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Jennifer Gammage

DePaul University
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  • DePaul University
    Doctoral student
APA Central Division
  • All publications (7)
  •  13
    Cities After COVID
    with Ian Olasov, Michael Menser, Eraldo Souza dos Santos, and John Rennie Short
    The Philosophers' Magazine 97 54-63. 2022.
  •  480
    Animal Activists and the Possibility of Response
    Mosaic 53 (2): 97-108. 2020.
    Animalistic rhetoric is often used to discredit and criminalize political activists. While such dehumanization is embedded within a history of racially-motivated oppression and certainly calls for a reassertion of humanity, I ultimately argue that viewing animals as apolitical forecloses rich possibilities for political resistance.
    Social and Political PhilosophyNatural Sciences, MiscContinental Philosophy: TopicsPhilosophy of LawRead more
    Social and Political PhilosophyNatural Sciences, MiscContinental Philosophy: TopicsPhilosophy of LawContinental Philosophy, Misc
  •  871
    Cities After COVID: Ten philosophers consider how COVID has impacted the life of the city.
    with Ian Olasov, Michael Menser, Eduardo Souza dos Santos, John Rennie Short, Kenny Easwaran, Ronald R. Sundstrom, Irfan Khawaja, Quill R. Kukla, and Katherine Melcher
    The Philosophers' Magazine. 2022.
    Business Ethics and Public Policy
  •  101
    Trauma and Historical Witnessing: Hope for Malabou's New Wounded
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 30 (3): 404-413. 2016.
    Catherine Malabou in The New Wounded develops a general theory of trauma by extending her account of destructive plasticity to the realm of post-traumatic stress disorder. “The new wounded,” she claims, “all come together around a single fact: the radical rupture that trauma introduces in the psyche”. This rupture is demonstrated by an affective fissure, which renders traumatized persons emotionally and socially mute, and a temporal fissure, which punctures subjects’ relationships to their pasts…Read more
    Catherine Malabou in The New Wounded develops a general theory of trauma by extending her account of destructive plasticity to the realm of post-traumatic stress disorder. “The new wounded,” she claims, “all come together around a single fact: the radical rupture that trauma introduces in the psyche”. This rupture is demonstrated by an affective fissure, which renders traumatized persons emotionally and socially mute, and a temporal fissure, which punctures subjects’ relationships to their pasts, thus tearing them from any sociohistorical context. Malabou’s new wounded are marked by extreme indifference and a new, unrecognizable identity created ex nihilo with total absence at its center; at times she...
    Continental Philosophy
  •  53
    Accidental Origins: The Importance of Tuchē and Automaton for Heidegger’s 1922 Reading of Aristotle
    Gatherings: The Heidegger Circle Annual 9 28-59. 2019.
    I examine a passage from Heidegger’s 1922 overview of a proposed book on Aristotle wherein he addresses the importance of Aristotle’s treatment of accidental (sumbebēkos) causes in the Physics II.4-6. My analysis shows that this passage plays a key role within the account of Aristotle’s ontology presented in the overview insofar as it allows Heidegger to open up a new way of reading Aristotle, one that both diagnoses and pushes through the inheritance of being understood as technē in order to re…Read more
    I examine a passage from Heidegger’s 1922 overview of a proposed book on Aristotle wherein he addresses the importance of Aristotle’s treatment of accidental (sumbebēkos) causes in the Physics II.4-6. My analysis shows that this passage plays a key role within the account of Aristotle’s ontology presented in the overview insofar as it allows Heidegger to open up a new way of reading Aristotle, one that both diagnoses and pushes through the inheritance of being understood as technē in order to retrieve originary insights about the movement of factical human life, world, and care. Rather than subordinate tuchē and automaton (chance) to the four ‘real’ causes they would remain merely incidental to or derivative of, Heidegger asks that we recognize the priority of praxis, whose archē unfolds as care toward and within a world of accidents.
    Martin Heidegger
  •  65
    Not-Being-at-Ease
    Philosophy Today 65 (2): 441-448. 2021.
  •  25
    Anthony Jensen’s Nietzsche’s Philosophy of History
    The Agonist : A Nietzsche Circle Journal 10. 2017.
    Philosophy of History
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