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  • Contributors

Paul Apostolidis is Assistant Professor in the Department of Politics at Whitman College. He is the author of Stations of the Cross: Adorno and Christian Right Radio, co-editor of Public Affairs: Politics in the Age of Sex Scandals, and author of several articles on critical theory, U.S. political culture, and the Christian right. He can be reached at apostopc@whitman.edu.

Etienne Balibar is Emeritus Professor of Political Philosophy, University of Nanterre, and Professor of Critical Theory, University of California, Irvine. He is the author of Reading Capital (with Louis Althusser, 1971); Race, Nation, Class. Ambiguous Identities (with Immanuel Wallerstein, 1991); Spinoza and Politics (1998); Politics and the Other Scene (2002).

William Chaloupka is Professor and Chair of the department of political science at Colorado State University. He teaches political theory, environmental thought and politics, and American politics. His most recent book was Everybody Knows: Cynicism in America. From 1999 through 2004 he served as Co-editor of Theory & Event. He can be reached at williamc@colostate.edu.

Jean-Philippe Deranty is an associate lecturer at Macquarie University (Sydney, Australia), where he teaches French and German philosophy. He is the author of Droit naturel et science de l’Etat, a presentation and translation into French of Hegel’s 1817 lectures on the philosophy of right.

Michael Dillon is Professor of Politics at Lancaster University, England. Author of Politics of Security: Towards a Political Philosophy of Continental Thought (Routledge, 1996), he is international editor of a political theory monograph series entitled Taking on the Political published by the Edinburgh and New York University Presses.

Filip Kovacevic is a scholar of contemporary critical theory. In 2003-2004, he will be a visiting faculty fellow at Smolny College, St. Petersburg State University, Russia. His most recent work on Lacanian political theory will appear in the December issue of Angelaki: Journal of Theoretical Humanities. He can be reached at fk1917@yahoo.com.

Kirstie M. McClure teaches political theory at UCLA, where she is associated with the departments of Political Science and English. Her most recent book is Judging Rights: Lockean Politics and the Limits of Consent, published by Cornell University Press. Her email address is: kmmac@ucla.edu

Aamir R. Mufti is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at UCLA. A book, Enlightenment in the Colony: The Jewish Question and Dilemmas in Postcolonial Culture is forthcoming from Princeton, and a co-edited volume, Dangerous Liaisons: Gender, Nation, and Postcolonial Perspectives, appeared from Minnesota in 1997. He has long been a member of the editorial collective of Social Text and is now also affiliated with boundary2. He can be reached at mufti@humnet.ucla.edu.

Davide Panagia is Canada Research Chair in Cultural Studies at Trent University (Peterborough, Canada) where he teaches aesthetics and politics. His forthcoming book, “The Poetics of Political Thinking” (Duke Univ. Press) inquires into contemporary accounts of the nature of political argument from the perspective of modern political and aesthetic thought. Currently he is finishing a second book manuscript, a genealogy of political reflection that examines the modes by which individuals constitute themselves as subject of perception through sensation. He may be contacted at: http://www.trentu.ca/culturalstudies/faculty_panag.htm.

Paul Patton teaches philosophy at The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. He co-edited Between Derrida and Deleuze, (2003). He can be reached at prp@unsw.edu.au.

Jacques Rancière is professor of aesthetics at the University of Paris VIII (St.-Denis). He is the author of numerous books including: Dis-agreement: Politics and Philosophy (1998), On the Shores of Politics (1995), and The Names of History (1994).

Paul Saurette is an Assistant Professor in Political Science at the University of Ottawa, Canada. He is currently revising a book manuscript entitled Challenging the Kantian Imperative: Common Sense Recognition and the Politics of Affective Cultivation. He can be reached at saurette@uottawa.ca.

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