Dr Ella Whiteley
School of Education
Lecturer in Politics, Philosophy and Economics
+44 114 222 8345
Full contact details
School of Education
The Wave
2 Whitham Road
Sheffield
S10 2AH
- Profile
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Dr. Ella Whiteley is a philosopher who joined the Sheffield Methods Institute in 2023. Before this, they were a Fellow in the Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method at the London School of Economics. Prior to that, they worked on the interdisciplinary 'Invisible Labour Project' at the University of Cambridge, which analysed and developed methods for recording undervalued and underpaid work in academia. In 2019, they completed their PhD in Philosophy at the University of Cambridge, investigating the role of salience and attention in ethics and epistemology.
Ella's research interests are primarily in ethics, social epistemology, and political philosophy. Specific areas include the normative dimensions of salience and attention, as well as the philosophy of work. Ella is interested in questions such as: can we be harmed by how others attend to us? Can we mislead someone simply by making the wrong thing salient in our communication? Ought governments nudge citizens to make less politically and ethically biased judgments? What are the more insidious ways in which institutions exploit workers? Most recently, Ella has been working on the topics of sexual objectification and methodologies for uncovering hidden forms of discrimination.
- Research interests
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- Discrimination and oppression
- Identity
- Social epistemology
- Implicit bias
- Feminist philosophy
- Objectification
- Language
- Invisible labour
- Philosophy of biology
- Qualitative research methods
- Publications
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Journal articles
- Order-Based Salience Patterns in Language: What They Are and Why They Matter. Ergo an Open Access Journal of Philosophy, 11(0), 689-715.
- Attentional discrimination and victim testimony. Philosophical Psychology. View this article in WRRO
- “A woman first and a philosopher second”: relative attentional surplus on the wrong property. Ethics, 133(4), 497-528. View this article in WRRO
Chapters
- View this article in WRRO Harmful salience perspectives In Archer S (Ed.), Salience: A Philosophical Inquiry (pp. 193-212). Routledge
- Clocking Invisible Labour in Academia: The Politics of Working With Time In Facer K, Siebers J & Smith B (Ed.), Working with Time in Qualitative Research: Case Studies, Theory and Practice Routledge
Website content
- Teaching activities
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- SMI11003: Principles in Politics, Philosophy and Economics
- SMI21003: Case Studies in Politics, Philosophy and Economics
- SMI11002: The Foundations of Social Science