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58Mono no Aware and Gender as Affect in Japanese Aesthetics and American Pragmatism (edited book)Lexington Books. 2023.Mono no Aware and Gender as Affect in Japanese Aesthetics and American Pragmatism argues that gender is best understood as a felt sense of the organization of the human body. Through Japanese aesthetics and American pragmatism, this book argues that re-understanding gender as an affect, or a feeling, can expand the ways that gender is understood, enacted, and theorized in experience.
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23Guest Editors’ IntroductionProject Muse®: Education and Culture - Latest Articles 37 (1): 4-6. 2021.Welcome to this special theme issue of Education & Culture. We are pleased to bring you a special two-part issue on Deweyan approaches to contemporary issues at the intersection of data and technology. Education in particular finds itself in need of sober reflection given the mass migration to online and remote teaching brought on by COVID-19. The impact of social distancing and prolonged isolation during education has yet to be fully appreciated, nor has the toll the past year and a half has ta…Read more
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37Guest Editors' NoteEducation and Culture 37 (2): 1-3. 2022.In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Guest Editors' NoteKevin Taylor (bio) and Johnathan Flowers (bio)Welcome to this special fall 2021 issue of Education & Culture. we are pleased to bring you the second installment of this special three-part issue on Deweyan approaches to contemporary issues at the intersection of data and technology.In his extensive writings on philosophy and technology, Luciano Floridi has argued that "the time has come to translate environmental et…Read more
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33On the Moral Neutrality of BloodbendingIn Helen De Cruz & Johan De Smedt (eds.), Avatar: The Last Airbender and Philosophy: Wisdom From Aang to Zuko, Wiley-blackwell. 2022.Bloodbending is sometimes referred to as the “puppetmaster technique” because it is the only bending art whose focus is on the direct manipulation and control of a target. Incarcerated in a maximum‐security prison designed specifically to hold waterbenders, Hama was powerless to resist her captors due to their restriction of any liquid that could be used to bend. The bending styles in Avatar: The Last Airbender draw their inspiration from real‐world Chinese martial arts. Karl Friday describes sa…Read more
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50Intentional Disruption: Expanding Access to Philosophy (review)Precollege Philosophy and Public Practice 4 111-114. 2022.
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53Information and Communications Technologies and Democratic Education: Lessons From John Dewey's PragmatismEducation and Culture 38 (1): 39-63. 2023.Abstract:This essay applies lessons from John Dewey’s theory of democracy and democratic education to the modern development of information communications technologies and the assertion that the development of such technologies will lead to a more open, more democratic society. Given the continuity of the technology and its applications with structures of oppression within modern society, any attempt to resolve or democratize technology through skills-based training is bound to fail, as this doe…Read more
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79Against Philosophy, Against DisabilityJournal of Philosophy of Disability 2 79-111. 2022.This paper argues that the field of philosophy, and bioethics specifically, engages in a series of speech acts that identify scholarship advocating for increased philosophical engagement with the experiences of disability as “activism.” In doing so, the field of philosophy treats these calls as not worthy of consideration, and therefore, to be ignored in “serious scholarship.” Further, this paper makes clear the ways that philosophy relies upon ableism through what Peter Railton calls the “cult…Read more
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156Disability as a Cultural ProblemEidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 5 (4): 39-61. 2021.This paper aims to reframe disability through John Dewey’s transactional theory of culture to indicate how disability is not located in the biological organization of the individual nor in the organization of culture, but in the transactions between the two. This paper will apply Dewey’s theory of culture to disability studies and philosophy of disability and then to ADHD to make clear the benefits of a transactional model of disability.
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95Striking Beauty: A Philosophical Look at the Asian Martial Arts by Barry AllenPhilosophy East and West 68 (1): 304-306. 2017.Striking Beauty: A Philosophical Look at the Asian Martial Arts by Barry Allen is the first English-language book to engage in a systematic investigation of the philosophical underpinnings of the Asian martial arts. In doing so, it aims to construct the Asian martial arts, specifically the Chinese martial traditions, as a field for comparative philosophy, wherein the investigation of Chinese philosophy through the martial traditions can provide illumination into Western questions of aesthetics, …Read more
Johnathan Flowers
Southern Illinois University - Carbondale
Worcester State University
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Worcester State UniversityAssistant Professor
Areas of Specialization
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Areas of Interest
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