2017–2018 Political Theory Workshop Schedule
The 2017–2018 Political Theory Workshop was organized by co-chairs Christina Lo Tempio and Shaul Notkin
Fall 2017
- Rhiannon Auriemma, “Lies My Feminism Told Me: Frantz Fanon and Decolonized Feminism”
Discussed by Julia Brown - Tristan Bradshaw, “Utility’s Politics, An Historical Reconstruction”
Discussed by Javier Burdman - Practice Job Talk
Giuseppe Cumella, “Aristotle on Political Activity” - Alan Kellner, “States of Nature in the Doctrine of Right“
Discussed by Tom Dabrowski
Published in 2020 in Political Research Quarterly 73 (3). - Tom Dabrowski, “Power & Choice: The Narrative Construction of Politics”
Discussed by Kyle Jones
Winter 2018
- Emre Gercek, “Revisiting Tocqueville’s ‘Equality of Conditions'”
Discussed by Noah Stengl - Boris Litvin, “Biography’s ‘Uncertain, Flickering, and often Weak Light’: Arendt on Action, Audience, and Authorship”
Discussed by Lucien Ferguson - Lucien Ferguson, “Amor Mundi: Contestations at the Heart of Hannah Arendt’s Political Theory”
Discussed by Boris Litvin - Arturo Chang, “Motivated Force and the Imaginative Enterprise of Power Politics: Binding Realism and Utopia through E.H. Carr and Hannah Arendt”
Discussed by Andrew Day - Owen Brown, “Practising the Imperial Order: Alain Locke and the Theory of Race Practice”
Discussed by Arturo Chang - Nathalia Justo, “Autobiographies as Political Theory: Self-healing and Modern Subjectivity in Mill and Nietzsche”
Discussed by Boris Litvin
Spring 2018
- Alan Kellner, “Reading Conflict of the Faculties Politically: A ‘More Creative Exposition’ of Kant’s Argument”
Discussed by Gent Carrabregu
Published in 2022 in The Review of Politics - Julia Brown, “‘All over Socinianized’: Locke and the Accusation of Socinianism”
Discussed by Andrew Day - Noah Stengl, “John Locke, the ‘Appeal to Heaven’, and the Ghost of Jephthah’s Daughter”
Discussed by Julia Brown