Women who work for the police can wear hijabs, but
not when they are in uniform”
Disagreement about what “neutrality” in the public sphere means o
6Taylor’s response to Habermas’
Most people are familiar with experiences that are analogous to spiritual ones o
7Bennet and Livingstone’s main argument about the rise of disinformation:
The tendency of newspapers to offer biased accounts of past elections o
8Habermas is a 93 year old white ass man. According to the material on POSITIONALITY
in lectures 1-3 this tells us:
There are elements of female, youth and non-European perspectives which his
work may not be able to adequately capture, incorporate or countenance o
9The question of which differences between people become political is primarily
determined by:
The way differences are politicized by political actors and processes o
10Statistics that describe differences between people:
Are political o
1
QUIZ 1 6/10:
1Translation of covid claim by Habermas:
Laws mandating vaccination for covid run contrary to the principle of civil liberty
and the right of people to conscientiously object to participation in governmental
health programs o
2Iris Marion Young: “exclusionary implications of the deliberative model”
How the speech of specific marginalized groups are systematically excluded by
seemingly neutral decision-making processes o
3Ethnographic research may be distinguished by its ability, through rich qualitative
techniques, to best capture and represent:
An emic perspective, which is that of a hypothetical ‘insider’ o
4The distinction between the public and private sphere as discussed in Lectures 1-3
primarily refers to:
A historically constituted distinction between two categories of social interaction o
5”Police uniforms will be neutral […] Women who work for the police can wear hijabs, but
not when they are in uniform”
Disagreement about what “neutrality” in the public sphere means o
6Taylor’s response to Habermas’
Most people are familiar with experiences that are analogous to spiritual ones o
7Bennet and Livingstone’s main argument about the rise of disinformation:
The tendency of newspapers to offer biased accounts of past elections o
8Habermas is a 93 year old white ass man. According to the material on POSITIONALITY
in lectures 1-3 this tells us:
There are elements of female, youth and non-European perspectives which his
work may not be able to adequately capture, incorporate or countenance o
9The question of which differences between people become political is primarily
determined by:
The way differences are politicized by political actors and processes o
10Statistics that describe differences between people:
Are political o
1