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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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417Anarchic 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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80In Defense of ExperienceHypatia 29 (2): 388-403. 2014.This article studies our philosophical understanding of experience in order to question the current political and theoretical dismissal of experiential accounts in feminist theory. The focus is on Joan Scott's critique of experience, but the philosophical issues animating the discussion go beyond Scott's work and concern the future of feminist theory and politics more generally. I ask what it means for feminist theory to redefine experience as a linguistic event the way Scott suggests. I attempt…Read more
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73Foucault, Husserl and the philosophical roots of German neoliberalismContinental Philosophy Review 49 (1): 115-126. 2016.The article investigates and vindicates the surprising claim Foucault makes in his lecture series The Birth of Biopolitics that the philosophical roots of post-war German neoliberalism lie in Husserl’s phenomenology. I study the similarities between Husserl’s phenomenology and Walter Eucken’s economic theory and examine the way that Husserl’s idea of the historical a priori assumes a determinate role in Eucken’s economic thinking. I also return to Foucault’s lectures in order to show how a versi…Read more
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166Sexual Experience: Foucault, Phenomenology, and Feminist TheoryHypatia 26 (1): 207-223. 2011.This paper explicates Foucault's conception of experience and defends it as an important theoretical resource for feminist theory. It analyzes Linda Alcoff's devastating critique of Foucault's account of sexuality and her reasons for advocating phenomenology as a more viable alternative. I agree with her that a philosophically sophisticated understanding of experience must remain central for feminist theory, but I demonstrate that her critique of Foucault is based on a mistaken view of his philo…Read more
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200Foucault’s politicization of ontologyContinental Philosophy Review 43 (4): 445-466. 2010.The paper explicates a politicized conception of reality with the help of Michel Foucault’s critical project. I contend that Foucault’s genealogies of power problematize the relationship between ontology and politics. His idea of productive power incorporates a radical, ontological claim about the nature of reality: Reality as we know it is the result of social practices and struggles over truth and objectivity. Rather than translating the true ontology into the right politics, he reverses the a…Read more
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247A phenomenology of genderContinental Philosophy Review 39 (3): 229-244. 2006.The article asks how phenomenology, understood as a philosophical method of investigation, can account for gender. Despite the fact that it has provided useful tools for feminist inquiry, the question remains how gender can be studied within the paradigm of a philosophy of a subject. The article explicates four different understandings of phenomenology and assesses their respective potential in terms of theorizing gender: a classical reading, a corporeal reading, an intersubjective reading and a…Read more
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