5 found
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Kristin McCartney [4]Kristin Parcell McCartney [1]
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Kristin McCartney
DePaul University
  1.  86
    What Lies Ahead: Envisioning New Futures for Feminist Philosophy.Kristen Intemann, Emily S. Lee, Kristin McCartney, Shireen Roshanravan & Alexa Schriempf - 2010 - Hypatia 25 (4):927 - 934.
    Thanks in large part to the record of scholarship fostered by Hypatia, feminist philosophers are now positioned not just as critics of the canon, but as innovators advancing uniquely feminist perspectives for theorizing about the world. As relatively junior feminist scholars, the five of us were called upon to provide some reflections on emerging trends in feminist philosophy and to comment on its future. Despite the fact that we come from diverse subfields and philosophical traditions, four common aims emerged in (...)
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  2.  17
    Andrew Valls, Editor, Race and Racism in Modern Philosophy.Kristin McCartney - 2007 - Philosophia Africana 10 (2):183-191.
  3.  52
    Queer Invisibility in the Transatlantic Reproduction of “Race”.Kristin Parcell McCartney - 2008 - International Studies in Philosophy 40 (2):77-91.
  4.  49
    W.E.B. Du Bois and the Sorrow Songs.Kristin McCartney - 2009 - Radical Philosophy Review 12 (1-2):79-86.
    While psychoanalysis credits the entrenchment of systems of subordination to the necessity of socialization and the transmission of dominant values from parent to child, by claiming social symbolics independent of the dominant hegemony, W.E.B. Du Bois calls for resistant forms of identification. Psychoanalyticaccounts of social power relations often assume that the dominant social group produces the only operative social symbolic and that this symbolic is also identical with the nation, but Du Bois’s attention to the slave song allows him to (...)
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  5.  9
    W.E.B. Du Bois and the Sorrow Songs.Kristin McCartney - 2009 - Radical Philosophy Review 12 (1-2):79-86.
    While psychoanalysis credits the entrenchment of systems of subordination to the necessity of socialization and the transmission of dominant values from parent to child, by claiming social symbolics independent of the dominant hegemony, W.E.B. Du Bois calls for resistant forms of identification. Psychoanalyticaccounts of social power relations often assume that the dominant social group produces the only operative social symbolic and that this symbolic is also identical with the nation, but Du Bois’s attention to the slave song allows him to (...)
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