Thompson - The Moral Risks of Online Shaming
Just a short note on Krista K. Thompson's "The Moral Risks of Online Shaming" - a paper that appears in OUP's "The Oxford Handbook of Digital Ethics" (2018). The paper itself deals with Shaming, the practice of calling out or stigmatizing people, institutions, corporations, etc. Shaming comes apart from experiences of shame themselves - and while individuals may in fact feel shame at being shamed, they need not even if the shaming act is effective in other ways. Indeed, the overall effects of shaming are what are at issue - it can be, it seems, extraordinarily effective, but perhaps not in ways we might anticipate. Thompson identifies two primary motivations for shaming practices. First, shaming is "meant to inspire self-consciousness or self-awareness " (her emphasis). Second, "shaming is meant to send a message of condemnation on behalf of and to the community " (again, the emphasis is hers). I think that these two motivations make ...