•  33
    Benjamin Fondane: An Undiscovered Reference for Gilles Deleuze
    Deleuze and Guattari Studies 19 (3): 405-428. 2025.
    This article gives evidence – taken primarily from some of Deleuze’s often-used citations of Kierkegaard – for Deleuze’s direct familiarity with the work of the Romanian-Jewish philosopher and poet Benjamin Fondane (1898–1944). By looking at the origins of certain key phrases, it argues that Deleuze did not merely share numerous conceptual and normative affinities with the earlier thinker, but more importantly that there is good reason to believe that Deleuze had acquainted himself with one or s…Read more
  •  8
    Kierkegaard as a Thinker of Deleuzian Immanent Ethics
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 24 (1): 118-137. 2020.
    In this article, I present an interpretation of Kierkegaard’s ethics in terms of Gilles Deleuze’s distinction between immanent ethics and transcendent morality. I argue that Kierkegaard’s skepticism towards moral prescription, his emphasis on the single individual as the basis of normative evaluation, and his view of Christianity as somehow “beyond” the scope of moral obligation are all functions of a Deleuzian conception of immanent ethics as a non-moralistic form of normativity. On this basis,…Read more
  •  57
    Sartre and Deleuze on Otherness1
    Sartre Studies International 30 (2): 1-19. 2024.
    This paper gives an account of Gilles Deleuze's and Jean-Paul Sartre's respective conceptions of “the Other” as this concept evolves in relation to Sartre's earliest insights into self/Other dynamics in his 1937 essay, The Transcendence of the Ego. By reading Deleuze through his early interlocutor—the philosopher and author Michel Tournier—I argue that the account of Otherness presented in Deleuze's early (and later disavowed) “Sartrean” works represents a critique of Sartre's own revisions to t…Read more
  •  54
    Panentheism, History and the Problem of Evil
    Journal for Continental Philosophy of Religion 5 (1): 3-26. 2023.
    In this paper I consider the thought of two Jewish existentialists from the first half of the 20th century, showing how their critique of pantheistic and panentheistic thinking grounded novel ideas about politics, history and human thought. In place of a concept of history directed towards a teleological redemption of suffering in the future, Lev Shestov (1866–1938) and Benjamin Fondane (1898–1944) abandoned notions of philosophical rationality in order to avow a ‘reversal’ of history according …Read more
  •  56
    Kierkegaard as a Thinker of Deleuzian Immanent Ethics
    Symposium 24 (1): 118-137. 2020.
    In this article, I present an interpretation of Kierkegaard’s ethics in terms of Gilles Deleuze’s distinction between immanent ethics and transcendent morality. I argue that Kierkegaard’s skepticism towards moral prescription, his emphasis on the single individual as the basis of normative evaluation, and his view of Christianity as somehow “beyond” the scope of moral obligation are all functions of a Deleuzian conception of immanent ethics as a non-moralistic form of normativity. On this basis,…Read more
  •  130
    Faith and Repetition in Kierkegaard and Deleuze
    Philosophy Today 63 (2): 383-401. 2019.
    In this paper, I compare Gilles Deleuze’s and Søren Kierkegaard’s concepts of “repetition.” Although Deleuze have argued that Kierkegaard’s use of this concept valorizes the role of unity in selfhood, I claim that, in Kierkegaard’s pseudonymous works, repetition in fact serves as a practical task linked to self-overcoming and rebirth. From this perspective, I argue that Kierkegaard’s conception of repetition as a function of “faith” can helpfully inform an understanding of Deleuze: self-overcomi…Read more
  •  53
    Nietzsche’s Philosophy of History
    New Nietzsche Studies 9 (3): 232-236. 2015.
  •  78
    Totality and Infinity at 50—Ed. Scott Davidson and Diane Perpich (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 52 (4): 498-500. 2012.