My research interests include feminist, queer and anti-racist phenomenology, epistemology of ignorance, and disability studies to reimagine the bodymind and the mind/body relation as a way to reorganize the material conditions of possibility for thinking otherwise.
I completed a PhD at New York University, where I studied the philosophy of Latin American women and non-binary femme thinkers from South America who theorized embodiment, fear, and desire as categories to question modern theories of political subjectivity and the authoritarian dimension of the body/mind divide.
I completed my licenciatura in Philosophy at the University of Bue…
My research interests include feminist, queer and anti-racist phenomenology, epistemology of ignorance, and disability studies to reimagine the bodymind and the mind/body relation as a way to reorganize the material conditions of possibility for thinking otherwise.
I completed a PhD at New York University, where I studied the philosophy of Latin American women and non-binary femme thinkers from South America who theorized embodiment, fear, and desire as categories to question modern theories of political subjectivity and the authoritarian dimension of the body/mind divide.
I completed my licenciatura in Philosophy at the University of Buenos Aires, defending a thesis about temporality and the logic of creativity and novel ideas in the works of Deleuze through his reading of Kant, Bergson, and Foucault. Even though I had specialized in logic and had been mostly writing about Frege and Quine before that, at some point I was intrigued by how to get out of a logic or how to allow a logic to change, which led me to embrace the messiness of phenomenology and literature. Both literature and contemporary neurobiology as well as disability studies and queer theory inform my thinking about epistemology and embodiment. My most recent research is on comics and how we process images to construct narratives about our embodied relation to the world.