•  22
    The Management of State Violence
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 28 (2): 53-66. 2007.
  •  88
    How to read Foucault
    W. 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.
  •  22
    Review of Marc djaballah, Kant, Foucault, and Forms of Experience (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (1). 2009.
  •  92
    Foucault, Politics, and Violence
    Northwestern 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
  •  36
    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
  •  16
    The Neoliberal Subject of Feminism
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 42 (1): 104-120. 2011.
  •  40
    In Defense of Experience
    Hypatia 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