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Stella Sandford

University of Essex
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    83
    • Most Recent
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    • Topics
  •  Events
    4
  •  News and Updates
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 More details
University of Essex
School of Philosophy and Art History
PhD, 1997
Areas of Specialization
History of Western Philosophy
Feminist Philosophy
Areas of Interest
History of Western Philosophy
Other Academic Areas
Feminist Philosophy
  • All publications (83)
  •  1
    Alain Badiou, with Nicolas Truong, In Praise of Love
    Radical Philosophy 176 62. 2012.
    Alain Badiou
  •  1
    Levinas: An Introduction Emmanuel Levinas, Basic Philosophical Writings (review)
    Radical Philosophy 87. 1998.
  • Conference Report: Going Australian: Reconfiguring Feminism and Philosophy, 6–8 February 1998, University of Warwick, UK (review)
    Radical Philosophy 90. 1998.
  • Women’s Philosophy Review, 1997–2005
    Radical Philosophy 135. 2006.
  •  26
    Book Review of: Truth and singularity: taking Foucault into phenomenology by Rudi Visker (review)
    Radical Philosophy 113 43-45. 2002.
  • The Edinburgh Encyclopedia of Continental Philosophy (review)
    Radical Philosophy 102. 2000.
    European Philosophy
  • Simone de Beauvoir: Philosophy and Feminism (review)
    Radical Philosophy 114. 2002.
    Simone de Beauvoir
  •  34
    Book Review of: Simone de Beauvoir: philosophe, by Michel Kail (review)
    Radical Philosophy 140 51-53. 2006.
  •  94
    Manly women
    The Philosophers' Magazine 17 60-60. 2002.
  •  705
    Going back: Heidegger, East Asia and The West
    Radical Philosophy 120 11-22. 2003.
    This article comprises a critical examination of some aspects of the English-language comparative literature on Heidegger and East Asian thought. It questions both its transcendental conceptual ground – the conditions of possibility for the comparative exercise – and its account of Heideggerʼs philosophy itself. For the comparative literature, I will argue, can only make its specific claims, sympathetic to the Heideggerian philosophical project, with a reading of that project that represses most …Read more
    This article comprises a critical examination of some aspects of the English-language comparative literature on Heidegger and East Asian thought. It questions both its transcendental conceptual ground – the conditions of possibility for the comparative exercise – and its account of Heideggerʼs philosophy itself. For the comparative literature, I will argue, can only make its specific claims, sympathetic to the Heideggerian philosophical project, with a reading of that project that represses most of what is fundamental to Heideggerʼs conception of philosophy and almost everything that we know about his politics. Furthermore, in its emphasis on the ancient it facilitates the repression of the history of Heideggerian fascism in modern East Asian, and particularly Japanese, thought. The point of this critical examination of the comparative literature is not, however, to expose a misreading of Heidegger. It is to reveal what is at stake in the mobilization of the imaginary geopolitical and geophilosophical unities of ʻthe Eastʼ and ʻthe Westʼ in relation to Heideggerʼs political-philosophical thinking of ʻthe Westʼ. Accordingly, I will look first at the claims typical in the advocatory comparative literature and then at the problematic conceptual ground of the comparison, both in terms of its immanent logic and its relation to Heideggerʼs conception of the history of philosophy.
    Martin Heidegger
  •  41
    Book Review of: Levinas: an introduction by Colin Davis, and Basic philosophical writings by Emmanuel Levinas (review)
    Radical Philosophy 87 49-50. 1998.
  •  120
    Thinking sex politically: rethinking 'Sex' in Plato's Republic
    South Atlantic Quarterly 104 (4): 613-630. 2005.
    This is in a special issue of the journal entitled 'Thinking Politically'. The material is an earlier version of chapter 1 of Sandford's 2010 book , Plato and Sex (Polity).
    Conceptions of GenderPolitical TheoryPlato: RepublicPlato: Feminism
  •  45
    Sexmat, revisited
    Radical Philosophy 145 28-35. 2007.
    Conceptions of Sex, Misc
  •  38
    Book Review of: Simone de Beauvoir, edited by Margaret A Simons with Marybeth Timmerman and Mary Beth Mader (review)
    Radical Philosophy 133 52-55. 2005.
    Simone de Beauvoir
  •  120
    Sexually ambiguous
    Angelaki 11 (3). 2006.
    This Article does not have an abstract
    Philosophy of Gender
  •  43
    'All human beings are pregnant': the bisexual imaginary in Plato's Symposium
    Radical Philosophy 150 24-35. 2008.
    Plato: SymposiumPregnancy
  •  160
    Levinas, feminism and the feminine
    In Robert Bernasconi & Simon Critchley (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Lévinas, Cambridge University Press. pp. 139-160. 2002.
    This is a critical evaluation of the feminist philosophical literature on the work of Emmanuel Levinas. It brought to a close Sandford's research on Levinas, the main outcome of which was her "The Metaphysics of Love : Levinas and Transcendence"
    Emmanuel LevinasFeminist Metaphysics
  •  1003
    Feminism against'the feminine'
    Radical Philosophy 105 6-14. 2001.
    Whilst the distinction between French and Anglo-American feminism was always rather dubious two specific linguistic differences between French and English have nevertheless determined two streams of feminist thought, and complicated the relation between them. Since the 1960s, English-language feminisms, in so far as they are distinctive, have centrally either presupposed or explicitly theorized the category of gender, for which there is no linguistic equivalent in French. At the same time, much …Read more
    Whilst the distinction between French and Anglo-American feminism was always rather dubious two specific linguistic differences between French and English have nevertheless determined two streams of feminist thought, and complicated the relation between them. Since the 1960s, English-language feminisms, in so far as they are distinctive, have centrally either presupposed or explicitly theorized the category of gender, for which there is no linguistic equivalent in French. At the same time, much (although not all) that came to be categorized as ʻFrenchʼ feminism has been articulated around the category of le féminin, for which there is no ready equivalent in English, although there is an obvious translational choice: ʻthe feminineʼ. Various Anglo-American feminisms have made consideration of what have been seen as feminine attributes and values central to their critical and reconstructive projects, but it is not this (adjectival) sense which is at issue here in the translation of le féminin, a noun. For despite the fact that the French and English words connote differently (in particular, le féminin also covers most of what is meant by the English ʻfemaleʼ), ʻthe feminineʼ, as a direct translation of the different and specific uses of le féminin in various French discourses, has become a common category in English-language feminist discourse, specifically English-language feminist philosophy of a ʻcontinentalʼ disposition, where it is often presumed to be both the proper object of such a philosophy and the proper goal of feminism. But is it? Or what exactly is at stake in making it so? Is ʻthe feminineʼ a necessary or useful category for feminism today?
    Continental FeminismAnalytic FeminismVarieties of Feminism, MiscFeminist Approaches to Philosophy, M…Read more
    Continental FeminismAnalytic FeminismVarieties of Feminism, MiscFeminist Approaches to Philosophy, MiscFeminist Perspectives on Phenomena, MiscFeminist Philosophy of LanguageLinguisticsTopics in Feminist Philosophy, Misc
  •  148
    50 Years of the Second Sex
    The Philosophers' Magazine 7 (7): 43-44. 1999.
  •  24
    Book Review of: The Edinburgh encyclopedia of continental philosophy by Simon Glendinning (ed.) (review)
    Radical Philosophy 102 42-45. 2000.
    European PhilosophyFrench PhilosophyPoststructuralism
  •  86
    The incomplete Locke: Balibar, Locke and the philosophy of the subject
    In Étienne Balibar (ed.), Identity and Difference: John Locke and the Invention of Consciousness, Verso. 2013.
    This is the Introduction to Etienne Balibar's book Identity and Difference: John Locke and the Invention of Consciousness. It begins with a brief reprise of Balibar’s main argument concerning Locke’s role in the ‘invention of consciousness’ and draws out the most important aspects of Balibar’s multi-faceted interpretation of Locke on personal identity. After a condensed overview of the main trends in the mainstream interpretation and criticism of Locke’s argument, focusing in particular on the …Read more
    This is the Introduction to Etienne Balibar's book Identity and Difference: John Locke and the Invention of Consciousness. It begins with a brief reprise of Balibar’s main argument concerning Locke’s role in the ‘invention of consciousness’ and draws out the most important aspects of Balibar’s multi-faceted interpretation of Locke on personal identity. After a condensed overview of the main trends in the mainstream interpretation and criticism of Locke’s argument, focusing in particular on the two major objections that continue to be leveled against Locke’s account, it then relocates Locke’s argument and Balibar’s interpretation of it within the context of recent work on the philosophical history of the concept of the subject. This new context for the interpretation of Locke allows us both to understand the dogged persistence of the main criticisms of Locke – from the earliest to some of his most recent ‘analytical’ critics – in a new way and to form of a connection between this part of the Essay Concerning Human Understanding and Locke’s political philosophy.
    Locke: Philosophy of Mind, Misc20th Century French Philosophy
  •  1
    Simone de Beauvoir: philosophe (review)
    Radical Philosophy 140. 2006.
    Simone de Beauvoir
  •  55
    Book Review of: In spite of Plato: a feminist rewriting of ancient philosophy by Adriana Cavarero (review)
    Radical Philosophy 81 50-51. 1997.
    Ethics
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