•  23
    Gilles Deleuze
    In Adam Kotsko & Carlo Salzani (eds.), Agamben's Philosophical Lineage, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 131-137. 2017.
  •  43
    Book review: The Human: Bare Life and Ways of Life (review)
    Thesis Eleven 174 (1): 144-147. 2023.
  • In the beginning was America
    In David Hancock, Anthony Faramelli & Robert G. White (eds.), Spaces of crisis and critique: heterotopias beyond Foucault, Bloomsbury Academic. 2018.
  •  1
    Deleuze after Afro-pessimism
    In Christine Daigle & Terrance H. McDonald (eds.), From Deleuze and Guattari to posthumanism: philosophies of immanence, Bloomsbury Academic. 2022.
  •  39
    Deleuze and History (edited book)
    Deleuze Connections. 2009.
    Despite the fact that time, evolution, becoming and genealogy are central concepts in Deleuze's work, there has been no sustained study of his philosophy in relation to the question of history. This book aims to open up Deleuze's relevance to those working in history, the history of ideas, science studies, evolutionary psychology, history of philosophy and interdisciplinary projects inflected by historical problems.The essays in this volume cover all aspects of Deleuze's philosophy and its relat…Read more
  •  104
    Humanist Posthumanism, Becoming-Woman and the Powers of the ‘Faux’
    Deleuze and Guattari Studies 16 (3): 379-401. 2022.
    Feminist and post-colonial theorists have embraced Deleuze and Guattari’s terminology of becoming-woman and nomadism, and have done so despite criticisms that these terms appropriate the struggles of real women and stateless persons. The force of the real has become especially acute in the twenty-first century in the wake of neoliberal mobilisations of feminism as yet one more marketing tool. Rather than repeat the criticism that identity politics deflects attention from real political struggles…Read more
  •  25
    The Space of Man: On the Specificity of Affect in Deleuze and Guattari
    In Ian Buchanan & Gregg Lambert (eds.), Deleuze and Space, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 189-206. 2005.
  •  99
    Extinction, Deterritorialisation and End Times: Peak Deleuze
    Deleuze and Guattari Studies 14 (3): 327-348. 2020.
    Have we reached what Alexander Galloway dismissively refers to as ‘peak Deleuze’? In this essay, I argue that the arrival at end times – with the sense of mass extinction and philosophy's exhaustion – is indeed a moment of ‘peak Deleuze’, but that this gesture of exhaustion is already implicit in A Thousand Plateaus. Recognising the limits and seduction of a text is never as easy as it seems; every attempt to break up with Deleuze and Guattari, though necessary, is fraught with a whole series of…Read more
  •  66
    Difference and Repetition in the Age of #MeToo and the Trumpocene
    Deleuze and Guattari Studies 14 (1): 31-33. 2020.
  •  46
    Time and Autopoiesis: The Organism Has No Future
    In Laura Guillaume & Joe Hughes (eds.), Deleuze and the Body, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 9-28. 2011.
  •  40
    On the Very Possibility of Queer Theory
    In Chrysanthi Nigianni & Merl Storr (eds.), Deleuze and Queer Theory, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 11-23. 2009.
  •  32
    Face Race
    In Arun Saldanha & Jason Michael Adams (eds.), Deleuze and Race, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 35-50. 2012.
  •  21
    Introduction Part I
    In Claire Colebrook & Jami Weinstein (eds.), Deleuze and Gender: Deleuze Studies Volume 2: 2008 (Supplement), Edinburgh University Press. pp. 1-19. 2019.
  •  40
    Introduction
    Feminist Theory 7 (2): 131-142. 2006.
  •  51
    Fast Violence, Revolutionary Violence: Black Lives Matter and the 2020 Pandemic
    Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 17 (4): 495-499. 2020.
    The 2020 pandemic cannot be divorced from the problem, pace, and spectacle of race, both because of the racial rhetoric regarding the origins of the virus and because of the subsequent racial injustice in the distribution of healthcare. This paper adds the concept of fast violence to Rob Nixon’s “slow violence” to look at the intersection between the climate of the planet and the climate of racial injustice.
  •  51
    Is There Something Wrong With the Task of Thinking?
    Environmental Philosophy 17 (1): 39-58. 2020.
    One way to approach the widely acknowledged failure to act on climate change would be to turn to the philosophical tradition, going back to Kant at least, that diagnoses all the internal impediments to thinking. It is with Heidegger, however, that thinking is curiously divided between a disclosure of the world, and the world’s occlusion. Rather than pursue Heidegger’s project of destroying throught’s accretions and returning to the world I will argue that it is the very concept of ‘thinking’ in …Read more
  •  51
    Climate machines, fascist drives and truth
    Contemporary Political Theory 20 (3): 127-130. 2021.
  •  39
    Extinguishing Ability: How We Became Postextinction Persons
    In Matthias Fritsch, Philippe Lynes & David Wood (eds.), Eco-Deconstruction: Derrida and Environmental Philosophy, Fordham University Press. pp. 261-276. 2020.
  •  134
    A cut in relationality
    Angelaki 24 (3): 175-195. 2019.
    One of the ways in which one might chart the force of various forms of posthuman thought is to mark a reversal in the ways we think about relationality. Rather than distinct Cartesian subje...
  •  108
    Slavery and the Trumpocene: It's Not the End of the World
    Oxford Literary Review 41 (1): 40-50. 2019.
    There is something more catastrophic than the end of the world, especially when ‘world’ is understood as the horizon of meaning and expectation that has composed the West. If the Anthropocene is th...
  •  22
    Feminist Interpretations of Søren Kierkegaard (review)
    Women’s Philosophy Review 21 92-96. 1999.
  •  64
    Specters of Non-Marxist Life: An Epoch of Extinction
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 43 (2): 117-130. 2012.
  •  121
    Time Travels: Feminism, Nature Power, by Elizabeth Grosz
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 39 (3): 331-333. 2008.
  •  63
    The Memory of Thought: An Essay on Heidegger and Adorno, by Alexander Garcia Duttmann
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 35 (2): 218-219. 2004.
  •  100
    Pragmatic Rights
    Law and Critique 26 (2): 155-171. 2015.
    In this essay I explore competing senses and tensions of the relation between the etymology of ta pragmata and praxis, with specific attention paid to Heidegger’s theorization of modernity. In so doing I question the relation between rights and persons, and whether there might not be a new way of thinking about rights that does not presuppose or privilege the agency of personhood. Pragmatic rights would not assume the liberal values of self-determination that underpin personhood, and would enabl…Read more
  •  42
    Framing the End of the Species
    Symploke 21 (1-2): 51. 2013.
  •  46
    Cinemas and Worlds
    Diacritics 45 (1): 25-48. 2017.
  •  94
    Both in his earliest debates with thinkers such as Foucault and Levinas, and in later critiques of political immediacy, Derrida invoked the inescapable burden of a necessary but impossible universalism. By raising the stakes so high it would seem that deconstruction generates hyperbolic conceptions of ethics and justice, but also precludes any form of day to day political positivity. In this essay I pursue the seemingly less ‘ethical’ conception of play in Derrida's work to argue for a multiple …Read more