The latest edition of philoSOPHIA is available now. This double edition includes: essays on memory, retrospection, speculative realism, understanding diaspora through film, creative pieces, more.
Read online: https://t.co/ODBounPz7i
Weaving theory with poetic style, history with affect, and retrospection, the sections "Memoirs," "Responses," and "On: Us Among Us" offer looks into diverse topics from friendship, collective histories, and art installations.
Available online: https://t.co/ODBounPz7i
Rounding up the TranScripts section on Soyoung Kim's exile trilogy, Ran Ma considers the process of contributing to an archive while examining it. Read "Retro toward an Affective Archive," available online: https://t.co/ohJO4To8IQ
In the TranScripts section on Soyoung Kim's Exile Trilogy, Earl Jackson considers the role of memory, mourning, and balances a distance from the project while recounting their own memories with the project.
Available online: https://t.co/R2KNtjMu1W
In the latest TranScripts section, "Focus: On Soyoung Kim’s Exile
Trilogy," Hye Young Kim writes about the "Analysis of Dasein in Kim Alex’s Story."
Read her article and the TranScripts section, here: https://t.co/Jy57YTm3cA
Arina Rotaru's "The Retrospective Glance in Soyoung Kim’s Exile Trilogy" uses theoretical perspectives from memory studies to understand issues around representation and "historical forgetting." Read the article, available online: https://t.co/j9nbGcWw7C
Hunmi Lee writes about post-cold war memories, North Korea, exile, and diaspora in recent documentary films. Read her article in the latest edition of philoSOPHIA, here: https://t.co/iwLPVwvUzr
Caio Yurgel's "Clarice Lispector: A Retro Ethics of Errors," looks at the Daoist roots of one of Brazil's most notable writers.
Read her article, available online: https://t.co/pdbo2l68K4
Elisabeth Paquette writes in the latest edition of philoSOPHIA about "the lesbian" in second-wave feminist Monique Wittig's writings.
Read about the potential of Wittig's categories for theorizing, here: https://t.co/4r6sk6scai
Marie Draz writes about "María Lugones’s account of the colonial/modern
gender system" to discuss the role of sex in the rollback of trans rights in the United States. Read her article: https://t.co/J6KPsXpybU
Sara Ishii's article on Gloria Anzaldúa's creative works "offer ways to challenge problematic human/nonhuman relations and bridge philosophical divides within the speculative turn." Read her article, available online: https://t.co/PTrTKwz3sd
In their introductory note, editors @AlysonCole18 and Kyoo Lee write about the through line of a retrospective approach that ties together essays on speculative realism, second wave feminism, and memory studies in the latest edition of philoSOPHIA.
Read: https://t.co/Mtc6hEsIxo
The latest (double) edition of philoSOPHIA is out now. We will be promoting essays, book reviews, and creative works from volume 11 in the coming days, so be on the look out!
Available online: https://t.co/ODBounPz7i
@AlysonCole18@SUNYPress
Margarita Rosa reviews Alys Eve Weinbaum's The Afterlife of Reproductive Slavery: Biocapitalism and Black Feminism's Philosophy of History, and a book by Camisha A Russell, The Assisted Reproduction of Rape.
Read here--> https://t.co/UnMhVNfY4L
In 10.2, Jonathan Sinnreich reviews Corine Pelluchon’s book Nourishment—A Philosophy of the Political Body.
“What is necessary, according to Pelluchon, to advance beyond the current political stasis, is nothing less than a radical new ontology.“
-- > https://t.co/RnrMVyB24C
Don’t miss @RobsonConLaw’s essay “Epistemology of the Envelope.”
This creative essay explores the retro practice of letters-in-envelopes in the context of epistemology, especially interrogating how knowledge is situated in time and in gender
--> https://t.co/jRMCzYX5u4
In our latest issue, @NicaSiegel reviews @bonnie_honig’s Public Things: Democracy in Disrepair.
"In Public Things...Honig takes up the permanent entanglement of even the most improbable forms of action with political worldliness."
--> https://t.co/BXz2cfE9Bl