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Hypatia 15.3 (2000) 200-202



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Notes On Contributors


Linda Martín Alcoff is Professor of Philosophy, Political Science, and Women's Studies at Syracuse University. Her books include Feminist Epistemologies (1993), co-edited with Elizabeth Potter; Real Knowing: New Versions of the Coherence Theory of Knowledge (1996); Epistemology: The Big Questions (1998); and Thinking From the Underside of History, co-edited with Eduardo Mendieta (forthcoming). Also forthcoming is Visible Identities: Race, Gender and the Self. (lmalcoff@hotmail.com)

Jodi Dean is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, N.Y. She is the author of Solidarity of Strangers (1996) and Aliens in America (1998). She also edited Feminism and the New Democracy (1997). Her new collection, Political Theory and Cultural Studies, will appear in 2000. She is currently working on a book on the ideology of the information age, Publicity's Secret. (jdean@hws.edu)

Xinyan Jiang is an assistant professor in philosophy at Grand Valley State University. She received a B.A. and an M.A. in philosophy from Beijing University (Peking University), and a Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Cincinnati. She has published in History and Philosophy of Logic and Journal of Chinese Philosophy. Her areas of interest include ethics, Chinese philosophy, comparative philosophy, and feminism. (jiangx@gvsu.edu)

María Pía Lara is a Professor of Philosophy at University Autónoma Metropolitana in Mexico City. She is the author of La Democracia como Proyecto de Identidad Etica (1992) and Moral Textures: Feminist Narratives in the Public Sphere (1998), and editor of Rethinking Evil: Postmetaphysical Approaches (forthcoming). She has also written on Habermas, Benhabib, multiculturalism, and globalization. (mpl@xanum.uam.mx)

María Lugones teaches at Binghamton University in both the Philosophy, Interpretation and Culture Program and the Department of Comparative Literature. She is also a popular educator and co-founder of the Escuela Popular Norteña. Her works include "Purity, Impurity and Separation," "The Logic of Pluralist Feminism," "Hard-to-Handle Anger," and "The Discontinuous Passing of the Tortillera/Cachapera from the Barrio, to the Bar, to the Movement," among others.

Eduardo Mendieta is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of San Francisco. He is the editor and translator of Enrique Dussel's The Underside of Modernity. Currently he is writing a book entitled The Geography of Utopia: Modernity's Spatio-Temporal Regimes. (mendietae@usfca.edu)

Amy Mullin is an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Toronto. She is the Coordinator of the Canadian Society of Women in Philosophy. In addition to her interests in feminist art theory and feminist conceptions of community, she publishes on topics in continental and early modern philosophy, and is currently working on feminist interpretations of the thinking that grows out of caring for young children. (mullin@chass.utoronto.ca)

Kelly Oliver is Professor of Philosophy and Women's Studies at SUNY Stony Brook. Her books include Witnessing: Beyond Recognition (2000), Subjectivity Without Subjects: From Abject Fathers to Desiring Mothers (1998), Family Values: Subjects Between Nature and Culture (1997), Womanizing Nietzsche: Philosophy's Relation to "the Feminine" (1995), and Reading Kristeva: Unraveling the Double-Bind (1993). (koliver@sunysb.edu)

Dorothea E. Olkowski is Professor of Philosophy and department Co-Chair at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, where she founded the Program in Women's Studies and served as Director until the fall of 1995. She is the author of Gilles Deleuze and The Ruin of Representation (1999). She is the co-editor, with Constantin V. Boundas, of Gilles Deleuze and the Theatre of Philosophy (1994) and, with James Morley, of Merleau-Ponty, Interiority and Exteriority, Psychic Life and the World (1999). (dolkowski@brain.uccs.edu)

Elizabeth A. Pritchard teaches western religious thought in the religion department at Bowdoin College. She is particularly interested in the intersection of critical theory and religion, with attention to the ways in which religious rhetoric establishes and reinforces various arrangements of power pertaining to gender, race, class, ethnicity, nationality, and religious affiliation. She recently received her doctorate from Harvard University. (epritcha @polar.bowdoin.edu)

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