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152The Language of Violence: Chiastic EncountersSophia 55 (1): 115-127. 2016.In her recent book, Violence and the Philosophical Imaginary, Ann Murphy suggests that the philosophical imaginary, in particular that of contemporary continental philosophy, is imbued with images of violence. The concept of the philosophical imaginary is drawn from the work of Michèle Le Dœuff to explore the role of images of violence in philosophy. Murphy sets the language of violence, reflexivity, and critique against that of vulnerability, ambiguity and responsibility. Her concern is that im…Read more
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51Promising and forgivenessIn Patrick Hayden (ed.), Hannah Arendt: Key Concepts, Routledge. pp. 209-21. 2014.My paper explores the power that forgiveness and the promise, as potentialities of action, have to counter the two difficulties that follow from the possibility of being able to begin something new or what Arendt calls the ‘frailty of human affairs’: irreversibility and unpredictability. Acts of forgiving and promising are expressions of freedom and natality, as they begin human relations anew: forgiveness creates a fresh beginning after wrong-doing, and the promise initiates new political agre…Read more
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102Editors' introduction: Philosophy and affective turnParrhesia 13 1-13. 2011.This special issue of Parrhesia has developed from the 2010 Australasian Society for Continental Philosophy’s Conference at the University of Queensland on the theme of the philosophy of affect.
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69Michele le Doeuff feminist epistemology and the unthoughtHecate 34 (2). 2008.The unthought means that which it is possible to think, but which has not yet been thought, and also what we are prevented from thinking. Philosophical systems can prevent us from thinking otherwise and restrictions on women’s access to knowledge can prevent women from thinking apart from what is prescribed as suitable. The unthought is both what hasn’t been thought and what could be thought if there wasn’t a barrier of some sort. Michèle Le Dœuff directs us towards the unthought as a measure of…Read more
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422The analytic imaginaryCornell University Press. 2002.lntroduction Imaginary and Images M philosophical imaginary refers to both the capacity to imagine and the stock of images philosophers use. ...
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609Love, That Indispensable Supplement: Irigaray and Kant on Love and RespectHypatia 20 (3): 92-114. 2005.Is love essential to ethical life, or merely a supplement? In Kant’s view, respect and love, as duties, are in tension with each other because love involves drawing closer and respect involves drawing away. By contrast, Irigaray says that love and respect do not conflict because love as passion must also involve distancing and we have a responsibility to love. I argue that love, understood as passion and based on respect, is essential to ethics.
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253This is a review of Margaret Simons's book, Beauvoir and the Second Sex: Feminism, Race, and the Origins of Existentialism.
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88At first blush: The politics of guilt and shameParrhesia (18): 85-99. 2013.A consideration of what are sometimes known as the reactive attitudes is useful to outline more positive conditions of ethical restoration. This paper focuses on the ways in which perceptions and experiences of guilt and shame are shaped by political conceptions of who belongs to the more guilty and shameful parties. I use the debate between Karl Jaspers and Arendt over guilt and responsibility, as well as Jean-Paul Sartre’s and Giorgio Agamben’s work on shame, to develop an account of the polit…Read more
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67Wonder and Generosity: Their Role in Ethics and PoliticsState University of New York Press. 2013._A compelling understanding of equality and difference in public life._.
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80Review: Burdened Virtues: Virtue Ethics for Liberatory Struggles (review)Mind 116 (463): 781-785. 2007.
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50Hipparchia's choice: An essay concerning women, philosophy, etc. 2nd ed. by Michèle le dœuff. Translated by trista selous (review)Hypatia 24 (1): 191-195. 2009.
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52The mute foundation of aesthetic experience?Culture, Theory, and Critique 54 (2): 209-224. 2013.Luiz Cost Lima argues in The Limits of Voice that Kant’s Critique of Judgment plays a pivotal role in furthering aestheticization, or the objectification and universalization of aesthetic experience. He introduces the term criticity to refer to the act of questioning and finds that Kant poses the alternatives of aestheticization and criticity. However, Costa Lima sees Kant and most of the following literary criticism as accepting aestheticization, with exceptions such as Schlegel and Kafka. (xii…Read more
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182Terrorism and trauma: Negotiating Derridean 'autoimmunity'Philosophy and Social Criticism 37 (5): 605-619. 2011.I begin by examining the logic of autoimmunity as characterized by Jacques Derrida, ‘that strange behaviour where a living being, in quasi-suicidal fashion, ‘‘itself’’ works to destroy its own protection, to immunize itself against its own immunity’ (Borradori, 2003: 94). According to Derrida, religion, democracy, terrorism and recent responses to the trauma of terrorism can be understood in terms of this logic. Responses to terrorism are ‘autoimmune’ and increase the trauma of terrorism as well…Read more
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128Moss, Fungus, CauliflowerSymposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 16 (1): 30-51. 2012.I argue that Sartre's understanding of needs is not inconsistent with his conception of the human condition. I will demonstrate that his use of the term "needs" signals a change of focus, not a rejection of his earlier views. Sartre's Iater "dialectical" account of human needs should he read, in light of his phenomenological account in Being and Nothingness, as aspects of our facticity and situation. Satisfying needs is compatible with a range of choices about how to satisfy those needs and what…Read more
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204Derrida: Opposing Death PenaltiesDerrida Today 2 (2): 186-199. 2009.Derrida's purpose in ‘Death Penalties’ (2004), is to show how both arguments in favour of capital punishment, exemplified by Kant's, and arguments for its abolition, such as those of Beccaria, are deconstructible. He claims that ‘never, to my knowledge, has any philosopher as a philosopher, in his or her own strictly and systematically philosophical discourse, never has any philosophy as such contested the legitimacy of the death penalty.’ (2004, 146) Derrida also asks how it is possible ‘to abo…Read more
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42Hope and affirmation: An Ethics of ReciprocityIn Steven Churchill & Jack Reynolds (eds.), Sartre's Legacy, Routledge. pp. 206-12. 2013.Jean-Paul Sartre’s final ethics of the “we” or reciprocity remains controversial and less developed than his other ethics. Scholars have generally accepted the periodization of his ethics into three, as Sartre himself described them: the first ethics of authenticity, the second Marxist or dialectical ethics, and this final ethics, that considers the ontological basis of ethics, based primarily on the 1980 interviews in Hope Now (1996) (L’espoir maintenant, 1991). I will focus on Sartre’s respons…Read more
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141Revaluing envy and resentmentPhilosophical Explorations 5 (2). 2002.Some forms of envy and resentment are centrally connected with a concern for justice and so should not be morally condemned but accepted. Envy and resentment enable us to discern and respond to injustices against ourselves and others. I argue that whereas envy and resentment as character traits or dispositions may be ethically deplorable, as episodic emotions they can be both moral responses to injustice and lead to action against injustice.
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Areas of Specialization
| Continental Philosophy |
| European Philosophy |
| Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality |
| Aesthetics |