•  2
    Hobbes, Marx, and the Foundations of Modern Political Thought
    Dissertation, Vanderbilt University. 2000.
    This dissertation is a study of the nature and development of "modern" political thought, typical features of which include the "state of nature" and "social contract." Specifically, I argue that modern thought is constructive, which is to say that thinking is seen as, at least to some extent, generative of its objects. I focus primarily on Hobbes and Marx as liminal thinkers in the development of modern political thought. I begin with a discussion of the nature of construction in modern thought…Read more
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    Biopolitics Is Not (Primarily) About Life: On Biopolitics, Neoliberalism, and Families
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 27 (3): 322-335. 2013.
    The emergence of topics such as reprogenetics and genetic testing for hereditary diseases attests to the continued salience of Foucault's analyses of biopolitics. His various discussions pose at least two problems for contemporary appropriation of the work. First, it is unclear what the "life" on which biopolitics operates actually refers to.1 Second, it is unclear how biopolitics relates to the economy, either in the classical form of the family/household (oikos) or in the current form of neoli…Read more