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  • Biographies

Emily Beausoleil is a Lecturer of Political Theory at Massey University in New Zealand and Associate Editor of Democratic Theory journal. Her research focuses on challenges of and possibilities for ‘voice’ and receptivity in conditions of profound social difference and inequality. Her work has been published in Political Theory, Contemporary Political Theory, Constellations, Conflict Resolution Quarterly, and Ethics & Global Politics, as well as various books. Emily’s email address is e.beausoleil@massey.ac.nz

Bruno Bosteels is Professor in the Department of Latin American and Iberian Cultures and the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society at Columbia University. He is the author, most recently, of Marx and Freud in Latin America (Verso, 2012) and is currently finishing a new book, Philosophies of Defeat: The Jargon of Finitude (Verso, 2018). Bruno’s email address is bb438@columbia.edu

Don T. Deere is Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Loyola Marymount University. He completed his PhD in the Philosophy department at DePaul University in 2016, where he defended his dissertation, The Invention of Order: Modern Spatial Concepts and the Emergence of the Americas. His research interests include Latin American philosophy, social and political philosophy, and twentieth-century French philosophy. He has published articles on Enrique Dussel, Michel Foucault, and recently the entry “History of Latino/a Philosophy” with Elizabeth Millán in Oxford Bibliographies in Latino Studies (Oxford UP, 2017). He is presently translating Santiago Castro-Gómez’s Tejidos oníricos: Movilidad, capitalismo y biopolítica en Bogotá (1910–1930). Don can be reached at: ddeere@lmu.edu

Nina Hagel is a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in Politics at Bates College. She is working on a book manuscript on the risks and possibilities for authenticity appeals in political discourse and political theory. She can be reached at nhagel@bates.edu

Andrew Lyndon Knighton is Professor of English at California State University, Los Angeles, where he has also served as Bailey Endowed Chair of American Communities. His teaching and research are devoted chiefly to explorations of American literary history, with a particular emphasis on relationships between aesthetics, economics, and [End Page 886] politics. Currently he is working on a book project about the political life and literary legacy of the radical poet Thomas McGrath; initial accounts of this research have recently appeared in the Journal for the Study of Radicalism, North Dakota Quarterly, and the Los Angeles Review of Books. Andrew’s email address is aknight@exchange.calstatela.edu

Fred Lee is Assistant Professor of Political Science and Asian/Asian American Studies at the University of Connecticut, Storrs. He works on contemporary political theory, comparative ethnic studies, and American Political Development. His current book project is entitled Extraordinary Racial Politics: Four Events in the Informal Constitution of the United States. His email is fred.lee@uconn.edu and his website is https://uconn.academia.edu/FredLee

Daniel Loick is Visiting Professor for Critical Social Theory at Goethe-University Frankfurt since April 2017. After receiving his PhD in 2010, he was junior faculty member of the Philosophy Department at Goethe-University, Postdoctoral Fellow at Harvard University, Visiting Professor at Humboldt-University Berlin, and Theodor Heuss Lecturer at the New School for Social Research in New York. His main research interests are in political, legal and social philosophy, especially Critical Theory and poststructuralism. Among his publications are four books, Kritik der Souveränität (Frankfurt 2012, English translation forthcoming as A Critique of Sovereignty in 2017), Der Missbrauch des Eigentums (Berlin 2016), Anarchismus zur Einführung (Hamburg 2017), and most recently Juridismus. Konturen einer kritischen Theorie des Rechts (Berlin 2017, forthcoming). Daniel can be reached at loick@em.uni-frankfurt.de

Ivan Manokha is Departmental Lecturer in International Political Economy at the Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford. He is currently working on power and obedience in the late-modern political economy, particularly in the context of the development of new technologies of mass surveillance. Ivan can be reached at ivan.manokha@qeh.ox.ac.uk

Robyn Marasco is Associate Professor of Political Science at Hunter College, CUNY, where she teaches the history of political thought, critical theory, and feminist theory. Her first book is The Highway of Despair: Critical Theory...

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