...has its definite opinions about nature. Early ecofeminist Karen Warren emphasized the similarities between the patriarchal treatment of nature and the patriarchal treatment of women; she argues that patriarchal modes...
...most helpful is “Best Practices for Conducting Risky Research” by Alice E. Marwick, Lindsay Blackwell, and Katherine Lo. Karen Frost-Arnold’s presentation from the 2015 APA session on “Navigating the Perils...
Photo of Karen Warren by Meghan Poort When Karen Warren died last year, friends and colleagues agreed that we had lost a compassionate, bold, and radical scholar, an award-winning teacher,...
...its complexities in light of a person’s identity and sense of self, with Brontë’s Jane Eyre. Karen Stohr’s use of a quotation from Jane Austen’s Emma, “Emma sat down to...
...way. The author’s edited volume with typo. Let me conclude with one final reflection. A few years ago, Karen Green and myself published a book, A History of Women’s Political...
...philosophical community, but recently it has experienced a revival in the work of Rahel Jaeggi, Deborah Cook, and Karen Ng. Analytic philosophers have taken up the concept of ideology and the practice of...
...am on the side of Karen Barad and Mel Chen, who have explicitly (although usually in footnotes) rejected any form of vitalism in their versions of new materialism. Time, like...
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...
...should involve literally looking away. Using Marilyn Frye’s distinction between arrogant and loving attention, Karen Warren wrote about the importance of humans moving away from an arrogant to a loving...