[Hum_events] Calendar Event: UC T&TSMRG Lect;

cdh at humnet.ucla.edu cdh at humnet.ucla.edu
Thu Jan 6 07:00:13 PST 2005



Coming Events (see below for announcements; see end of message to unsubscribe):

--> Identity Politics: A Defense
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1/11/05 (Tues) 
 Identity Politics: A Defense
 4:30PM until 6:30PM 
 In: 306 Royce Hall

THE UC TRANSNATIONAL AND TRANSCOLONIAL STUDIES MULTICAMPUS 
  RESEARCH GROUP

  Presents

  LINDA ALCOFF

  The debate over identity politics continues to engage 
  political theorists, especially those who are liberal or 
  left-wing. In this paper Professor Alcoff boils down the 
  standing criticisms of identity politics to three issues, 
  concerning separatism, the reification of identities, and 
  the limiting of rationality. She then unpacks the 
  assumptions behind these concerns, and considers whether 
  they meet a test of empirical confirmation or theoretical 
  coherence. She argues they do not.

  Linda Martín Alcoff is Professor of Philosophy and Women's 
  Studies at Syracuse University. She received her Ph.D. at 
  Brown University in 1987. She works primarily in 
  continental philosophy, epistemology, feminist theory, and 
  philosophy of race. Her books include Feminist 
  Epistemologies, co-edited with Elizabeth Potter 
  (Routledge, 1993); Real Knowing: New Versions of the 
  Coherence Theory of Knowledge (Cornell, 1996); 
  Epistemology: The Big Questions (Blackwell: 1998); 
  Thinking From the Underside of History (Rowman and 
  Littlefield, 2000) co-edited with Eduardo Mendieta; 
  Identities (Blackwell 2003) co-edited with Eduardo 
  Mendieta; Singing in the Fire: Stories of Women in 
  Philosophy (Rowman and Littlefield), and is currently co-
  editing with Eva Kittay the Blackwell Guide to Feminist 
  Philosophy. Visible Identities: Race, Gender and the Self 
  is forthcoming with Oxford Press. She is also editing the 
  first series of coursebooks in feminist philosophy with 
  Routledge, with several already under contract. She has 
  written over forty articles on topics concerning Foucault, 
  sexual violence, the politics of knowledge, and gender and 
  race identity.

  This program is free and open to the public. Limited 
  seating is available, but no reservations are required. 
  
 -- submitted by Thi Dao (thidao at humnet.ucla.edu)
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 This event is taken from the Center for Modern & Contemporary Studies Calendar.
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