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Mario Saenz

Le Moyne College
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    35
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 More details
  • Le Moyne College
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
Southern Illinois University - Carbondale
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1985
Syracuse, New York, United States of America
Areas of Interest
19th Century Philosophy
20th Century Philosophy
Philosophy of the Americas
  • All publications (35)
  •  39
    The Identity of Liberation in Latin American Thought: Latin American Historicism and the Phenomenology of Leopoldo Zea
    Lexington Press/Rowman & Littlefield. 1999.
    Through a close examination of philosopher Leopoldo Zea's historicist phenomenology, Mario Saenz offers fresh insights into the role of Mexican intellectuals in the creation of a Latin American "philosophy of liberation". While this philosophy of liberation has been widely recognized as the most intellectual political ideology to emerge from Latin America this century, few scholars have specifically explored the Mexican roots of this intellectual movement. Saenz redresses this imbalance by placi…Read more
    Through a close examination of philosopher Leopoldo Zea's historicist phenomenology, Mario Saenz offers fresh insights into the role of Mexican intellectuals in the creation of a Latin American "philosophy of liberation". While this philosophy of liberation has been widely recognized as the most intellectual political ideology to emerge from Latin America this century, few scholars have specifically explored the Mexican roots of this intellectual movement. Saenz redresses this imbalance by placing Zea and his contemporary intellectuals firmly within the context of post-revolutionary Mexico, a political and social landscape that fostered criticisms of colonial and neo-colonial structures of dependence. Saenz demonstrates how Zea's philosophy was informed by a sense of Mexico's distinctive social and cultural identity.
    Latin American Philosophy: Value Theory
  •  52
    Latin American Perspectives on Globalization: Ethics, Politics, and Alternative Visions (edited book)
    with Linda Martín Alcoff, Debra A. Castillo, Santiago Castro-Gómez, Rafael Cervantes Martínez, Felipe Gil Chamizo, Raúl Fornet-Betancourt, Jorge J. E. Gracia, María Mercedes Jaramillo, María Pía Lara-Zavala, Eduardo Mendieta, Walter Mignolo, Iván Petrella, Roberto Regalado Álvarez, Ofelia Schutte, and Leopoldo Zea
    Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2002.
    From the most prominent thinkers in Latin American philosophy, literature, politics, and social science comes a challenge to conventional theories of globalization. The contributors to this volume imagine a discourse in which revolution requires no temporalized march of progress or takeovers of state power but instead aims at local control and the material conditions for human dignity.
    Latin American Philosophy: Value Theory, MiscGlobalization
  •  141
    Enrique Dussel, the invention of the americas: Eclipse of“the other”and the myth of modernity (review)
    Continental Philosophy Review 31 (4): 425-434. 1998.
    Latin American Political Philosophy
  •  212
    Memory, enchantment and salvation: Latin american philosophies of liberation and the religions of the oppressed
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 17 (2): 149-173. 1991.
    Critical Theory20th Century Latin American PhilosophyLatin American Philosophy: Value Theory, Misc
  •  158
    Living Labor in Marx
    Radical Philosophy Review 10 (1): 1-31. 2007.
    The concept of living labor in Marx’s Grundrisse represents the key notion that conceptually ties his early theory of alienation with the drafts of Capital of the 1860s. Through a critique of the formalism that opened space for Marx’s economic writings, I explore living labor, not only as alienated within the capital–laborrelation, but as an absolute, metahistorical exteriority. Furthermore, the interpretive writings of Enrique Dussel on the Grundrisse are contrasted with the reading ofMichael H…Read more
    The concept of living labor in Marx’s Grundrisse represents the key notion that conceptually ties his early theory of alienation with the drafts of Capital of the 1860s. Through a critique of the formalism that opened space for Marx’s economic writings, I explore living labor, not only as alienated within the capital–laborrelation, but as an absolute, metahistorical exteriority. Furthermore, the interpretive writings of Enrique Dussel on the Grundrisse are contrasted with the reading ofMichael Hardt and Antonio Negri to show how living labor can be understood as ethical excess within the framework of biopolitical production.
    Latin American Political PhilosophyKarl MarxContinental Political Philosophy
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