Interview: Dr. Vincent Lloyd on Black Dignity and the Struggle Against Domination — Epistemic Unruliness 38
Always Already Podcast | A Critical Theory Podcast
by alwaysalreadypodcast@gmail.com (Always Already Podcast), Always Already Podcast
1y ago
We’re back! After a not-so-brief hiatus, we’re excited to bring you a very special and energizing episode. James and Sid talk with Dr. Vincent Lloyd about his latest book, Black Dignity: The Struggle Against Domination. In this lively conversation, your hosts and Vincent explore the new moral and political vocabulary of contemporary Black racial justice. Breaking down barriers between activist and academic knowledge-production, Black Dignity offers a novel and urgent perspective on anti-Black domination, Black love, Black rage, Black futures, Black struggle, and, most importantly, Black dignit ..read more
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Interview: Breea Willingham on Incarceration, Higher Ed, and Abolition – Epistemic Unruliness 37
Always Already Podcast | A Critical Theory Podcast
by alwaysalreadypodcast@gmail.com (Always Already Podcast), Always Already Podcast
2y ago
In this episode, John is joined be his colleague, Dr. Breea Willingham, to discuss her multiple forms of work on higher education in prisons, both within and without academia. Their conversation about the new Journal of Higher Education in Prison, the Jamii Sisterhood, the States of Incarceration Project, and being a Black woman abolitionist in the discipline of Criminal Justice raises several pressing questions: how does one define an academic field that seeks to abolish the need for that very field? How do Black women scholars enact political practices between academic institutions that reje ..read more
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Ep. 72 – Miguel de Beistegui, The Government of Desire
Always Already Podcast | A Critical Theory Podcast
by alwaysalreadypodcast@gmail.com (Always Already Podcast), Always Already Podcast
2y ago
Back from a hiatus in western Massachusetts, B joins John and special guest co-host Alyssa Ruth Mazer to discuss Miguel de Beistegui’s book The Government of Desire: A Genealogy of the Liberal Subject. What is a liberal subject and how does desire open up its discourses and genealogy and governmentalities? Did Beistegui try to out-Foucault…Foucault, the book’s stated intellectual inspiration? The team attempts a reparative reading of the Introduction, Conclusion and Beistegui’s chapters on recognition. But these three self-professed genealogists hit a snag. Critiquing the murky depths of desir ..read more
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Ep. 71 – Jedidiah Purdy, After Nature
Always Already Podcast | A Critical Theory Podcast
by alwaysalreadypodcast@gmail.com (Always Already Podcast), Always Already Podcast
3y ago
In this episode, Emily and John welcome John’s colleague Gary Kroll for a discussion of Jedediah Purdy‘s After Nature: A Politics for the Anthropocene. We map the contours of the book, asking questions about the scope of the argument and both the promises and limits of its framework. Throughout we interrogate the concepts of the Anthropocene, humanism, the posthuman (are they incompatible??), and democracy, and ask what work the environmental imaginary does. In classic Always Already fashion, notions of scientific authority appear along with our favorite questions: what of capitalism, and ..read more
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Ep. 70 – Audra Simpson, Mohawk Interruptus
Always Already Podcast | A Critical Theory Podcast
by alwaysalreadypodcast@gmail.com (Always Already Podcast), Always Already Podcast
3y ago
John is joined by friends-of-the-show Tyler Tully and Danielle Hanley to discuss Audra Simpson‘s Mohawk Interruptus: Political Life Across the Borders of Settler States (Duke UP, 2014). The book — simultaneously a work of political theory, ethnography, and settler colonial studies — thinks with the Kahnawà:ke Mohawks to examine the situated production and assertion of Indigenous political subjectivities, membership(s), sovereignties, knowledges, practices, and much more. We talk through questions of a politics of refusal (and a politics of recognition and governance by settler states), ongoing ..read more
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Interview: Jane Gordon and Drucilla Cornell on Creolizing Rosa Luxemburg — Epistemic Unruliness 36
Always Already Podcast | A Critical Theory Podcast
by alwaysalreadypodcast@gmail.com (Always Already Podcast), Always Already Podcast
3y ago
This episode, Rachel and John have the honor and pleasure of interviewing Dr. Jane Anna Gordon and Dr. Drucilla Cornell about their new edited volume, Creolizing Rosa Luxemburg. Part of the Creolizing the Canon series, this volume examines the political economy and political philosophies of Polish Marxist thinker and revolutionary Rosa Luxemburg, from her work on imperialism and the expanded reproduction of capital, to the violence of fascism, and her theory of primitive accumulation. The volume also considers her reception across the twen ..read more
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Interview: Eric Bayruns García on Race and Epistemic Injustice — Epistemic Unruliness 35
Always Already Podcast | A Critical Theory Podcast
by alwaysalreadypodcast@gmail.com (Always Already Podcast), Always Already Podcast
3y ago
In this episode, Emily and Rachel talk with the inimitable Eric Bayruns García, Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Cal State San Bernardino, about two recent articles. Specializing in philosophy of race, epistemology, and Latin American philosophy, Bayruns García’s writing and teaching addresses racial injustice, colonialism, and epistemologies of ignorance, among other topics. In this episode we discuss two recent articles, “How Racial Injustice Affects News-Based Inferences,” in Episteme, and “Expression-Style Exclusion,” in Social Epistemology. We begin by discussing Bayruns García’s moti ..read more
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Ep. 69 – Dorfman and Mattleart on Disney and Imperialism
Always Already Podcast | A Critical Theory Podcast
by alwaysalreadypodcast@gmail.com (Always Already Podcast), Always Already Podcast
3y ago
In this episode, Emily, James, and John enter the Worrisome World-Making of Disney () via How to Read Donald Duck, a 1971 Chilean Marxist critique of the American imperial-capitalist project of Disney, republished in 2018. Our trio approaches the book in form and content, and they discuss its social opposition through state censorship — whether as literal book-burning under the Pinochet regime or the banal violence of copyright infringement litigation in the United States — as well as praise the clarity of its cultural studies analysis of the Donald Duck comic strip (1938-1995). The ..read more
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Ep. 68 – W.E.B. Du Bois, Darkwater: Voices from Within the Veil
Always Already Podcast | A Critical Theory Podcast
by alwaysalreadypodcast@gmail.com (Always Already Podcast), Always Already Podcast
3y ago
Join Emily, B, Sid, and John for a classic AAP text discussion, this time featuring W.E.B. Du Bois’s Darkwater: Voices From Within the Veil. Our discussion begins (perhaps unsurprisingly!) with knowledge, education, and epistemology, and spans Du Bois’s analysis of racial capitalism, his materialism, aesthetics, canonization as a political theorist, and more. We interrogate Du Bois as a democratic theorist in his own right, analyze his (maybe) humanism and (maybe) universalism, and ask, what does it mean to read DuBois as a prescient diagnostician of our own political moment (and who is t ..read more
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Interview: Jessica Blatt on Race and the Making of American Political Science — Epistemic Unruliness 34
Always Already Podcast | A Critical Theory Podcast
by alwaysalreadypodcast@gmail.com (Always Already Podcast), Always Already Podcast
3y ago
In this episode, John welcomes Jessica Blatt, Associate Professor of Political Science at Marymount Manhattan College, for a conversation about her 2018 book Race and the Making of American Political Science. What was political science’s role in shaping a de-radicalizing ‘race relations’ paradigm? How did the early discipline of political science turned to categories of ‘race’ in a bid for foundation funding and claims to scientific knowledge? What are the pedagogical implications for political scientists today of the book and of this genealogy of racism in the discipline? Tune in to expl ..read more
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