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www.talkingpoliticspodcast.com | ||
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www.philosophytalk.org
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| | | | Anna Julia Cooper was born into slavery but became only the fourth African-American in history to earn a PhD. She lived into the 1960s, witnessing Reconstruction, Jim Crow, and the Civil Rights movement. Her book "A Voice from the South" influenced later thinkers like Frederick Douglass and W.E.B. Du Bois. | |
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polarjournal.org
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| | | | APLA invites members and the public to a livestream event on Tuesday, February 25, 2025, from 5-7 PM Eastern Standard Time. Silky Shah (Detention Watch Network), Georgina Ramsay (University of Delaware), Bridget Haas (Case Western Reserve University), and Naomi Paik (University of Illinois Chicago) will discuss the politics of immigration and what to expect in... | |
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im1776.com
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| | | | Throughout his intellectual career, the French philosopher Michel Foucault pursued two goals: a critique of the Enlightenment, and a 'return' to the Greeks. These two projects, or rather two faces of his life's work of which the thought of Immanuel Kant seemed to him to be the clearest expression, were understood by Foucault's sharpest observers on the left, such as Jurgen Habermas, as a new form of conservatism, following in the wake of Nietzsche and Heidegger, Foucault's chief philosophical inspirations. | |
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dissidentvoice.org
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| | Faramarz Farbod: You have taught at Princeton University for four decades; you were the UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territories in Israel (2008-2014); and you are the author of numerous books about global issues and international law. In preparation for this conversation, I have been reading your autobiography, Public Intellectual: |