•  99
    Lógica, Lecciones de M. Heidegger (review)
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 16 (2): 516-524. 1993.
  •  1
    Until now, North American and European philosophies have been engaged in debates about the possibility of a postmetaphysical philosophy and the consequences of the linguistic turn for the assessment of modernity; they have done so, however, without departing from the narrow horizons of their respective nationalistic perspectives. In this incisive critique, Dussel demonstrates how most of thse philosophies have either failed to give historically faithful analyses of the genesis of the "myth" of m…Read more
  •  186
    Is There Latin American Philosophy?
    Philosophy Today 43 (Supplement): 50-61. 1999.
  •  189
    The Prison Contract and Abolition Democracy
    Radical Philosophy Today 5 209-217. 2007.
    This article discusses the fortuitous genesis of the book of my conversations with Angela Y. Davis, Abolition Democracy (Seven Stories, 2005) and traces some of the intellectual and philosophical sources that informed the specific questions and approaches that inform the dialogue. Davis’ relationships to Georg Rusche and Otto Kirchheimer, as well as to Foucault, are discussed. Similarly, Davis’ place within a critical black American political-philosophical tradition is analyzed. The essay focuse…Read more
  • Etiquetas étnicas son identidades políticas
    Revista Internacional de Filosofía Política 16 183-187. 2000.
  •  21
    Richard Rorty (1931-2007) in memoriam
    Ideas Y Valores 56 (134): 119-124. 2007.
  •  242
    Elogio a la herejía: el ateísmo radical de Rorty
    Ideas Y Valores 57 (138): 17-28. 2008.
    Rorty se debe estudiar, no especialmente por la fidelidad de sus narraciones de la historiografía filosófica, o por la corrección de sus lecturas, sino principalmente porque, como los grandes pensadores de la filosofía occidental, él nos ha ofrecido una gran meta-narrativa. Rorty fue un meta-filósof..
  •  132
    Plantations, ghettos, prisons: US racial geographies
    Philosophy and Geography 7 (1): 43-59. 2004.
    In the first part of this essay, I develop the argument that Michel Foucault's work should be read with geographical and topological ideas in mind. I argue that Foucault's archeology and genealogy are fundamentally determined by spatial, topological, geographical, and geometrical metaphors and concepts. This spatial dimension of genealogy is explicitly related to racism and the regimes that domesticate agents through the practices, institutions and ideologies of racialization. The second part of…Read more
  •  87
    Philosophy after Hiroshima (review)
    Philosophy East and West 62 (3): 420-423. 2012.
  •  67
    Communicative freedom, citizenship and political justice in the age of globalization
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 31 (7): 739-752. 2005.
    Seyla Benhabib’s The Claims of Culture: Equality and Diversity in the Global Era (2002), is considered in terms of three main virtues: first, it moves the question of political justice beyond the debate on the priority of recognition over distribution; second, it contributes to the expansion of the notion of communicative freedom and how it relates to rights; and third, it lays down the foundation for a cosmopolitan, post-nationalistic, form of citizenship that would have as its core the rights …Read more
  •  62
    The Silence of the Sirens: Rereading the Dialectic of Enlightenment with Kafka and Borges
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 28 (3): 401-410. 2014.
    ABSTRACT The article rereads Horkheimer and Adorno's classic Dialectic of Enlightenment from the standpoint of animal philosophy while also offering a comparison and contrast between Odysseus and Socrates as personifications of the “animal question” that haunts all Western philosophy. The key thesis is that this question is a metaphilosophical question and that we thus have to develop a critical philosophy that is at its core also an animal philosophy.
  •  51
    Ecoscapes: Geographical Patternings of Relations (edited book)
    with Gary Backhaus, John Murungi, Jose-Hector Abraham, Azucena Cruz, Benjamin Hale, Jessica Hayes-Conroy, John E. Jalbert, Troy Paddock, Christine Petto, Dennis E. Skocz, and Alex Zukas
    Lexington Books. 2006.
    This volume presents the concept of Ecoscape as spatial interrelations, or spatially patterned processes, that are constitutive of an environment_an ecosystem. Contributors investigate environmental issues concerning the human impact on geohistory, food distribution, genetically modified biota, waste management, scientific mapping, and the rethinking of human identity.
  •  44
    Philosophical explorations of the processes of globalization, particularly in the context of Latin America.
  •  196
    The city and the philosopher: on the urbanism of phenomenology
    Philosophy and Geography 4 (2): 203-218. 2001.
    Philosophy projects a certain understanding of reason that is related to the ways in which the city figures in its imaginary. Conversely, the city is a practice of spatialization that determines the ways in which agents are able, or unable, to live out their social agency. This essay focuses on the ways in which philosophy and the city's spatializing practices and imaginaries inform differential ways of living out social agency. The thrust of the investigation is to discern the ways in which sex…Read more
  •  43
    Editors’ Introduction
    Radical Philosophy Review 8 (1): 3-5. 2005.
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  •  168
    What can and cannot be rescued – taking leave of Heidegger’s hut
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 38 (2): 227-233. 2012.
  •  59
    Is There Philosophical Progress? A Philosopher Responds to the Pope
    Dialogue and Universalism 9 (7-8): 115-121. 1999.
  •  296
    Identities: Race, Class, Gender, and Nationality (edited book)
    with Linda Martín Alcoff
    Wiley-Blackwell. 2008.
    This anthology provides the definitive theoretical sources of contemporary thinking about identity, including explorations of race, class, gender, and nationality. Explores the long and rich tradition of philosophical analysis and debate over the genesis, contours, and political effects of identity categories. Provides the definitive theoretical sources and contemporary debates by leading theorists such as selections from Hegel, Marx, Freud, DuBois, Beauvoir, Lukács, Fanon, Hall, Guha, Hobsbawm,…Read more
  •  49
    In "The Frankfurt School on Religion," Eduardo Mendieta has brought together a collection of readings and essays revealing both the deep connections that the Frankfurt School has always maintained with religion as well as the significant contribution that its work has to offer. Rather than being unanimously antagonistic towards religion as has been the received wisdom, this collection shows the great diversity of responses that individual thinkers of the school developed and the seriousness and …Read more