•  216
    The philosophical significance of rhythm in the United States has been undermined from both sides of what Adorno and Horkheimer called the ‘dialectic of enlightenment’. When rhythm has not been falsely exalted, promising a fetishised, racialised ‘return’ to the body, it has been devalued through the tainted associations of rhythmic synchronisation with fascist regimes and the demand for compliance. In this article, I engage these issues as they inflect the politics of musical form. Adorno’s noto…Read more
  •  26
    Poe’s experimental fiction revitalizes Hume’s ambivalent empiricism, the complexities of which were sometimes obscured in the philosopher’s nineteenth-century American reception. Poe’s ‘Murders in the Rue Morgue’ broaches formally the question of how one thought leads to another, while ‘The Man that Was Used Up’ stages the question of what grounds the unity of one’s thoughts. Reading both tales together exposes the scope and limits of an associationist paradigm often traced back to Hume. But rea…Read more
  •  24
    "Prufrock" between Acquaintance and Description: Bertrand Russell and T. S. Eliot
    Philosophy and Literature 47 (1): 167-183. 2023.
    Abstract:This article recovers a submerged philosophical debate between Bertrand Russell's theory of descriptions and T. S. Eliot's "Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock." Russell's concern with immediate experience ("acquaintance") underscores a dilemma troubling literary modernism generally and modernist abstraction in particular. In "Prufrock," acquaintance with reality marks an epistemic failure whose social form is the "etherization" gripping the city and everything in it. The conversation betwe…Read more
  • "The Indispensability of Form: A Kantian Approach to Philosophy and Literature"
    In The Cambridge Companion to Philosophy and Literature, ed. R. Lanier Anderson and Karen Zumhagen-Yekplé. forthcoming.
  • "Immanuel Kant"
    The Johns Hopkins Guide to Critical and Cultural Theory, Eds. Cymene Howe, Martin Kreiswirth, Andrew Pendakis and Imre Szeman. forthcoming.