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65Marine MaterialismAngelaki 30 (1): 13-25. 2025.This paper contributes to the idea of “marine materialism.” Specifically, I argue that the marine drama of the sun moving over the sea sheds light on the human act of knowing as a performative and material process. I do not argue that we should think of the sea as a metaphor, simile, analogy, or metonym for human knowledge. Instead, I want to show that the connection between ontology, epistemology, and the marine drama is a relation of scale. That is, I want to show that the marine drama iterati…Read more
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112Gilles Deleuze and MetaphysicsLexington Books. 2014.This collection examines an aspect of Gilles Deleuze’s thought that has largely been neglected; whether or not Deleuze was a metaphysician. Answering this question may reveal the problematic nature of so-called postmodernism and the critique it leveled at the first philosophy, and it may help readers to better understand philosophy’s fate
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396What is an Assemblage?Substance 46 (1): 21-37. 2017.The concept of assemblage plays a crucial role in the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari. In a 1980 interview with Catherine Clément, Deleuze describes their invention of the concept of the assemblage as the “general logic” at work in A Thousand Plateaus. However, despite its thirty years of influence on political theory, this “general logic of the assemblage” still remains obscured by the fact that Deleuze and Guattari never formalized it as a theory per se, but largely used it ad …Read more
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4Notes on ContributorsIn Nicolae Morar, Thomas Nail & Daniel Warren Smith (eds.), Between Deleuze and Foucault, Edinburgh University. pp. 294-298. 2016.
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10IndexIn Nicolae Morar, Thomas Nail & Daniel Warren Smith (eds.), Between Deleuze and Foucault, Edinburgh University. pp. 299-304. 2016.
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46Introduction: Between Deleuze and FoucaultIn Nicolae Morar, Thomas Nail & Daniel Warren Smith (eds.), Between Deleuze and Foucault, Edinburgh University. pp. 1-8. 2016.
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2393Between Deleuze and Foucault (edited book)Edinburgh University. 2016.Deleuze and Foucault had a long, complicated and productive relationship, in which each was at various times a significant influence on the other. This collection combines 3 original essays by Deleuze and Foucault, in which they respond to each other's work, with 16 critical essays by key contemporary scholars working in the field. The result is a sustained discussion and analysis of the various dimensions of this fascinating relationship, which clarifies the implications of their philosophical …Read more
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881Introduction to Foucault Studies (April 2014), Special Issue on Foucault and DeleuzeFoucault Studies 17 4-10. 2014.
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47Lucretius I: an ontology of motionEUP. 2018.The Most Original and Shocking Interpretation of Lucretius in the Last Forty Years, After centuries of abuse by modern atomists and mechanistic materialists, Thomas Nail argues that it is now time to return to De Rerum Natura from the perspective of a new materialism. Nail shows that some of the most important contributions of Lucretius' poem have been completely overlooked or misunderstood. He reinterprets this classical text as an absolutely contemporary one defined by motion and gives us a ge…Read more
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72We Have Always Been PlanetaryEnvironmental Philosophy 19 (2): 191-202. 2022.This essay shows how a new materialist theory of the Earth side-steps the distinction between the global and the planetary that structures Chakrabarty’s historiography. It advocates for a non-binary-generating approach to our planetary situation grounded in the philosophy of motion.
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29Chapter 2 No Gods! No Masters!: From Ontological to Political AnarchismIn Chantelle Gray Van Heerden & Aragorn Eloff (eds.), Deleuze and Anarchism, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 31-46. 2019.
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1743The Figure of the MigrantStanford University PRess. 2015.This book offers a much-needed new political theory of an old phenomenon. The last decade alone has marked the highest number of migrations in recorded history. Constrained by environmental, economic, and political instability, scores of people are on the move. But other sorts of changes—from global tourism to undocumented labor—have led to the fact that to some extent, we are all becoming migrants. The migrant has become the political figure of our time. Rather than viewing migration as the exc…Read more
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272What is new materialism?Angelaki 24 (6): 111-134. 2019.New materialism is one of the most important emerging trends in the humanities and social sciences, but it is also one of the least understood. This is because, as a term of ongoing contest...
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53The politics of borders: Sovereignty, security, and the citizen after 9/11Contemporary Political Theory 19 (3): 206-209. 2020.
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124A Post-Neoliberal Ecopolitics? Deleuze, Guattari, and ZapatismoPhilosophy Today 54 (2): 179-190. 2010.
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83Returning to Revolution: Deleuze, Guattari and ZapatismoEdinburgh University Press. 2012.Introduction We have to try and think a little about the meaning of revolution. This term is now so broken and worn out, and has been dragged through so many places, that it's necessary to go back to a basic, albeit elementary, definition.
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203The Crossroads of Power: Michel Foucault and the US/Mexico Border WallFoucault Studies 15 110-128. 2013.This paper draws on the work of Michel Foucault in order to analyze the constellation of political strategies and power at the US/Mexico border wall. These strategies, however, are incredibly diverse and often directly antagonistic of one another. Thus, this paper argues that in order to make sense of the seemingly multiple and contradictory political strategies deployed in the operation of the US/Mexico border wall, we have to understand the coexistence and intertwinement of at least three dist…Read more
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44Zapatismo and the Global Origins of OccupyJournal for Cultural and Religious Theory 12 (3): 20-35. 2013.
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233Expression, Immanence and Constructivism: 'Spinozism' and Gilles DeleuzeDeleuze and Guatarri Studies 2 (2): 201-219. 2008.This paper is an attempt to explicate the relationship between Spinozist expressionism and philosophical constructivism in Deleuze's work through the concept of immanent causality. Deleuze finds in Spinoza a philosophy of immanent causality used to solve the problem of the relation between substance, attribute and mode as an expression of substance. But, when he proceeds to take up this notion of immanent causality found in Spinoza in Difference and Repetition, Deleuze instead inverts it into a …Read more
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42Constructivism and the Future Anterior of Radical PoliticsAnarchist Developments in Cultural Studies 1. 2010.
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135Violence at the BordersRadical Philosophy Review 15 (1): 241-257. 2012.This paper argues that borders and violence against migrants no longer takes place exclusively at the geographical space between two sovereign territories. Instead border violence today has become much more normalized and diffused into society itself. An entire privatized industry now capitalizes on the cycle of transporting, incarcerating, hiring, and releasing non-status migrants. Similarly, however, resistance to this violence is also shifting from the older confrontation with sovereignty and…Read more
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151Alain Badiou and the Sans-PapiersAngelaki 20 (4): 109-130. 2015.The rising number of non-status migrants is one of the central political issues of our time. This essay argues that if we want to understand the political and philosophical importance of this phenomenon, the contributions of Alain Badiou, his militant group L'Organisation politique, and the struggle of the sans-papiers movement in France are absolutely crucial. This is the case because, I will argue, Badiou, the OP, and the sans-papiers created a new kind of migrant justice struggle in the mid-1…Read more
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147
Denver, Colorado, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Continental Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| Continental Philosophy |
| European Philosophy |