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Sigridur Thorgeirsdottir

University of Iceland
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 More details
  • University of Iceland
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
Humboldt University, Berlin
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1993
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Religion
Social and Political Philosophy
19th Century Philosophy
20th Century Philosophy
Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Continental Philosophy
European Philosophy
3 more
  • All publications (34)
  •  39
    Zur Einleitung: Kritik und Transformation bei Nietzsche
    with Helmut Heit
    In Helmut Heit & Sigridur Thorgeirsdottir (eds.), Nietzsche als Kritiker und Denker der Transformation, De Gruyter. pp. 1-12. 2016.
  •  45
    Frauen Im Leben Nietzsches
    Nietzsche Studien 38 (1): 410-419. 2009.
  •  23
    Sachregister
    with Helmut Heit
    In Helmut Heit & Sigridur Thorgeirsdottir (eds.), Nietzsche als Kritiker und Denker der Transformation, De Gruyter. pp. 305-306. 2016.
  •  68
    Dependency and Emancipation in the Debt‐Economy: Care‐Ethical Critique of Contractarian Conceptions of the Debtor–Creditor Relation
    Hypatia 30 (3): 564-579. 2015.
    The fight for emancipation takes place on different levels, and one of them is the level of contemporary financial capitalism as debt-economy. Debt can be a major tool of control and exploitation in that it produces subordinate subjects situated in exchange relations of debt and credit. Recent work on financial debt and the debt-economy has, however, not taken gender adequately into account in philosophical definitions of indebted subjects. Gender analysis discloses how the debtor–creditor relat…Read more
    The fight for emancipation takes place on different levels, and one of them is the level of contemporary financial capitalism as debt-economy. Debt can be a major tool of control and exploitation in that it produces subordinate subjects situated in exchange relations of debt and credit. Recent work on financial debt and the debt-economy has, however, not taken gender adequately into account in philosophical definitions of indebted subjects. Gender analysis discloses how the debtor–creditor relationship is based on a contractarian idea of the indebted subject as an autonomous moral agent, and on a masculine, that is, a-relational understanding of what counts as debt and what does not in the contemporary debt-economy. In contrast to atomistic notions of the subject in liberal, contractarian theories, relational notions of the subject as advanced in care ethics are a better point of departure for capturing the interdependence of subjects within a debt-economy as a core feature of a nonsustainable monetary system. On the basis of such analysis, care ethics also offers means for imagining ways of emancipation from private and public problem credit in order to make financial systems more sustainable and more just
    Autonomy in Applied EthicsFeminism: AutonomyFeminist EthicsFeminist Perspectives on Phenomena, MiscF…Read more
    Autonomy in Applied EthicsFeminism: AutonomyFeminist EthicsFeminist Perspectives on Phenomena, MiscFeminist Philosophy, Misc
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