•  1
    The Didi-Huberman Dictionary (edited book)
    Edinburgh UP. 2023.
    The Didi-Huberman Dictionary is a specialized introduction to the thought of contemporary French philosopher Georges Didi-Huberman, best known for his path-breaking philosophy of image and for his impact on the 'visual turn' in theoretical humanities. With over 150 entries, including 125 main entries, the dictionary is a useful research tool for students coming to Didi-Huberman's work for the first time. Entries range from Theodor Adorno and Anthropology through to Materiality and Memory and on …Read more
  •  14
    Witnessing the Anthropocene
    with Michael Richardson
    Angelaki 28 (4): 3-12. 2023.
    Witnessing the Anthropocene: the task feels both urgent and impossible. How can the human, whether individually or collectively, witness catastrophe at a planetary scale? It is perhaps no surprise...
  •  5
    Witnessing the Anthropocene
    with Michael Richardson
    Angelaki 28 (4): 1-2. 2023.
    This special issue on “Witnessing the Anthropocene” is the second in a two-part endeavour, following the 2022 special issue on “Witnessing After the Human” in Angelaki (vol. 27, no. 2), which toget...
  • The inorganic
    In Sherryl Vint (ed.), After the Human: Culture, Theory and Criticism in the 21st Century, Cambridge University Press. 2020.
  •  12
    The Nocturnal Order of Visuality: Images, Dreams, and Uprisings in Didi-Huberman
    Journal of Continental Philosophy 2 (2): 379-400. 2021.
    Didi-Huberman conceptualizes images as unstable and incongruent events in disagreement with the art historiographic discourses that reduce visuality to the contents of representation. I analyze the link between Freud’s dream-theory and Didi-Huberman’s philosophy of images, focusing on the notion of dreams and images as instance of rising against repression and erasure. Didi-Huberman does not simply “apply” psychoanalysis to disrupt the dominant art historiography; his interpretation of the dream…Read more
  •  17
    Witnessing after the human
    with Michael Richardson
    Angelaki 27 (2): 3-16. 2022.
    What does it mean to witness after the human? The adverbial clause suggests, first, a temporal and a conditional relation to the subject, whereby the act or event of witnessing follows, responds to...
  •  18
    Witnessing after the human
    with Michael Richardson
    Angelaki 27 (2): 1-2. 2022.
    Until recently, the scholarship on witnessing in literature, media, and culture has made the assumption that testimony is produced by and addressed to human subjects. This is evidenced, for example...
  •  14
    Analyses the social imaginary of undoing, repair and return underpinning the international norm of restitution-makingApproaches restitution not just as a legal norm of property return, but as a social imaginary and a cultural-psychoanalytic 'scene' of undoing, repair and returnBrings together philosophic-political, socio-legal and cultural-psychoanalytic approaches to the study of restitutionOutlines a heterogeneous and multifaceted idea of restitution emergent in modernity, and looks at the per…Read more
  •  38
    Michael Haneke’s film The White Ribbon narrates violent attacks that disrupt the cyclical life of a German village in 1913–14. The narrator frames the violence as a study of the origins of fascism: the alleged perpetrators are children, who rebel against the disciplinary powers of patriarchal authority. Coming to maturity during World War I, they will have become the generation of Nazism’s followers. In contrast to psycho-historical readings of The White Ribbon as a cinematic exploration of the …Read more
  •  24
    Memory, Trauma, and History: Essays on Living with the Past (review)
    The European Legacy 19 (1): 137-138. 2014.
  •  20
    The current proliferation of restitutive claims in response to expropriation in armed conflicts occurs at the interstices of humanitarianism and transitional justice. Restitution indicates the expansion of the humanitarian mandate from providing immediate relief to those who have suffered loss, to engaging in remedial, redressive and restorative practices. That intersection between the humanitarian goals and post-conflict justice is one of the signs of ‘new’ forms and ethos of humanitarianism. T…Read more
  •  43
    On Jean Améry: Philosophy of Catastrophe
    with J. M. Bernstein, Roy Ben-Shai, Thomas Brudholm, Arne Grøn, Dennis B. Klein, Kitty J. Millet, Joseph Rosen, Philipa Rothfield, Melanie Steiner Sherwood, Wolfgang Treitler, Aleksandra Ubertowska, Michael Ure, Anna Yeatman, and Markus Zisselsberger
    Lexington Books. 2011.
    This volume offers the first English language collection of academic essays on the post-Holocaust thought of Jean Améry, a Jewish-Austrian-Belgian essayist, journalist and literary author. Comprehensive in scope and multi-disciplinary in orientation, contributors explore central aspects of Améry's philosophical and ethical position, including dignity, responsibility, resentment, and forgiveness
  •  42
    This article intervenes in the project of theorizing the politics of reconciliation and transitional justice with the suggestion that (a) more attention be paid to subjective experiences and discursive sensitivities affected/shaped by the trauma of historical violence and injustice, and that (b) the constitutive as well as potentially subversive working of these experiences and sensitivities be recognized. It focuses specifically on Paul Celan (1920?1970), a Jewish-Romanian-German poet and Holoc…Read more
  •  32
    Han Kang's 2007 novel The Vegetarian, published in English translation in 2015, tells a story of one woman's refusal to eat meat. Yeong-hye's refusal comes from her desire to eschew the intersecting violence of patriarchy and carnism, which gradually reveals an underlying psychosis and drive towards self-attrition. Because of the central motifs of bodily transgression and self-abnegation in the novel, critics have compered Han Kang's Yeong-hye to Frantz Kafka's Gregor Samsa or the hunger artist.…Read more
  •  26
    The Fragility of it All
    with Krzysztof Michalski
    Angelaki 15 (3): 99-108. 2010.
    This article examines the development of Leszek Kolakowski's thought, in the context of changing Polish political landscape; from the early Marxist text, critical of the Catholic Church and its doctrine -- to the late books on Augustine and Pascal and sympathetic analysis of the role of religion in contemporary society. The author attempts to discover a continuity in this development; it may by found, the author argues, in Kolakowski's rationalism, understood first in opposition to religion, but…Read more
  •  18
    (2010). Apocalyptic Writing, Trauma and Community in IMRE Kertész's Fateless. Angelaki: Vol. 15, The Unbearable Charm of Fragility Philosophizing in/on Eastern Europe, pp. 87-98
  •  25
    Climate Change as Experience of Affect
    with Gerda Roelvink
    Angelaki 16 (4). 2011.
    Angelaki, Volume 16, Issue 4, Page 43-57, December 2011
  •  31
    The questions of forgiveness and political justice have recently become intertwined with the “transitional justice” project, the aim of which is the coming to terms with past human rights violations. This article demonstrates that “transitional justice” is less concerned with providing justice than with achieving historical closure, moral redemption, and a “new beginning.” It proposes that justice requires a profound reflection of a political nature by introducing and discussing Jean Améry's con…Read more
  •  46
    Posthumanist perspectives on affect: Framing the field
    with Gerda Roelvink
    Angelaki 20 (3): 1-20. 2015.
    This special issue on posthumanist perspectives on affect seeks to create a platform for thinking about the intersection of, on the one hand, the posthumanist project of radically reconfiguring the meaning of the “human” in light of the critiques of a unified and bounded subjectivity and, on the other, the insights coming from recent scholarship on affect and feeling about the subject, sociality, and connectivity. Posthumanism stands for diverse theoretical positions which together call into que…Read more
  •  24
    Magic Realism in Holocaust Literature: Troping the Traumatic Real
    The European Legacy 19 (2): 285-286. 2014.