•  842
    Remembering Stanley Cavell
    Conversations: The Journal of Cavellian Studies 7 (n/a): 65-68. 2019.
    Memorial notice for Stanley Cavell originally published on the Harvard Philosophy Department website.
  •  1370
    Individuality and Mortality in the Philosophy of Portrait Painting: Simmel, Rousseau, and Melanie Klein
    Contrastes: Revista Internacional de Filosofía 23 (3): 27-52. 2018.
    This paper explores some connections between depictions of mortality in portrait-painting and philosophical (and psychoanalytic) treatments of our need to be recognized by others. I begin by examining the connection that Georg Simmel makes in his philosophical study of Rembrandt between that artist’s capacity for depicting his portrait subjects as non-repeatable individuals and his depicting them as mortal, or such as to die. After noting that none of Simmel’s explanations of the tragic characte…Read more
  •  402
    An Autobiography of Companions
    Modern Language Notes 126 (5): 972-978. 2011.
    Part of a symposium on Stanley Cavell's memoir Little Did I Know held at the Johns Hopkins Humanities Center in 2011, this brief essay connects some themes from that book to concerns about knowledge of "what we say" as treated in the opening essays of Cavell's first book, Must We Mean What We Say?; and it attempts to illuminate the latter concerns by comparing them to recent philosophical work on self-knowledge, especially Richard Moran's book Authority and Estrangement.