Workshop: Gender, Autism, and Affective and Epistemic Injustice

Schedule

Tue Jul 07 2026 at 10:00 am to 03:30 pm

UTC+01:00
Location

PCL050 • The Palatine Centre • Durham University | Durham, EN

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A hybrid workshop developing interdisciplinary conversations around key themes of GAIA: gender, autism, and affective & epistemic injustice
About this Event

How do stereotypes, social norms, medical knowledge and the construction of social, technological, and research environments impact people’s affective experiences, sense of self, and authenticity? When are these impacts unjust?

The Durham Faculty of Arts and Humanities funded Gender, Affective Injustice and Autism (GAIA) project has focused specifically on autistic women and their experiences of late diagnoses. It has gathered data about autistic women’s experiences of late diagnoses, exploring whether their experiences can be conceptualised as affective injustices, i.e. injustices people experience in their capacity to feel and have emotions, epistemic injustices, i.e. injustices experienced as a knower, or both.

This project workshop explores the key themes of GAIA: gender, autism, affective injustice and epistemic injustice. Speakers cover a broad range of topics related to these key themes, including:

  1. The lived experience of masking among women, explored through the lens of epistemic injustice and standpoint theory
  2. The relationship between AI, autism and authenticity,
  3. How epistemic injustice may arise via methods used to understand autistic experience, particularly those of trans and gender diverse adults,
  4. Impression management in socially anxious people, in relation to gender, intersubjectivity, agency and sense of authentic self.

The workshop aims to develop interdisciplinary conversations around these important issues.

Please see the agenda below, and speakers' bios and abstracts

Please note that the paper presentations will be in-person and online; the second half of the day is in-person only.

This hybrid event is free to attend. If you have any dietary/accessibility requirements, please get in touch with [email protected].

The Zoom link will be circulated closer to the date.

This event is one of a series of activities brought to you by the new Research Theme on Gender, Affective Injustice and Health led by Roslyn Malcolm (Anthropology) and Katherine Puddifoot (Philosophy) within the Institute for Medical Humanities.


Agenda

🕑: 10:00 AM - 10:30 AM
Coffee and welcome
🕑: 10:30 AM - 11:00 AM
Lucienne Spencer

Info: Impression Management in Socially Anxious Young People: A Phenomenological Investigation across Gender


🕑: 11:00 AM - 11:30 AM
Katie Munday

Info: Imagining Transgender Autistic Participatory Action Research 


🕑: 11:30 AM - 12:00 PM
Coffee Break
🕑: 12:00 PM - 12:30 PM
Joel Krueger

Info: “Life is masking, masking is life": autism, AI, and authenticity


🕑: 12:30 PM - 01:00 PM
Sumeera de Alwis, Amy Pearson and Sophie Hodgetts

Info: “And that’s just about gender...I’m doing all of that feeling like an alien in a human suit”: Exploring the lived experiences of masking in autistic women 


🕑: 01:00 PM - 02:00 PM
Lunch
🕑: 02:00 PM - 03:00 PM
Future Directions: Networking and Collaboration Workshop (in-person only)
🕑: 03:00 PM - 03:30 PM
Closing, with coffee available
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Where is it happening?

PCL050 • The Palatine Centre • Durham University, 12 Stockton Road, Durham, United Kingdom

Event Location & Nearby Stays:

Tickets

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