•  11
    This paper examines how public health promotion in colonial Australia figures the maternal body as an instrument for the production of whiteness for the perpetuation of the colonial state. In the context of a paradox between the institutional valuing of motherhood and institutional practices of systemic child removal and violence against women and mothers, I argue that public health promotion should be understood as a mechanism for the production of the white maternal body. I first establish the…Read more
  •  15
    Feminism, Capitalism, and Ecology by Johanna Oksala
    Environmental Philosophy 22 (2): 348-352. 2025.
  •  634
    Moral hazard occurs when the presence or promise of a new technology or policy reduces incentives for responsible behaviour, because the consequences of risky behaviour are perceived to be reduced, transferred, or mitigated. Moral hazard risk has been widely empirically investigated in the case of geoengineering for climate change, but other novel technologies have not been subject to such scrutiny. Ever since de-extinction was announced to the public as a viable possibility with modern biotechn…Read more
  •  49
    Some theorists have argued that novel food objects spur ontological debates and are thus grounds for the disruption of problematic normative ontologies. In this paper, I take up this claim to consider how disputes about milk and alternatives, among them synthetic milk, manifest certain ontological commitments. Through a political approach to ontology, I argue that the disruption of hegemonic ontologies can afford novel ethical considerations otherwise concealed from view. Drawing on ecofeminist …Read more
  •  57
    The problem of empathy has been typically founded on subjectivist theories of human being. Empathy was adopted into philosophy by the phenomenologist Edmund Husserl, who interpreted it as the solution to the problem of the foreign ego. Among phenomenologists, whose discipline is foundational to the concept of empathy, there is contention about the notion of empathy as an account of human being with one another. The 20th century philosopher Martin Heidegger was particularly critical of the basis …Read more
  •  95
    In response to Shawn Loht’s 2017 project delineating a Heideggerian phenomenology of film, Phenomenology of Film: A Heideggerian Account of the Film Experience, I examine how productive Loht’s Dasein-centric account of the film viewer might be for considering diverse film-viewer experiences. Starting from Loht’s premise that the film–viewer relation is the constitutive ground of filmic disclosure, I raise two concerns regarding Heidegger’s account of Dasein that might obscure an account of the d…Read more