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The Virtue of Gossip
Abstract
The moral status of gossip is generally defined negatively from a Western
perspective and, I argue, is or should be accorded a more positive role in African
accounts of ethics. In a broadly communitarian vein, I argue that a characteristically Western approach to gossip is problematic – in that it casts a fundamental aspect of human life as moral wrongdoing, does not provide an adequate fit between wrongness and censure, and excludes significant morally positive values realised through gossip – and argue for a more nuanced account. Examining and responding to five arguments for the viciousness of gossip, and proposing four candidate virtues, I develop an
account that distinguishes vicious from virtuous forms of gossip.
South African Journal of Philosophy Vol. 27 (4) 2008: pp. 400-412