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47Tired of Life? Michel Henry on Fatigue and Political CrisisAngelaki 31 (2): 106-122. 2026.This paper examines the socio-political implications of Michel Henry’s phenomenology of life as immanent affectivity, in which life experiences itself from within and can grow weary from its own intrinsic movement. I argue that this form of tiredness has both destructive and emancipatory social and political consequences. First, it generates conditions for self-destructive politics. I draw on Henry’s phenomenological study of political and economic structures – democracy, totalitarianism, capita…Read more
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On the Liberatory Potential of Play: Winnicott, Adorno, and the Revival of ExperienceAngelaki: Journal of the Theoretical Humanities. forthcoming.
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13Pathos and Praxis: An Integrated Phenomenology of Life (review)The Review of Metaphysics 79 (3): 667-669. 2026.
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103Restoring the Value of Nature: Michel Henry's Eco-Phenomenology of LifeStudia Phaenomenologica 25. 2025.Environmental philosophy in the Western world has shifted between two poles: one in which human beings are regarded as separate from nature, and another in which they are seen as part of it. This paper argues that Michel Henry’s phenomenology of life presents us with a third option that stands outside of these views, one in which nature is experienced as the absolute resistance to the effort of our originary bodily life. As I will try to make plain, this position provides us with another basis f…Read more
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1Mindfulness and Creativity: The Impact of Michel Henry and Otto Rank on PsychoanalysisIn Susi Ferrarello & Christos Hadjioannou (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Phenomenology of Mindfulness, Routledge. 2023.This chapter highlights the impact of the work of French phenomenologist Michel Henry and Austrian psychoanalyst Otto Rank on psychoanalysis. I contend that Henry and Rank clarify the nature and role of mindfulness and creativity in psychoanalysis. To begin, I draw out the implications of Henry’s critique of Freudian psychoanalysis. In my view, Henry’s work reveals and untangles basic inconsistencies in Freud’s views on the unconscious, affective layer of the subject’s life, and establishes t…Read more
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46Turning the Natural World into a Moral World: Michel Henry on the Vocation of LifeHuman Studies 47 (2): 349-365. 2024.It has been widely argued that Michel Henry dismisses the importance of the subject’s worldly and intentional mode of existence in his account of the well-being of life. However, through a careful analysis of Henry’s theory of life and his study of culture and barbarism, I will demonstrate that the prevailing position on this point is both correct and incorrect: (i) correct in that absolute life does not require a moral transformation of the world; and (ii) incorrect inasmuch as Henry’s philosop…Read more
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66Revolutionizing Labor: Marx and Michel Henry on the Power of PraxisRevista Portuguesa de Filosofia 80 (1-2): 377-398. 2024.This paper will address the concept of labor through a study of Karl Marx and Michel Henry. While Henry claims to uncover, against the tradition of Marxism itself, the truth of Marx’s philosophical conception of the human being as a laborer within a social context, I will argue that both Marx and Marxism (i.e., Étienne Balibar) can help rectify certain shortcomings in Henry’s view of the matter. Toward this end, I will begin by laying out Henry’s account of Marx’s theory of labor and demonstrate…Read more
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84Transforming Artistic Practice: Collingwood, Adorno, and the Diseases of the MindHuman Affairs: Postdisciplinary Humanities and Social Sciences Quarterly 34 (4): 586-595. 2024.This paper addresses the views of R.G. Collingwood and Theodor Adorno on the role of amusement and art in what each of them saw as the crisis of contemporary Western civilization. We will begin by showing how the aesthetic theories of Collingwood and Adorno develop out of their shared concerns about the harmful effects of amusement and bad art on the consciousness of human beings. We will argue that a productive dialogue between these two figures clarifies that the value of art consists in its a…Read more
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67Art Education and the World of Life: Michel Henry on the Cultural Value of ArtHorizon: Studies in Phenomenology 13 (2): 314-331. 2024.
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The Finite Praxis of Sense: Jean-Luc Nancy and Claire Denis on the Play of Intrusion and LoveIn Kamil Lipiński & Zsolt Gyenge (eds.), Sensitive Aesthetics of Jean-Luc Nancy and Moving Images, Edinburgh University Press. forthcoming.
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To Desire Time: Levinas and the Ethical Character of MotivationIn Christos Hadjioannou, Peter Antich & Nikos Soueltzis (eds.), Motivation and Time in Phenomenology, Routledge. forthcoming.
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109Turning the Natural World into a Moral World: Michel Henry on the Vocation of LifeHuman Studies: A Journal for Philosophy and the Social Sciences 1-17. 2023.It has been widely argued that Michel Henry dismisses the importance of the subject's worldly and intentional mode of existence in his account of the well-being of life. However, through a careful analysis of Henry's theory of life and his study of culture and barbarism, I will demonstrate that the prevailing position on this point is both correct and incorrect: (i) correct in that absolute life does not require a moral transformation of the world; and (ii) incorrect inasmuch as Henry's philosop…Read more
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15The Eco-Imagination of Life: Toward a Material Eco-PhenomenologyAnalecta Husserliana 127 203-216. 2025.This work engages with Michel Henry’s phenomenological account of the imagination and its ability to further our understanding of the relation between human life and the natural world. I argue that Henry’s account of the imagination does in fact harbour the ability to positively contribute to a renewal of our understanding of the relation between human life and the natural world. It does so, for one, by showing how the forgetting of life’s imagination plays a significant role in opening the way …Read more
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66Searching for a Life beyond Law: Agamben, Henry, and a Coming ChristianityReligions 14 (2): 1-16. 2023.This paper addresses the claim that the social orders of Western civilization operate on the basis of the law’s presumed sovereignty over life. I demonstrate how the respective works of Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben and French phenomenologist Michel Henry are joined in their concern over this issue, and in their shared belief that life can be made sovereign over the law through a communal life based upon habit. At the same time, I argue that their respective conceptions of this communal li…Read more
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Renewing the Erotic Relation: Michel Henry and The Lover's NightIn Andrej Božič (ed.), Thinking Togetherness: Phenomenology and Sociality, Institute Nova Revija For the Humanities. pp. 205-224. 2023.This paper engages in a critical examination of Michel Henry’s (1922-2002) phenomenological study of the erotic relation. I argue that while Henry’s analysis sheds light on the nature of eros and how it might be renewed from the obscene objectivism to which it has largely been reduced in Western society today, his analysis of eros undermines his account of the phenomenological life of the subject as a radically immanent mode of appearing and calls for revision. I contend that it is by acknowle…Read more
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49The Limits of Care in Heidegger: Self-Interest and The Well-Being of the WorldRevista Internacional de Estudios Heideggerianos y Sus Derivas Contemporáneas 4 95-109. 2018.
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75The Dawning Ethics of Aleatory Materialism: A Study of Marx and Michel HenryIn Bryan Smyth & Richard Westerman (eds.), Marxism and Phenomenology: The Dialectical Horizons of Critique, Lexington Books. pp. 193-212. 2021.
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178Bonds of Trust: Thinking the Limits of Reciprocity with Heidegger and Michel HenryStudia Phaenomenologica 19 289-309. 2019.This paper seeks to address whether human life harbours the possibility of a gratuitous or non-reciprocal form of trust. To address this issue, I take up Descartes’ account of the cogito as the essence of all appearing. With his interpretation of Descartes’ account of the cogito as an immanent and affective mode of appearing, I maintain that Henry provides the transcendental foundation for a non-reciprocal form of trust, which the history of Western philosophy has largely covered over by forgett…Read more
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187The Issue of Novelty in Husserl’s Analysis of Absolute Time-Constituting ConsciousnessPhilosophy Today 62 (3): 969-987. 2018.This paper concerns the issue as to whether novelty plays a significant role in Husserl’s analysis of time. To address this matter, I show that horizontal and transverse intentionality constitute absolute consciousness as a process of self-differentiation, which enables the ego to anticipate its own renewal and yet to escape coinciding with this synthesising activity. I then further analyse time-constituting consciousness as a process of self-differentiation through a study of Husserl’s account …Read more
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286The Failure of Life: Michel Henry and The Ethics of IncompletenessSymposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 21 (2): 208-229. 2017.This article addresses the problematic relation between Michel Henry’s phenomenology of life and ethics. More specifically, it asks whether Henry’s account of the self’s transcendental birth in the immanent self-generation of life allows for a sense of individual responsibility. I begin by discussing Henry’s generation of the self and show how the historical essence of the self is structured according to the antinomy of affectivity. I then show how, for Henry, this history of life is full and ye…Read more
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