Ann V. Murphy Fordham University Department of Philosophy Office: 718-817-3321 441 East Fordham Road Fax: 718-817-3300 Bronx, New York 10458 [email protected] APPOINTMENTS • 2012-present. Associate Professor of Philosophy (with tenure). Fordham University • 2006- Present. Assistant Professor of Philosophy. Fordham University. • 2003-2006. New South Global Postdoctoral Fellow. School of Philosophy. University of New South Wales. Sydney, Australia. • 2002-2003. Visiting Assistant Professor. Mount Holyoke College. South Hadley, MA. EDUCATION • Ph.D. Philosophy. University of Memphis. Memphis, TN. 2002. • B.A. Philosophy. Grinnell College. Grinnell, IA. 1996. AREAS OF RESEARCH Areas of Specialization: Feminist Theory, 20th Century Continental Philosophy, Social and Political Philosophy (especially philosophies of violence and non-violence) Areas of Competence: Phenomenology, Ethics, Philosophy of Race PUBLICATIONS Book Violence and the Philosophical Imaginary. SUNY Series in Gender Theory. (2012) Journal Articles & Book Chapters 1. “Corporeal Vulnerability and the New Humanism” in Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy. Special Issue on the Ethics of Embodiment. Eds. Debra Bergoffen and Gail Weiss. Volume 26, No.3. 2011. 2. “’Violence is Not an Evil:’ Ambiguity and Violence in Simone de Beauvoir’s Early Philosophical Writings” in philoSOPHIA: a journal of continental feminism. Volume 1, no.1. 2010. 3. “’All Things Considered:’ Sensibility and Ethics in the Later Merleau-Ponty and Derrida” in Continental Philosophy Review. Volume 42. No. 4. 2010. 4. “The Remainder: Between Symbolic and Material Violence” in Philosophy and the Return of Violence: Studies from this Widening Gyre. Eds. Christopher Yates and Nathan Eckstrand. Continuum Press. 2011. 5. “Ambiguity and Precarious Life: Tracing Beauvoir’s Legacy in the Work of Judith Butler” in Simone de Beauvoir Engages The Philosophers: Essays on Beauvoir's Dialogue with Western Thought. Eds. Shannon Mussett and William Wilkerson. SUNY Press. Forthcoming 2012. 6. “Apology and Forgiveness,” for A Companion to Derrida. Blackwell. Forthcoming. 7. “Critique, Power and Ontological Violence” in Between Levinas and Heidegger. Eds. John Drabinski and Eric Nelson. Albany: SUNY Press. Forthcoming. 8. “Reality Check: Rethinking the Ethics of Vulnerability” in Theorizing Sexual Violence, Eds. Victoria Grace and Renee Hemberle. Routledge Press. 2009. 9. “Feminism and Race Theory” in Merleau-Ponty: Basic Concepts. Eds. Rosalyn Diprose and Jack Reynolds. Acumen Press, 2008. 10. “Sexuality” in The Blackwell Companion to Phenomenology and Existentialism. Eds. Mark Wrathall and Herbert Dreyfus. Blackwell. 2007. 11. “Beyond Performativity and Against Identification: Gender and Technology in Irigaray” in Returning to Irigaray, Eds. Maria Cimitile and Elaine Miller. SUNY Press. SUNY Series in Gender Theory, 2007. 12. “Language in the Flesh: The Politics of Discourse in Merleau-Ponty, Levinas, and Irigaray” in Feminist Interpretations of Merleau-Ponty. Eds. Dorothea Olkowski and Gail Weiss. Penn State Press, 2006. 13. “Between Generosity and Violence: Towards a Revolutionary Politics in the Philosophy of Simone de Beauvoir” in The Philosophy of Simone de Beauvoir. Ed. Margaret Simons. Indiana University Press. 2006. 14. “The Political Significance of Shame” Borderlands: New Spaces in the Humanities. Special Issue on Unassumable Responsibility, ed. C. Mills and F. Jenkins. Volume 3, No. 1. 2004. 15. “Violence and the Denigration of Community: Between Transcendental and Revolutionary Violence in Fanon.” In Philosophy Today, Volume 29, SPEP Supplement 2003. 16. “Strange Company: Foucault and Merleau-Ponty on Phenomenology and its Ethics.” In Chiasmi International: International Trilingual Studies Concerning the Thought of Merleau-Ponty. Issue no. 3. 2002. 17. “The Enigma of the Natural in Luce Irigaray” in Philosophy Today, Volume 45. SPEP Supplement 2001. 2 Introductions & Encyclopedia Articles • “Continental Feminism” (4000 words) in International Encyclopedia of Ethics. Hugh La Follette, ed. Forthcoming. • “Finitude” (1000 words) and “The Double” (1000 words) in The Foucault Lexicon. Ed. Leonard Lawlor and John Nale. Cambridge University Press. Forthcoming. 2011. • “Rethinking the Ethical: An Introduction to Judith Butler’s ‘Sexual Difference as a Question of Ethics: Alterities of the Flesh in Irigaray and Merleau-Ponty’” in Chiasmi International: Tenth Anniversary Edition. 2009. • “Corporeal Feminism” (500 words), “Judith Butler” (750 words), and “Performativity,” (500 words) in Edinburgh Encyclopedia of Continental Philosophy. John Protevi, Ed. Edinburgh University Press. 2007. Translation • Maurizio Ferraris, “Phenomenology and the Messiah.” in Derrida: Critical Assessments. Ed. Zeynep Direk and Leonard Lawlor. Routledge, 2002. Reviews • Gail Weiss, Refiguring the Ordinary (Indiana University Press, 2008), philoSOPHIA: a journal of continental feminism. Forthcoming. • David West, Continental Philosophy (Polity Press) for International Philosophical Quarterly. Forthcoming. • Robin May Schott, ed. Birth, Death, and Femininity: Philosophies of Embodiment (Indiana University Press, 2010) for Notre Dame Philosophical Review. Forthcoming. • John Russon, Bearing Witness to Epiphany (SUNY, 2008), The Owl of Minerva. 41:1-2 (2009-10). • Alan D. Schrift, Twentieth Century French Philosophy: Key Themes and Thinkers (Blackwell, 2006), Continental Philosophy Review. Vol 41. No. 1. 2008. • Rick Parrish, Violence Inevitable (Rowan & Littlefield, 2006), International Philosophical Quarterly. Vol. 48, No. 4. 2008. • Kevin Olson, Reflexive Democracy (MIT Press, 2006), International Philosophical Quarterly, Vol. 48, No. I, Issue 189. 2008. 3 CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS, SEMINARS & COMMENTS Invited participant on book panel honoring Debra Bergoffen’s Contesting the Politics of Genocidal Rape: Affirming the Dignity of the Vulnerable Body. Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy. Rochester, NY. November 2012. Comments on Leonard Lawlor’s “What Happened? What is Going to Happen? An Essay on the Experience of the Event” SPEP Panel. American Philosophical Association. Eastern Division Meeting. Washington, D. C. December 2011. Comments on Shiloh Whitney’s “Affective Orientation and Difference in Merleau-Ponty’s Account of Pure Depth: A New Conception of Intentionality?” American Philosophical Association. Eastern Division Meeting. Washington, D.C. December 2011. “Violent Metaphors in Philosophical Discourse on Materiality.” Invited Paper for a panel on Feminism, Materiality, and Life. Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy. Philadelphia, PA. October 2011. “Images of Violence in Contemporary French Philosophy.” Invited Talk. SUNY Purchase. September 2011. “Critique of Transcendental Violence: Images of Violence and Passivity in Merleau-Ponty’s Descriptions of the Flesh.” 36th Annual International Merleau-Ponty Circle. Concordia College. Moorehead, MN. September 2011. Invited participant, book panel. Gayle Salamon’s Assuming a Body: Transgender and the Rhetorics of Materiality. American Philosophical Association. Pacific Division Meeting. San Diego, CA. April 2011. “The Body and the New Humanism.” Invited paper for an Informational Session on “Ethics of Embodiment.” American Philosophical Association. Eastern Division Meeting. Boston, MA. December 2010. “Precarity and Ontological Altruism: The Body and Contemporary Violence in Cavarero and Butler.” (Single paper with commentator.) Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy. Montreal, Canada. November 2010. Response to Diane Perpich and Beata Stawarska for a symposium on “Contemporary Continental Feminist Theory.” American Philosophical Association. Eastern Division Meeting. New York, NY. December 2009. “Shame and the Philosophical Imaginary.” • Continental Philosophy in the Desert: Inaugural Meeting of the Southwest Seminar in Continental Philosophy. University of New Mexico. Albuquerque, NM. May 2010. • The Australasian Society for Continental Philosophy. Monash University. Melbourne, Australia. November 2009. • Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy. Washington, D.C. October 2009. “The Subject of Politics” Discussion Section Leader. Collegium Phaenomenologicum. Perugia, Italy. July 2009. 4 “Ontological Crime: The New Ontology of Vulnerability.” philoSOPHIA: a feminist society. Fordham University and John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY. New York, NY. May 2009. “Normativity and Violence in the Philosophy of Simone de Beauvoir.” Keynote address. The Philosophical Red Star Line Conference. Universiteit Antwerpen. Antwerp, Belgium. March 2009. “A Violent Act Which is Perception Itself.” The International Merleau-Ponty Circle. Ryerson University. Toronto, Canada. September 2008. “Violence and Ethics: Simone de Beauvoir at her Centenary.” The International Symposium for Phenomenology. Perugia Italy. July 2008. “Simone de Beauvoir’s Ethics of Ambiguity and Contemporary Feminist Thought.” philoSOPHIA: a feminist society. Atlanta, GA. March 2008. “Passivity, Anonymity, Violence.” International Merleau-Ponty Circle. Memphis, TN. September 2007. “The Visible and the Invisible of Identity.” International Association for Philosophy and Literature. Nicosia, Cyprus. June 2007. “Violence and the Philosophical Imaginary.” Inaugural Meeting of the French Feminism Circle. Nashville, TN. May 2007. Comment on Marie-Eve Morin, “The Community of Witnesses: Derrida Inheriting Husserl and Blanchot.” American Philosophical Association. Central
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