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4031Beyond Dehumanization: A Post-Humanist Critique of Intensive ConfinementJournal of Critical Animal Studies. Special Issue on Animals and Prisons 10 (2). 2012.Prisoners involved in the Attica rebellion and in the recent Georgia prison strike have protested their dehumanizing treatment as animals and as slaves. Their critique is crucial for tracing the connections between slavery, abolition, the racialization of crime, and the reinscription of racialized slavery within the US prison system. I argue that, in addition to the dehumanization of prisoners, inmates are further de-animalized when they are held in conditions of intensive confinement such as …Read more
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4912Resisting Agamben: The biopolitics of shame and humiliationPhilosophy and Social Criticism 38 (1): 59-79. 2012.In Remnants of Auschwitz , Giorgio Agamben argues that the hidden structure of subjectivity is shame. In shame, I am consigned to something that cannot be assumed, such that the very thing that makes me a subject also forces me to witness my own desubjectification. Agamben’s ontological account of shame is problematic insofar as it forecloses collective responsibility and collapses the distinction between shame and humiliation. By recontextualizing three of Agamben’s sources – Primo Levi, Robert…Read more
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139The Gift of the Other: Levinas and the Politics of ReproductionSUNY Press. 2006.The Gift of the Other brings together a philosophical analysis of time, embodiment, and ethical responsibility with a feminist critique of the way women’s reproductive capacity has been theorized and represented in Western culture. Author Lisa Guenther develops the ethical and temporal implications of understanding birth as the gift of the Other, a gift which makes existence possible, and already orients this existence toward a radical responsibility for Others. Through an engagement with the wo…Read more
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2405Subjects Without a World? An Husserlian Analysis of Solitary ConfinementHuman Studies 34 (3): 257-276. 2011.Psychiatrist Stuart Grassian has proposed the term “SHU syndrome” to name the cluster of cognitive, perceptual and affective symptoms that commonly arise for inmates held in the Special Housing Units (SHU) of supermax prisons. In this paper, I analyze the harm of solitary confinement from a phenomenological perspective by drawing on Husserl’s account of the essential relation between consciousness, the experience of an alter ego and the sense of a real, Objective world. While Husserl’s prioritiz…Read more
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88Introduction: Queer, Trans, and Feminist Responses to the Prison NationphiloSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 6 (1): 1-8. 2016.
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2729Le Flair Animal: Levinas and the Possibility of Animal FriendshipPhaenEx 2 (2): 216-238. 2007.In Otherwise than Being, Levinas writes that the alterity of the Other escapes “le flair animal,” or the animal’s sense of smell. This paper puts pressure on the strong human-animal distinction that Levinas makes by considering the possibility that, while non-human animals may not respond to the alterity of the Other in the way that Levinas describes as responsibility, animal sensibility plays a key role in a relation to Others that Levinas does not discuss at length: friendship. This approach t…Read more
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48Review of Diane Perpich, The Ethics of Emmanuel Levinas (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (2). 2009.
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1970The Most Dangerous Place: Pro-Life Politics and the Rhetoric of SlaveryPostmodern Culture 22 (2). 2012.In recent years, comparisons between abortion and slavery have become increasingly common in American pro-life politics. Some have compared the struggle to extinguish abortion rights to the struggle to end slavery. Others have claimed that Roe v Wade is the Dred Scott of our time. Still others have argued that abortion is worse than slavery; it is a form of genocide. This paper tracks the abortion = slavery meme from Ronald Reagan to the current personhood movement, drawing on work by Orlando Pa…Read more
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Vanderbilt UniversityRegular Faculty
Nashville, Tennessee, United States of America