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Linda Martín Alcoff is a Panamanian American philosopher and professor of philosophy at Hunter College, City University of New York. Alcoff specializes in social epistemology , feminist philosophy , philosophy of race , decolonial theory and continental philosophy , especially the work of Michel Foucault . [ 1 ]
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Holly Martin Smith (fl. 2014) Nancy Snow (fl. 2014) Miriam Solomon (fl. 2014) Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (born 1942) Susanne Sreedhar (fl. 2014) Amia Srinivasan (born 1984) Susan Stebbing (1885–1943) W; Edith Stein (1891–1942), pedagogue D1; Isabelle Stengers (born 1949) Kathleen Stock (born 1971) Helene Stöcker (1869–1943), feminist ...
The Stone was the New York Times philosophy series, edited by the Times opinion editor Peter Catapano and moderated by Simon Critchley.It was established in May 2010 as a regular feature of the New York Times opinion section, with the goal of providing argument and commentary informed by or with a focus on philosophy. [1]
Linda Martín Alcoff: United States: 1955 – Philosopher at the City University of New York [123] 1940–1999: Ayaan Hirsi Ali: United States, Netherlands, Somalia, 1969 – Somali-Dutch feminist and atheist activist, writer and politician [124] 1940–1999: Pam Allen: United States: 1943 – A founder of New York Radical Women [125] 1940 ...
At the time, according to Linda Martín Alcoff , president of the Hypatia Inc. board of directors since February 2018, [14] philosophers who wanted to write about gender-related issues were being silenced in a discipline "riven by unabashed bias and vested interest, inflicting its own form of unapologetic mob violence". [15]
In critical race theory, the black–white binary is a paradigm through which racial history is presented as a linear story between White and Black Americans. [1] This binary has largely defined how civil rights legislation is approached in the United States, as African Americans led most of the major racial justice movements that informed civil rights era reformation. [2]
At Brown, Nussbaum's students included philosopher Linda Martín Alcoff and actor and playwright Tim Blake Nelson. [13] In 1987, she gained public attention due to her critique of fellow philosopher Allan Bloom's The Closing of the American Mind. [14] More recent work (Frontiers of Justice) establishes Nussbaum as a theorist of global justice.