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12María Lugones In Vestal: Or, a Meditation on LifedeathphiloSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 15 (1): 1-11. 2025.In an interview, the late Argentinian feminist philosopher María Lugones appeals to fungi as proof of the permeability of beings—the way they become in and through one another, the way they make each other. That interview was conducted at her home in Vestal, just outside of Binghamton, New York. One day in September 2023, I decided to visit Lugones’s grounds and meet her housekeeper. Reflecting on that visit, I take the opportunity, in this essay, to pursue an extended meditation not only on fun…Read more
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20Between Fungal Networks and Fractured Categories: An Interview with Gabriela VeronelliphiloSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 15 (1): 61-69. 2025.In this conversation, Perry Zurn interviews Gabriela Veronelli, campañera of the late Argentinian feminist philosopher María Lugones. While the conversation centers on Lugones’s interest in fungi and the inspiration she took from mycelial networks, it expands well beyond that. Veronelli explores how the mycelial approach subtends Lugones’s critique of the coloniality of knowledge and its logic of purity but also supports her theorizations of relationality, Aymara philosophy, multilingualism, and…Read more
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16How Cis Went MainstreamFeminist Philosophy Quarterly 11 (2). 2025.Today, cisgender (or cis for short) typically refers to someone whose gender “aligns with” or “matches” their sex assigned at birth. In this essay, I track and analyze how that dominant sense of cis arose. I identify three primary forces that helped mainstream the term and its current definition: Julia Serano’s Whipping Girl, Sam Killerman’s “Cisgender Privilege” checklist, and South Park’s “Cissy” episode. Analyzing these key moments, I argue that cis gets mainstreamed through its depoliticizat…Read more
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25Gender/Fucking: The Pleasures and Politics of Living in a Gendered Body by Florence Ashley (review) (review)Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 35 (1): 1-5. 2025.
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17Nicole Anderson, Derrida: Ethics Under Erasure (London, Bloomsbury, 2012), 208 pp (review)Oxford Literary Review 37 (2): 294-298. 2015.
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16DISORIENTING: Curiosity and the Work of UnknowingIn Lisa Stuckey & Alexander Damianisch (eds.), Uncertain Curiosity in Artistic Research, Philosophy, Media and Cultural Studies: Transforming Understanding—Understanding Transformation, Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 43-50. 2025.It is little appreciated that curiosity is disorienting. Overwhelmingly, discourse on curiosity offers it as an orientation. Ask more questions! Gain more knowledge! The curious process, however, is also a disintegrative one. It necessarily involves an undoing of how things are typically or presently thought. This essay proposes two disorientations (or failed orientations) that are essential to curiosity—disorientations that are obscured by the overly simplistic ways curiosity gets theorized tod…Read more
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50Re-Citing the Origins of NeuroqueerKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 34 (2): 333-364. 2025.Recently, neurodiversity scholars published a letter to the editor of _Autism_ arguing that Judy Singer should not be cited as coiner of _neurodiversity_; rather, the term should be attributed to earlier neurodiverse forums online. I make a similar argument for _neuroqueer_. Neuroqueer is typically attributed to one of the letter's authors: Nick Walker (2015). Archival information, however, demonstrates that the term was developed in neuroqueer community conversations on the _NeuroQueer_ blog (2…Read more
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43Cripping CisJournal of Philosophy of Disability 4 5-24. 2024.In this paper, I look for the crip potential at the heart of cis. What would a theory of cisgender look like if that were presumed from the start? I begin by observing that many early endorsers theorizing cis were trans crip, mad, disabled people. In the first section, I grapple with the challenges that genealogy poses for cis as a construct. In the second section, I review disability studies and trans studies for a disability critique of cisness. I then turn, in the third section, to expand Fin…Read more
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74Curiosity, Power, and the Forms They TakeAPA Newsletter on LGBT Issues in Philosophy 1 (21): 3-5. 2021.What forms, then, does curiosity take? And what are the curiosity formations of our time? Of our universities? Of our disciplines? Of our material lives beyond the discursive? Where one asks these questions—and who it is that asks—matters. Drawing on Virginia Woolf, Zora Neale Hurston, and Michel Foucault, I chart out the grammar of curiosity formations in and beyond the university.
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99Philosophical Curiosity: What and Who Is It For?American Association of Philosophy Teachers Studies in Pedagogy 7 40-63. 2022.In this essay, I sketch a preliminary account of philosophical curiosity. Drawing on philosophy of curiosity, philosophy of education, and philosophical pedagogy, I argue first that philosophical curiosity is a set of investigative practices and affects that engage philosophical content and philosophical skills. Turning to critical pedagogy and meta-philosophy, especially via Paulo Freire and Kristie Dotson, I then supplement the preliminary account by arguing that philosophical curiosity is als…Read more
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54Abolition and the Prophetic ImaginationFoucault Studies 1 (3): 100-104. 2021.There is something prophetic about abolition; some element of the elsewhere that marks its practice, and its discourse. In the work of undoing, there is a crack. In the refusal, a moment of imagination. Abolition is driven by definitive demands as much as by what is yet to come and what is still unfinished.
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55Two Friends and a Camera: Foucault, Livrozet, and the Guerilla Art of Documentary FilmFoucault Studies 31 (1): 104-115. 2021.
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26How We Make Each Other: Trans Life at the Edge of the UniversityDuke University Press. 2024.Trans people have always lived in the cracks of institutions—and the university is no exception. In How We Make Each Other, Perry Zurn tells the stories of how trans people make and live their lives at the edges of the university in ways that sometimes lead to policy change but always leave participants and institutions different than they were before. Using the Five Colleges in Massachusetts as a case study, Zurn notes that Amherst College, Hampshire College, Mount Holyoke College, Smith Colleg…Read more
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1Expanding Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion to DisabilityBiological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging 7 (12): 1280-1288. 2022.Given its subject matter, biological psychiatry is uniquely poised to lead STEM DEI initiatives related to disability. Drawing on literatures in science, philosophy, psychiatry, and disability studies, we outline how that leadership might be undertaken. We first review existing opportunities for the advancement of DEI in biological psychiatry around axes of gender and race. We then explore the expansion of biological psychiatry’s DEI efforts to disability, especially along the lines of represent…Read more
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63A Critical Phenomenology of Walking: Footpaths and FlightwaysPuncta 4 (1): 1-18. 2021.It is hardly difficult to imagine writing about critical phenomenology and walking. One might pause over the method of critical phenomenology as a meta-odos, a thinking of the path. Or consider the steps critical phenomenology takes and the unique pitch of its gait as it traverses the borderlands between phenomenology and critical theory. One might query how these two have the capacity to walk so well side by side, so much so that they can become as one, barely distinguishable against an open sk…Read more
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39Hope Is the Blood of It: On the GIP, Paris 8, and the Urgency of WritingIn Perry Zurn & Kevin Thompson (eds.), Intolerable: Writings from Michel Foucault and the Prisons Information Group, 1970-1980, University of Minnesota Press. pp. 391-406. 2021.This interview with Hélène Cixous took place in her apartment in Paris on March 14, 2019. The interview was conducted in English and subsequently revised for publication. The discussion focuses on Cixous' involvement in the Prisons Information Group in the early 1970's, but it extends to her writing life and activism both before and since.
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154Trans Philosophy: The Early YearsAPA Newsletter on LGBTQ Issues in Philosophy 1 (20): 1-11. 2020.Trans philosophy—like everything else—has a history. The 1990s was a pivotal decade for the academic development of trans philosophy in the United States and Canada. During this period, the broader interdisciplinary field of transgender studies was beginning to emerge, and professional philosophy’s own contributions to transgender studies were starting to take shape as well. In what follows, we hear from Talia Mae Bettcher, Loren Cannon, Miqqi Alicia Gilbert, and Jacob Hale, four trans philosoph…Read more
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42BathroomIn Keywords in Gender and Sexuality Studies, New York University Press. pp. 23-. 2021.There is no denying that the bathroom is a political space. But that is what makes it a space of possibility. As a social-material fixture we use every day, the bathroom has the potential to illuminate, and ultimately to challenge, some of our deepest values and deepest needs. Appreciating the weave of experiences and institutions that have, across time, made the modern bathroom what it is opens up important questions about what it might be. Leaning into the legacy of refusal, we can demand a ra…Read more
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53Critical Phenomenology of Walking: Footpaths and Flight WaysPUNCTA: Journal of Critical Phenomenology 1 (4): 1-18. 2021.In this essay, I sketch the contours of a critical phenomenology of walking. I begin by briefly characterizing the critical phenomenological project and marking some of its invitations to think method and movement alongside one another. Then, I explore two modes of doing a critical phenomenology of walking: attending to how one walks and when and where one walks. I revisit and reread, in particular, the stories of Charlie Howard and Latisha King, whose walks not only signaled a unique comportmen…Read more
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8Trans Philosophy: Meaning and Mattering (edited book)University of Minnesota Press. 2024.Trans Philosophy: Meaning and Mattering will be the first authoritative collection to establish trans philosophy as a unique field of inquiry. It defines trans philosophy as philosophical work that is accountable to and illuminative of transgender experiences, histories, cultural production, and politics. The book will showcase work from a range of fresh and established voices in this nascent field. It will address a variety of topics (e.g. embodiment, identity, language, law, politics, transpho…Read more
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100Busybody, Hunter, Dancer: Three Historical Models of CuriosityIn Marianna Papastefanou (ed.), Toward New Philosophical Explorations of the Desire to Know: Just Curious About Curiosity. pp. 26-49. 2019.Throughout history, many scholars have offered up definitions of curiosity. These definitions range far and wide. Some attempt to amass all the elements of curiosity, systematize them, and propose a unified theory. Some characterize curiosity as a conceptual unit with two primary dimensions (e.g. epistemic and perceptual), as two distinct kinds of things (e.g. bona et mala curiositas), or as one side of a binary (e.g. curiosity vs. care). What is curiosity? Which characterization is most apt to …Read more
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102Social DeathIn Gail Weiss, Ann V. Murphy & Gayle Salamon (eds.), Fifty Concepts for a Critical Phenomenology, Nothwestern University Press. pp. 309-314. 2019.There is a kind of living that feels like dying. There is a kind of life marked—relentlessly—by death. The term social death refers to this experience, this rhythm, this walled passage. By definition, social death may belong to whoever—or indeed whatever—lives and dies in a network of relation. Even when conceived of only anthropocentrically, then, the term must apply beyond that, because the human being lives and dies in nonhuman relation. Moreover, social death always occurs out of sync with p…Read more
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58Curiosity and Political ResistanceIn Curiosity Studies: A New Ecology of Knowledge, University of Minnesota Press. pp. 227-245. 2020.In this essay, the resistant potential of curiosity will be first framed by theories of political curiosity writ large (drawn from Friedrich Nietzsche, Michel Foucault, and Jacques Derrida) and then explicated through three case studies: the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960’s, prison resistance networks in the 1970’s, and a more recent initiative for accessible restrooms. From these archives, an anatomy of politically resistant curiosity will be drawn.
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75On Teaching CuriosityIn Curiosity Studies: A New Ecology of Knowledge, University of Minnesota Press. pp. 269-290. 2020.In this essay, we offer a preliminary account of why and how to consciously cultivate curiosity in contemporary learning environments. First, we begin by discussing some of the educational theory upon which curiosity-centric classrooms might be built: experiential learning pedagogy, feminist pedagogy, critical pedagogy, and abolitionist pedagogy. Second, recognizing that our social, cultural, political, and economic processes all shape who can be curious, about what, and when, we then formulate …Read more
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100What is Curiosity Studies?In Curiosity Studies: A New Ecology of Knowledge, University of Minnesota Press. 2020.In what follows, we intervene in the long history of the study of curiosity to propose curiosity studies proper. Such a field, we argue, traverses the many disciplinary and experiential contexts in which curiosity appears, in order to generate theories, analytics, and practices of curiosity that are as complex and ubiquitous as the phenomenon of curiosity itself. Assuming an ecology of knowledge framework, which expressly resists academic silos and intellectual monocultures, we envision curiosit…Read more
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62PrisonsIn Ásta Sveinsdóttir & Kim Q. Hall (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Feminist Philosophy, . pp. 440-450. 2021.Prisons are a feminist issue. This chapter offers an account of central issues and themes in feminist philosophical work on prisons, examples of important contributions, and future directions for feminist work in the field. It does so, however, in a way that consciously deploys a feminist methodology that resists the replication of hierarchical norms and structural violence in the very doing of theory and history. In this spirit, it emphasizes the record of struggle across the prison’s history, …Read more
Ithaca, New York, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality |
| Applied Ethics |
| Continental Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Environmental Philosophy |
| Scientific Research Ethics |
| Transgender Issues |