Peter Baehr is Research Professor of Social Theory at Lingnan University, Hong Kong. He writes on European and American social and political thought. Baehr is the editor of The Portable Hannah Arendt (2002), the co-editor (with Philip Walsh) of the Anthem Companion to Hannah Arendt (2016; 2019), and the author of Hannah Arendt, Totalitarianism, and the Social Sciences (2010). His latest book is The Unmasking Style in Social Theory (2019).
James Barry, Jr., is Professor of Philosophy at Indiana University Southeast. He is the author of Measures of Science (1997) and the co-editor of Merleau-Ponty: Texts and Dialogues (1996). He is the editor of the journal Arendt Studies published by the Philosophy Documentation Center. He is the co-founder and a member of the Board of Advisors of the Hannah Arendt Circle. His most recent articles include “The Growth of the Social Realm in Arendt’s Post-Mortem of the Modern Nation-State” and “The Risk of Total Divergence: Politicized Intelligence and Defactualization in the Age of Imminent War.” He is currently completing a book-length study on the legacies of expropriation and the rise of modern poverty at play in Arendt’s work.
Ronald Beiner is Professor of Political Science at the University of Toronto and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. His recent books include Civil Religion: A Dialogue in the History of Political Philosophy (2011), Political Philosophy: What It Is and Why It Matters (2014), and Dangerous Minds: Nietzsche, Heidegger, and the Return of the Far Right (2018). He is also the editor of Hannah Arendt’s Lectures on Kant’s Political Philosophy (1982).
Andrew Benjamin is Distinguished Professor of Architectural Theory at the University of Technology, Sydney (and Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Monash University Melbourne). His recent publications include Towards a Relational Ontology: Philosophy’s Other Possibility (2015), Art’s Philosophical Work (2015), and Virtue in Being (2016).
Roger Berkowitz is the founder and Academic Director of the Hannah Arendt Center and Professor of Political Studies and Human Rights at Bard College. He is the author of The Gift of Science: Leibniz and the Modern Legal Tradition (2005), co-editor of Artifacts of Thinking: Reading Hannah Arendt’s Denktagebuch (2017) and Thinking in Dark Times: Hannah Arendt on Ethics and Politics (2010), and the editor of the journal HA: The Journal of the Hannah Arendt Center.
James Bernauer is the Kraft Family Professor of Philosophy at Boston College. He is the author of Michel Foucault’s Force of Flight: Toward an Ethics for Thought (1990). Among other collections, he is the editor of Amor Mundi: Explorations in the Faith and Thought of Hannah Arendt (1987) and the co-editor (with Robert Maryks) of The Tragic Couple: Encounters between Jews and Jesuits (2013).
Richard Bernstein is an American philosopher who teaches at the New School for Social Research. He has written extensively about a broad array of issues and philosophical traditions including American pragmatism, neopragmatism, critical theory, deconstruction, social philosophy, political philosophy, and hermeneutics. His most recent books include Violence: Thinking without Banisters (2013), Pragmatic Encounters (2016), Ironic Life (2016), and Why Read Hannah Arendt Now? (2018).
Leora Bilsky is the Benno Gitter Chair in Human Rights and Holocaust Research at the Tel Aviv University faculty of law and Director of the Minerva Center for Human Rights. She has served as Editor-in-Chief of the political theory journal Theory and Criticism, and as the editor of law journals Mishpatim, Iyunei Mispat, and Theoretical Inquiries in Law. She is the author of Transformative Justice: Israeli Identity on Trial (2004) and The Holocaust, Corporations, and the Law: Unfinished Business (2017). Her main areas of research are law and the Holocaust, political trials, transitional justice, international criminal law, feminist legal theory, and the relationship between law, history, and memory. Her current research focuses on restitution and cultural genocide.
Peg Birmingham is Professor of Philosophy at DePaul University. She is the author of Hannah Arendt and Human Rights: The Predicament of Common Responsibility (2006) and the co-editor (with Philippe van Haute) of Dissensus Communis: Between Ethics and Politics (1996) and (with Anna Yeatman) of Aporia of Rights: Citizenship in an Era of Human Rights (2014). She is the editor of Philosophy Today.
Robert Burch is Professor Emeritus, Philosophy, University of Alberta. In addition to work on Arendt, he has published articles on hermeneutics, philosophy of education, philosophy of technology, phenomenology, aesthetics, and history of philosophy, including on Merleau-Ponty, Heidegger, Croce, Hegel, and Kant. He co-edited (with Massimo Verdicchio) Between Philosophy and Poetry: Writing, Rhythm, History (2002). In retirement he is working on a translation of the Iliad for fun, and a reading of Kant’s moral philosophy and the primacy practical reason for edification.
Lucy Cane is Visiting Assistant Teaching Professor at the University of Denver, where she teaches political theory and US constitutional law. Her first book, Sheldon Wolin and Democracy: Seeing Through Loss (Routledge) is forthcoming in 2020. She has published in European Journal of Political Theory, Political Theory, New Political Science, The Oxford Handbook of Classics in Contemporary Political Theory, and Oxford Bibliographies Online.
Peter F. Cannavò is Professor of Government and Environmental Studies at Hamilton College in Clinton, New York. He is the author of The Working Landscape: Founding, Preservation, and the Politics of Place (2007), the co-editor (with Joseph Lane) of Engaging Nature: Environmentalism and the Political Theory Canon (2014), and the author of various articles and book chapters on the relationship between environmentalism and civic republicanism. He is currently writing a book on the green civic republican tradition in the United States.
Adriana Cavarero is an Italian philosopher and feminist thinker. She holds the title of Professor of Political Philosophy at the Università degli studi di Verona. She has also held visiting appointments at the University of California, Berkeley, and Santa Barbara, at the New York University and Harvard. She focuses on natality, narration, vocality, embodied subjectivities, and sexual difference. Her books include In Spite of Plato: A Feminist Rewriting of Ancient Philosophy (1995), Relating Narratives: Storytelling and Selfhood (2000), Stately Bodies: Literature, Philosophy and the Question of Gender (2002), For More Than One Voice: Toward a Philosophy of Vocal Expression (2005), Horrorism: Naming Contemporary Violence (2009), and Inclinations: A Critique of Rectitude (2016).
William W. Clohesy is Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at the University of Northern Iowa. He has written extensively on Kant’s ethics and political thought, on the US Constitution, and on Hannah Arendt. Papers delivered at recent International Kant Congresses are “Kant’s Opposition to Lying from Expediency” (2005) and “The Objectivity of the Categorical Imperative in the Foundations” (2015). His essay, “Altruism and the Endurance of the Good,” published in Voluntas (2001), studies the political importance of the independent sector drawing crucially upon Hannah Arendt’s political thought. Clohesy holds a PhD in Philosophy from the New School.
Wout Cornelissen recently held a position as Research Assistant Professor at Vanderbilt University and is currently appointed as Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter in the Institute for Philosophy of the Free University Berlin. He holds a PhD in Philosophy from Leiden University and specializes in political and social philosophy and twentieth-century continental philosophy. His first monograph, a critical interpretation of the relation between political acting and thinking in the writing of Karl Popper, Leo Strauss, and Hannah Arendt, is under contract with Fordham UP. He is co-editing the new and critical edition of Arendt’s The Life of the Mind, as part of the critical edition of her Complete Works, published by Wallstein, Göttingen.
Jeremy Elkins is Associate Professor of Political Science at Bryn Mawr College. He has written on a wide variety of topics, including truth and democracy; sacrifice, identity, and law; constitutional founding; declaration of rights; the model of war as social policy; and law and globalization. His current research draws on psychoanalytic ideas to examine the role of movement and aggression in human desire and the implications for social organization. He is currently an advanced psychoanalytic clinical candidate at the Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia.
Rick Elmore is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Appalachian State University. He earned his PhD in Philosophy from DePaul University in 2012. He researches and teaches on twentieth-century French philosophy, critical theory, ethics, social political philosophy, environmental philosophy, and new realisms. His articles and essays have appeared in Politics & Policy, Symplokē, Symposium, The Cormac McCarthy Journal, Edinburgh Companion to Animal Studies, and The Aesthetic Ground of Critical Theory.
Robert Fine was a British sociologist. He was a leading European scholar on the history of social and political thought, cosmopolitan social theory, the social theory of Karl Marx and Hannah Arendt, the Holocaust and contemporary anti-semitism, crimes against humanity and human rights.
Jennifer Gaffney is an assistant professor of philosophy in the Department of Philosophy at at Loyola University Chicago. Her interests are in social and political philosophy with emphases on continental philosophy, philosophy of race, ethics, and the history of philosophy. Gaffney is the author of Political Loneliness: Modern Liberal Subjects in Hiding (Rowman & Littlefield International, 2020) and has published in such journals as Philosophy and Social Criticism, Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology, and Philosophy Today. She is also the co-founder and associate editor of Arendt Studies: A Journal for Research on the Life, Work, and Legacy of Hannah Arendt.
Samir Gandesha is Associate Professor in the Department of the Humanities and Director of the Institute for the Humanities at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada. His work has appeared in Political Theory, New German Critique, Constellations Logos, Kant-Studien, Philosophy and Social Criticism, the European Legacy, the European Journal of Social Theory, as well as in several edited books. He is the co-editor (with Lars Rensmann) of Arendt and Adorno: Political and Philosophical Investigations (2012), (with Johan Hartle) of Spell of Capital: Reification and Spectacle (2017), and (with Johan Hartle) of Aesthetic Marx (2017). He has been Liu Boming Visiting Scholar in Philosophy at the University of Nanjing and Visiting Lecturer at Suzhou University of Science and Technology in China, Visiting Scholar at the Hochschule für Gestaltung in Karlsruhe, and Visiting Lecturer at the University of São Paulo, and is a Visiting Faculty Member at the Paris Institute for Critical Thinking.
Susannah Gottlieb is Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literary Studies at Northwestern University. She is the author of Regions of Sorrow: Anxiety and Messianism in Hannah Arendt and W.H. Auden (2003) and the editor of Hannah Arendt: Reflections on Literature and Culture (2007). Her forthcoming book is entitled Auden and the Muse of History.
Peter Gratton is Assistant Professor of Philosophy in the Department of History and Political Science at Southeastern Louisiana University, where he specializes in the history of ideas and contemporary European philosophy, and is a board member of the Association for Philosophy and Literature. He is the series co-editor of New Perspectives in Ontology and Textures and has published such works as The State of Sovereignty (2012) and Speculative Realism: Problems and Prospects (2014). The editor of seven books, including co-editing two on Jean-Luc Nancy, he has also published dozens of articles and chapters in such journals as Angelaki, Philosophy Today, and Telos.
Dean Hammer is the John W. Wetzel Professor of Classics and Professor of Government at Franklin and Marshall College (USA). He has written on ancient political thought and Hannah Arendt. His works include Roman Political Thought: From Cicero to Augustine, Roman Political Thought and the Modern Theoretical Imagination, The Iliad as Politics; The Performance of Political Thought, The Puritans in Revolutionary, Federalist, and Whig Political Thought: The Rhetoric of Origins, and an edited volume, A Companion to Greek Democracy and the Roman Republic.
Patrick Hayden is Professor of Political Theory and International Relations at the University of St Andrews, UK. His publications include Political Evil in a Global Age: Hannah Arendt and International Theory (2009), and Hannah Arendt: Key Concepts (2014).
Samantha Rose Hill is the assistant director of the Hannah Arendt Center for Politics and Humanities, visiting assistant professor of Political Studies at Bard College, and associate faculty at the Brooklyn Institute for Social Research in New York City. She is the author of two forthcoming books: Hannah Arendt, a biography, and Hannah Arendt’s Poems. You can find her writing in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Public Seminar, OpenDemocracy, Theory & Event, Contemporary Political Theory, and The South Atlantic Quarterly. For more information please visit her website: www.samantharosehill.com.
Kei Hiruta is Research Fellow in Philosophy at Wolfson College, University of Oxford. He received his DPhil from Oxford, was previously a Fellow at the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs, and is currently a Eurias Fellow at the Paris Institute for Advanced Study (2018–19). He is a co-founder and Associate Editor of Arendt Studies and the editor of Arendt on Freedom, Liberation, and Revolution (Palgrave Macmillan, 2019, forthcoming). He is currently completing a monograph entitled “Berlin’s Bête Noire: Hannah Arendt and Isaiah Berlin on Freedom, Politics, and Humanity.”
Bonnie Honig Bonnie Honig is Nancy Duke Lewis Professor in the departments of Modern Culture and Media (MCM) and Political Science at Brown University. She is author of the Political Theory and the Displacement of Politics (1993), Democracy and the Foreigner (2001), Emergency Politics: Paradox, Law, Democracy (2009), Antigone, Interrupted (2013), and Public Things: Democracy in Disrepair (Thinking Out Loud series, 2017). She is currently finishing a book version of her Flexner Lectures, titled A Feminist Theory of Refusal (forthcoming Harvard, 2021).
Julian Honkasalo is an Academy of Finland postdoctoral research scholar in gender studies, University of Helsinki. Honkasalo obtained their PhD in gender studies at the University of Helsinki in 2016, with a dissertation on feminist interpretations of Hannah Arendt. Honkasalo obtained a second PhD in political science at the New School for Social Research in 2018, with a dissertation on Hannah Arendt and biopolitics. The dissertation was awarded with the New School's Hannah Arendt Award in Politics. Honkasalo's current, postdoctoral research focuses on contemporary offshoots of twentieth-century race hygiene and eugenic discourse from a Foucaultian perspective.
Grayson Hunt is the Associate Director of LGBTQ Studies and lecturer in the Center for Women’s & Gender Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. He received his PhD in philosophy from the New School for Social Research in 2013. He specializes in transgender studies, queer theory, and continental philosophy, especially Arendt and Nietzsche. His work has been published in New Nietzsche Studies, American Dialectic, The Journal of Speculative Philosophy, and Hypatia Reviews Online. Hunt is the editor of the American Philosophical Association Newsletter on Issues in LGBTQ and PhilPapers’ “Feminism: Rape and Sexual Violence” category.
Catherine Kellogg is Professor of Political Science at the University of Alberta. She specializes in contemporary political theory, and is the author of Law’s Trace: From Hegel to Derrida (2010). She has also published numerous articles and book chapters on Arendt, Hegel, Derrida, Malabou, Benjamin, Nancy, and Agamben. Her work has appeared in such journals as Law, Culture and the Humanities, Philosophy & Social Criticism, Law and Critique, Cultural Values, and Theory and Event. Her current project is a book-length study tentatively entitled “Sovereignty and Cruel Treatment.”
Richard H. King is Professor Emeritus of US Intellectual History at the University of Nottingham, UK. He is the editor of Obama and Race: History, Culture, Politics (2012), co-editor of Hannah Arendt and the Uses of History: Imperialism, Race, Nation, Genocide (2007), and the author of Race, Culture, and the Intellectuals, 1940-1970 (2004), among other books.
Vincent Lefebve is Researcher at the Centre de recherche et d’information socio-politiques (CRISP), Brussels. He is also Associate Researcher at the Free University of Brussels and at the Institut des hautes études sur la justice (IHEJ), Paris. In his doctoral dissertation, in the field of legal philosophy, he strived to unveil the legal dimension of Hannah Arendt’s thought. This research received two scientific awards: in 2014, the Alice Seghers Prize of the Free University of Brussels’ Faculty of Law and, in 2015, the Auschwitz Foundation International Prize. A b ook resulting from this PhD thesis was published in 2016. Currently, Vincent Lefebve is conducting his postdoctoral research on representations of judges and justice in films.
David Macauley is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Environmental Studies at Penn State University, Brandywine. He has taught at Oberlin College, Emerson College, and New York University and was a Mellon Fellow at University of Pennsylvania. David is the author of Elemental Philosophy: Earth, Air, Fire, and Water as Environmental Ideas (2010), editor of Minding Nature: The Philosophers of Ecology (1996), and the co-editor of The Seasons: Philosophical and Environmental Perspectives (2011). He has published articles on environmental philosophy, aesthetics, political theory, and Continental thought. He is completing a book entitled “Walking: Philosophical and Environmental Foot Notes.”
Maša Mrovlje is a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Edinburgh, working on the ERC-funded project “Illuminating the Grey Zone.” Her research interests are oriented by the rubric of international political theory and the history of political thought, with a specific focus on twentieth-century philosophies of existence, poststructuralist and critical theories, and their significance to issues of political judgment, responsibility, violence, resistance and transitional justice. In addition, she is interested in the relatively recently emergent field of the ethics and politics of narrative. She is the author of Rethinking Political Judgement: Arendt and Existentialism (2018).
Phillip Nelson is a PhD candidate in Philosophy at Stony Brook University and an American military veteran of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan who served in the active Army from 2003 to 2008. He earned his MA in Philosophy at the University of Oregon in 2013. His work is in political philosophy and phenomenology, with particular interests in responsibility, warfare, embodiment, deconstruction and gender; he has written on Arendt, Merleau-Ponty, and Derrida. His dissertation, “War and Responsibility: A Political Phenomenology,” seeks to define the relation between political responsibility and a state’s engagement in war.
Anne O’Byrne is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Stony Brook University. Her work is in political philosophy and ontology, and engages twentieth-century and contemporary European thinkers on issues of identity, natality, embodiment, education, history, gender, race, and genocide. She is the author of Natality and Finitude (2010) and the co-editor (with Martin Shuster) of Logics of Genocide: The Structures of Violence and the Contemporary World (2020). She has also published various articles and book chapters, and translations of Jean-Luc Nancy’s Being Singular Plural (translated with Robert Richardson, Stanford University Press, 1996) and other works. Her current project is entitled “The Genocide Paradox,” a book that asks why democracies fail to stand up to genocidal violence.
Yasemin Sari is Assistant Professor of Philosophy in the Department of Philosophy and World Religions at the University of Northern Iowa. Sari completed her PhD in Philosophy at the University of Alberta in September 2015. She was a DAAD Postdoctoral Researcher at Goethe University, Frankfurt, in 2016. As a political philosopher, her work mainly focuses on democratic political theory, especially as it relates to human rights, extra-institutional recognition, and the borders between citizen and noncitizen. Her current research takes up the global refugee crisis. She has published in such journals as Philosophy Today, Arendt Studies, and Symposium: The Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy.
Natasha Saunders is Lecturer of International Relations and International Political Theory at the University of St Andrews. Her research sits at the intersection of global politics and political theory, focusing on contemporary political thought as a framework for analyzing global issues, with a particular interest in forced migration, human rights, and citizenship. She is the author of International Political Theory and the Refugee Problem (2017) and has published on the history of refugee protection, on asylum seeker protest movements, and on the political thought of Hannah Arendt and Michel Foucault as they relate to forced migration and political action.
Andrew Schaap is Associate Professor of Political Thought at the University of Exeter's Cornwall campus. Andrew has published articles on Hannah Arendt in Political Studies, European Journal of Political Theory and Political Theory. He is the author of Political Reconciliation (2005) and co-editor (with Danielle Celer and Vrasidas Karalis) of Power, Judgment and Political Evil: In Conversation with Hannah Arendt (2010). Andrew is currently working on a book on Hannah Arendt and Jacques Rancière, provisionally entitled “Civility and Emancipation.”
Eve Seguin is Professor lectures in political theory, political science, and STS, at Université du Québec à Montréal. Her current work mainly focuses on the political organization of modernity, new materialism, political theories of science and technology, and the thought of Bruno Latour, Harold Lasswell, and Hannah Arendt. She has published in such journals as Theory, Culture & Society; Science and Public Policy; Symposium: The Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy; Studies in History and Philosophy of Science; Discourse & Society; Science as Culture; British Journal for the History of Science; Revue française d’administration publique; Politix; Langage et société; Mots. Les langages du politique; Revue française de science politique. She is the editor of Infectious Processes. Knowledge, Discourse, and the Politics of Prions.
Kascha Semonovitch has edited two collections of philosophical essays on phenomenology; her work focuses on early twentieth-century thought, most recently in “Attention and Expression,” in Simone Weil and Continental Philosophy (2018). She holds a doctorate in philosophy from Boston College and an MFA in poetry from Warren Wilson College, and has received fellowships at the MacDowell Colony and the Ucross Foundation. She has taught philosophy at Boston College, Seattle University, and the Hugo House in Seattle.
Cecilia Sjöholm is Professor of Aesthetics at Södertörn University. Her research is particularly focused on the relation between art and politics in contemporary culture. She has published extensively on art, psychoanalysis, and critical theory. Her latest book, Doing Aesthetics with Arendt; How to See Things (2015), looks at the way in which Hannah Arendt’s reflections on art and aesthetics invite us to rethink her political concepts.
Charles E. Snyder is Associate Fellow at Bard College, the Hannah Arendt Center for Politics and Humanities. His research concerns the history of ancient Greek and Roman philosophy, in particular the Socratic revival in the early Hellenistic period and the Academy’s confrontation with the metaphysical foundations of Stoic and Epicurean ethics. In the spring of 2014, Charles earned his PhD in Philosophy from the New School for Social Research. In 2014–15, he was Postdoctoral Fellow at the Hannah Arendt Center and Teaching Fellow at the Bard Prison Initiative. He has served as Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the American University in Bulgaria and as Junior Research Fellow at the University of Hamburg, Maimonides Centre for Advanced Studies, Jewish Skepticism.
Ian Storey is the co-editor (with Roger Berkowitz) of Archives of Thinking and the author of the forthcoming Hungers on Sugar Hill: Hannah Arendt, the New York Poets, and the Remaking of Metropolis, which examines postwar changes in the urban politics of race, class, and representation through the lens of Arendt’s first experiences of the United States. He also produces contemporary adaptations of German theater, including Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny, Antigone des Sophokles, and St. Joan of the Stockyards. Having received his PhD in Political Science from the University of Chicago, Storey’s work centers on urban politics, the politics of aesthetics, and democratic theory.
Dianna Taylor is Professor of Philosophy at John Carroll University in Cleveland, Ohio, USA. Her research focuses on twentieth-century continental philosophy and contemporary feminist philosophy. She is the co-editor of Feminism and the Final Foucault (2004) and Feminist Politics: Identity, Difference, Agency (2007), and is the editor of Michel Foucault: Key Concepts (2010). Her current book project brings into conversation the work of Michel Foucault and contemporary feminist philosophers in order to theorize new ways of conceptualizing and countering the harm of sexual violence against women.
Christian Volk is Professor of Political Science, with a special focus on political theory and law at the Otto-Suhr-Institute of the Free University of Berlin. His research interests include democratic and constitutional theory, critical theory, state theory, transnationalization, and social and political protest movements. He is the author of Arendtian Constitutionalism: Law, Politics, and the Order of Freedom (2015). Some of his other recent publications have appeared in Leiden Journal of International Law; Constellations; Philosophy and Social Criticism; Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie; and Politische Vierteljahresschrift.
Philip Walsh is Associate Professor of Sociology at York University in Toronto. He is the author of Arendt Contra Sociology (Routledge, 2015) and co-editor (with Peter Baehr) of The Anthem Companion to Hannah Arendt (Anthem, 2017), together with several articles addressing the significance of Arendt’s theories for the social sciences. His most recent writings are focused on the links between Arendt’s insights and the sociological theory of her contemporary Norbert Elias.
Tama Weisman is Professor of Philosophy at Dominican University. She is the author of Hannah Arendt and Karl Marx: On Totalitarianism and the Tradition of Western Political Thought. Her most recent work focuses on understanding narratives surrounding environmental technologies in light of neoliberal politics.
Matthew Wester received his PhD from Texas A&M University, where he serves as Lecturer in the Department of Philosophy. His research centers on the importance of judgment to Arendt’s work. His interests are social and political philosophy, nineteenth-century German philosophy, and twentieth-century continental philosophy.
Kerry H. Whiteside is Clair R. McCollough Professor of Government at Franklin & Marshall College. Among his many books, he is the author of Divided Natures: French Contributions to Political Ecology (2002).
Emily Zakin is Professor of Philosophy at Miami University. Her areas of specialization include political philosophy, psychoanalysis, feminist theory, and nineteenth- and twentieth-century continental philosophy. Her current research focuses on the limits and possibilities of political community. She is the co-editor (with Ellen Feder and Mary C. Rawlinson) of Derrida and Feminism: Recasting the Question of Woman (1997) and (with Denise Eileen McCoskey) of Bound by the City: Greek Tragedy, Sexual Difference, and the Formation of the Polis (2009). She was a founding co-editor of philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism, and has published numerous book chapters and articles in journals such as Journal of Speculative Philosophy, The Southern Journal of Philosophy, and Telos.