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  • Contributors

Razvan Amironesei is Postdoctoral Scholar at the University of California, San Diego. His research and teaching interests are in political theory, phenomenology, and bioethics. His work has been published in the Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy, among others. His current research focuses on the concept of nature in the history of philosophy, in particular, Aristotle, Kant, and Merleau-Ponty.

Daniel Colucciello Barber is Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Pace University. He was previously affiliated with the ICI Berlin Institute for Cultural Inquiry. He is the author of Deleuze and the Naming of God: Post-Secularism and the Future of Immanence; and On Diaspora: Christianity, Religion, and Secularity.

Jon Bialecki is a fellow in the School of Social and Political Science at the University of Edinburgh. His academic interests include the anthropology of religion, anthropology of the subject, ontology and temporality, religious language ideology, and religious Transhumanist movements. His work has been published in several edited volumes, as well as in academic journals such as the South Atlantic Quarterly, American Ethnologist, Anthropological Theory and the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute; his ethnographic monograph, A Diagram for Fire: Miracles and Variation in an American Charismatic Movement, was recently published by University of California Press.

Christine Daigle is Professor of Philosophy, Chancellor’s Chair for Research Excellence, Director of the PhD in Interdisciplinary Humanities, and Director of the Posthumanism Research Institute at Brock University. She has authored and edited books and articles on the philosophies of Friedrich Nietzsche, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Simone de Beauvoir. Her current research explores feminist materialism and posthumanist thinking to expand on the insights proposed by existential phenomenologists.

Réal Fillion is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Sudbury, a federated university of Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. His research and teaching interests are in philosophy of history, moral, social and political philosophy and contemporary French [End Page 193] philosophy. He is the author of Multicultural Dynamics and the Ends of History (2008) and Foucault and the Indefinite Work of Freedom (2012), both from University of Ottawa Press.

Béatrice de Montera’s academic background is in biology and ethics. After her work as a research engineer at the National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA), she is now Associate Professor at Lyon Catholic University (UCLy) in France. Her research expertise covers two domains: biological sciences and ethics of science and technology. She is currently responsible for the ethical component of the MetaGenoPolis Project with INRA and industrial partners where she is leading a qualitative research study on the ethical aspects of the research on human microbiota. Illustrating a true multidisciplinary background, she is first author of articles published in well-known scientific and philosophical peer-reviewed journals and books.

Thomas Nail is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Denver. He is the author of Returning to Revolution: Deleuze, Guattari and Zapatismo (Edinburgh University Press, 2012), The Figure of the Migrant (Stanford University Press, 2015), Theory of the Border (Oxford University Press, 2016), and co-editor of Between Deleuze and Foucault (Edinburgh University Press, 2016). His work has appeared in Angelaki, Theory & Event, Philosophy Today, Parrhesia, Deleuze Studies, Foucault Studies, and elsewhere.

Davide Panagia is Associate Professor of Political Science at UCLA. He is a political theorist with multidisciplinary interests across the humanities and social sciences. His work specializes in the relationship between aesthetics and politics, and media cultures. His most recent publications are Ten Theses for an Aesthetics of Politics (Minnesota UP: Forerunners, 2016) and Impressions of Hume: Cinematic Thinking and the Politics of Discontinuity (Rowman and Littlefield, 2013). He is an affiliated researcher in the Digital Cultures Lab at UCLA.

Louis-Étienne Pigeon is Lecturer at Laval University in Québec. His main teaching and research fields include environmental ethics, phenomenology, philosophy of science, sustainable development, and ethics. Over the last years, he has contributed to several peer-reviewed journals, including The American Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics, Studies of New and Emerging Technologies and VertigO. His current research focuses on the relation between politics, ethics and the emerging influence of epigenetic knowledge in public health issues such...

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