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139Foucault on FreedomCambridge University Press. 2005.Freedom and the subject were guiding themes for Michel Foucault throughout his philosophical career. In this clear and comprehensive analysis of his thought, Johanna Oksala identifies the different interpretations of freedom in his philosophy and examines three major divisions of it: the archaeological, the genealogical, and the ethical. She shows convincingly that in order to appreciate Foucault's project fully we must understand his complex relationship to phenomenology, and she discusses Fouc…Read more
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7From the Death of the Author to the Freedom of Language: Foucault on LiteratureActa Philosophica Fennica 79 191. 2006.
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180Feminism and Neoliberal GovernmentalityFoucault Studies 16 32-53. 2013.The article investigates the consequences for feminist politics of the neoliberal turn. Feminist scholars have analysed the political changes in the situation of women that have been brought about by neoliberalism, but their assessments of neoliberalism’s consequences for feminist theory and politics vary. Feminist thinkers such as Hester Eisenstein and Sylvia Walby have argued that feminism must now return its focus to socialist politics and foreground economic questions of redistribution in or…Read more
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69What is feminist phenomenology? Thinking birth philosophicallyRadical Philosophy 126 16-22. 2004.
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91Political Philosophy in the Era of Climate ChangeGraduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 37 (1): 51-70. 2016.
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98Foucault, Politics, and Violence: A Response to Jana Sawicki and Kevin ThompsonPhilosophy Today 58 (2): 297-307. 2014.In her book, Oksala shows that the arguments for the ineliminability of violence from the political are often based on excessively broad, ontological conceptions of violence distinct from its concrete and physical meaning and, on the other hand, on a restrictively narrow and empirical understanding of politics as the realm of conventional political institutions
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57The Neoliberal Subject of FeminismJournal of the British Society for Phenomenology 42 (1): 104-120. 2011.
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121How to read FoucaultW. W. Norton & Co.. 2008.Introduction -- The freedom of philosophy -- Reason and madness -- The death of man -- The anonymity of literature -- From archaeology to genealogy -- The prison -- Repressed sexuality -- A true sex -- Political power, rationality, and critique -- Practices of the self.
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62Review of Marc djaballah, Kant, Foucault, and Forms of Experience (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (1). 2009.
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157Foucault, Politics, and ViolenceNorthwestern University Press. 2011.In her book, Oksala shows that the arguments for the ineliminability of violence from the political are often based on excessively broad, ontological conceptions of violence distinct from its concrete and physical meaning and, on the other hand, on a restrictively narrow and empirical understanding of politics as the realm of conventional political institutions.
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416Anarchic Bodies: Foucault and the Feminist Question of ExperienceHypatia 19 (4): 99-121. 2004.The article shows that Michel Foucault's account of the sexual body is not a naive return to a prediscursive body, nor does it amount to discourse reductionism and to the exclusion of experience, as some feminists have argued. Instead, Foucault's idea of bodies and pleasures as a possibility of the counterattack against normalizing power presupposes an experiential understanding of the body. The experiential body can become a locus of resistance because it is the possibility of an unpredictable …Read more
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