...you reading right now? A Philosophy of Struggle, particularly the essay on dignity therein, by Leonard Harris, who is on my dissertation committee. Teresa Santiago and Michael Walzer on humanitarian...
...Leonard Harris’s insurrectionist ethics. The practice of beginning in place counters the inside/outside framework by grounding one’s philosophical work in space. The second front is epistemic and related to epistemic...
...Leonard Harris. We want to thank all of these scholars for being generous with their time and allowing us to ask difficult and engaging questions. The sheer volume of guest...
...perhaps have swapped out Rancière for a discussion of Leonard Harris’s insurrectionary ethics, leaving the focus on militant antifascism as grounded in opposition to oppression rather than radical egalitarianism. My...
Professor Leonard Harris works in Purdue University’s Department of Philosophy. He is also Chair of the Board of the Philosophy Born of Struggle Association. Tweet...
...it was a gathering of mostly white academics, as he himself was the only Latino, and Leonard Harris was the only African American. He thanked the various past Presidents of...
To view a contributors bio, click Hsiang-Yun Chen Hsiang-Yun Chen is an assistant research fellow at The Institute of European and American Studies (IEAS) at Academia Sinica and works primarily...
...such work possible? This path of making possible what is avowedly impossible—or at least highly improbable—is a task born of what the African American philosopher Leonard Harris calls “philosophy born...
...and proto-existentialist. In this regard, one could consult Broadus Butler, “Frederick Douglass: The Black Philosopher in the United States,” in Leonard Harris’s classic anthology Philosophy Born of Struggle: An Anthology...