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4Not Bearing the Future: The Temporality of Unchosen PregnancyHypatia 1-17. forthcoming.This study offers a phenomenological exploration of unchosen pregnancy as a distinct temporal experience. By bracketing the traditionally dominant concept of pregnancy as culminating in birth, this study unveils the unique temporal contours of early pregnancy, particularly when it is not chosen. Through a critical phenomenology analysis, this study demonstrates how unchosen pregnancy is characterized by extreme temporal disorientation, a heightened experience of multiple temporal layers, and a p…Read more
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69Navigating the intimate unknown: vulnerability as an affective relationNORA 29 (3): 190-202. 2021.This study theorizes vulnerability as a dual affective relation between subjects and their surroundings. I argue that an account of the affective aspects of vulnerability can respond to two challenges related to theories of vulnerability. The first challenge is to offer a critique of vulnerability as an effect of harmful social formations while not assuming an account of vulnerable subjects as living lessened lives. The second challenge is to provide an improved understanding regarding how vulne…Read more
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80Those Who Gather in the Streets. Butler’s Vulnerable Political SubjectsPhilosophy Today 64 (3): 599-616. 2020.This article examines the notion of vulnerable political subjectivity in Judith Butler’s theory of vulnerability. The paper aims to contribute to critical discussions of Butler’s political theory by offering an account of how the ontological, ethical, and political aspects of vulnerability shape political subjectivity in her work. The first part of the paper analyzes the features of vulnerable political subjects. The second part critically assesses to what extent Butler offers an alternative to …Read more
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32Creating Oneself: Agency, Desire and Feminist TransformationsPeter Lang. 2011.The question of individual agency lies at the heart of any political and social theory aiming to analyse the social conditions that shape reality. Drawing mainly on the works of Luce Irigaray, Judith Butler, Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze, this book endeavours to provide an account of agency as a mode of life in which social transformation and personal transformation meet and influence one another.<BR> The book describes the shortcomings of associating agency with resisting social norms or…Read more
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Women in philosophy in Britain: The good news and the bad; Feminist philosophy in IsraelRadical Philosophy 80. 1996.
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168Power, Freedom, and Individuality: Foucault and Sexual DifferenceHuman Studies 28 (1): 1-14. 2005.This paper offers a detailed account of Foucaults ethical and political notion of individuality as presented in his late work, and discusses its relationship to the feminist project of the theory of sexual difference. I argue that Foucaults elaboration of the classical ethos of care for the self opens the way for regarding the I-woman as an ethical, political and aesthetic self-creation. However, it has significant limitations that cannot be ignored. I elaborate on two aspects of Foucaults avoid…Read more
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71Living Politically: An Irigarayan Notion of Agency as a Way of LifeHypatia 28 (3): 469-482. 2013.This paper formulates Luce Irigaray's notion of agency as a political way of life. I argue that agency, within an Irigarayan framework, is both the outcome and the condition of a political life, aimed at creating political transformations. As Irigaray hardly addresses the topic of agency per se, I suggest understanding Irigaray's textual style as implying specific “technologies of self” in the Foucauldian sense, that is, as self-applied social practices that reshape social reality, one's relatio…Read more
Areas of Specialization
1 more
| Continental Feminism |
| Poststructural Feminism |
| Critical Theory, Misc |
| Vulnerability |
| Feminist Ethics |
| Social Ontology |