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  • Biographies

Sarah Brouillette is a Professor in the Department of English at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada.

Kirill Chepurin is a Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow. He is the author of Hegel's Philosophical Anthropology (in Russian; SGT Press, 2011). In his current work, he explores the intersections between idealist and romantic thought, modernity, and political theology. He is currently working (with Alex Dubilet) on a reassessment of 19th-century Russian thought through the lens of contemporary philosophical concepts, including immanence, nothingness, and utopia.

Joshua Clover is the author of six books, most recently Riot.Strike.Riot: the New Era of Uprisings, a political economy of social struggles, with recent editions in French, German, Turkish, and Swedish. He is an editor at Commune Editions and Commune magazine, and a professor of english and comparative literature at the University of California Davis. He has collaborated with Aaron Benanav, Jasper Bernes, Sarah Brouillette, Chris Chen, Tim Kreiner, Annie McClanahan, Chris Nealon, Juliana Spahr, Wendy Trevino, and others.

Melinda Cooper is Associate Professor in the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Sydney, Australia. She is the author of Family Values: Between Neoliberalism and the New Social Conservatism (Zone Books, 2017) and coeditor, with Martijn Konings, of the Stanford University Press series, Currencies: New Thinking for Financial Times.

Lisa Disch is Consulting Editor for the journal Contemporary Political Theory and Professor of Political Science at the University of Michigan, where she teaches political theory with a focus on democratic theory, feminist theory, and environmental political thought. She has most recently co-edited, with Mathijs van de Sande and Nadia Urbinati, The Constructivist Turn in Political Representation (Edinburgh UP, 2019) and, with Mary Hawkesworth, The Oxford Handbook of Feminist Theory (Oxford UP, 2016). She is currently completing a book manuscript titled Representation as Mobilization: A Realism for Democrats, which is under contract with University of Chicago Press. Lisa can be reached at ldisch@umich.edu.

Stefan Dolgert (sdolgert@brocku.ca) is Associate Professor of Political Science at Brock University, where he writes and teaches on democratic theory, critical animal studies, posthumanism, and ancient Greek political thought. He is currently editing a volume on contemporary posthumanist politics, and is also completing Ichneumenoid Athena, a manuscript on the subaltern tradition of anti-humanist thought in ancient Greece.

Alex Dubilet is a Senior Lecturer in English and Political Science at Vanderbilt University. He is the author of The Self-Emptying Subject: Kenosis and Immanence, Medieval to Modern (Fordham University Press, 2018). He is also a co-translator (with Jessie Hock) of François Laruelle's General Theory of Victims and A Biography of Ordinary Man: On Authorities and Minorities. He is co-editing (with Kirill Chepurin) a volume entitled German Idealism and the Future of Political Theology: Kant to Marx.

Nicholas Huber recently completed a Ph.D. in Literature at Duke University. Other work related to his dissertation, Feedback Exhaust: Money and the Novel at the End of the Contemporary, can be found in Novel: A Forum on Fiction and Open Library of the Humanities. Nick can be contacted at nicholas.huber@duke.edu.

Johanna Isaacson is an Instructor of English at Modesto Junior College and a founding editor of Blind Field journal. She is the author of The Ballerina and the Bull: Anarchist Utopias in the Age of Finance (Repeater, 2016).

Annie McClanahan is an Associate Professor of English at University of California, Irvine and the author of Dead Pledges: Debt, Crisis, and 21st Century Culture (Stanford UP). She is currently working on a project about tipwork, microwork, and automation.

Jayan Nayar is an Associate Professor in Law and Director of the International Development Law and Human Rights LL.M Programme, at the School of Law, University of Warwick, UK. His teaching and research interests are concerned with thinking about the implications of 'anti-colonial' struggles, past and present, on the doing of political-legal philosophy. He is currently working on a manuscript for a book entitled Being Anti-Colonial. Jayan can be reached at r.j.nayar@warwick.ac.uk.

Emily O'Rourke is a PhD candidate in Rhetoric at the...

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