Results for 'Namita Bhatnagar'

49 found
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  1.  22
    Smoking as a Job Killer: Reactions to Smokers in Personnel Selection.Nicolas Roulin & Namita Bhatnagar - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 149 (4):959-972.
    Decades of tobacco control initiatives have turned public opinion against cigarette smoking. Smokers, once considered glamorous, are now stigmatized in domains including the workplace. Extant literature lacks scrutiny of smoker stigmatization and devaluation within the job selection process, and mechanisms that lead to such outcomes. Using an experimental design, we empirically examine initial reactions to job applicants’ smoking behaviors within two samples. We show that initial impressions are significantly worse when job applicants smoke versus do not in a store-based context. (...)
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  2.  11
    Subjects that matter: philosophy, feminism, and postcolonial theory.Namita Goswami - 2019 - Albany: SUNY Press, State University of New York Press.
    Argues for postcoloniality as a model for philosophical practice. In this ambitious book, Namita Goswami draws on continental philosophy, postcolonial criticism, critical race theory, and African American and postcolonial feminisms to offer postcoloniality as a model for philosophical practice. Moving among and between texts, traditions, and frameworks, including the work of Gayatri Spivak, Theodor Adorno, Barbara Christian, Paul Gilroy, Neil Lazarus, and Hortense Spillers, among others, she charts a journey that takes us beyond Eurocentrism by understanding postcoloniality as the (...)
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  3.  11
    Spirituality and Corporate Philanthropy in Indian Family Firms: An Exploratory Study.Navneet Bhatnagar, Pramodita Sharma & Kavil Ramachandran - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 163 (4):715-728.
    Family firm philanthropy (FFP) is the donation of resources to support societal betterment in ways meaningful for the controlling family. Family business literature suggests that socioemotional goals of achieving family prominence, harmony, and continuity drive FFP. However, these drivers fail to explain spiritually motivated philanthropic behaviors like anonymous giving by business families. 14 case studies of Indian Hindu business families with a combined FFP exceeding 2 billion INR in 2016–17 reveal spirituality or the moral dimension as an additional important driver (...)
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  4.  19
    Europe as an Other: Postcolonialism and Philosophers of the Future.Namita Goswami - 2014 - Hypatia 29 (1):59-74.
    This essay challenges the reduction of Gayatri Spivak's critique of postcolonial reason to functional and derivative identity politics. Such a reading neutralizes the philosophical nature of Spivak's conceptual contributions. Because Spivak is derided as preaching about subaltern victimhood, this essay discerns what is philosophical about the concept of the subaltern. I focus on Spivak's attempt at a space-clearing gesture that can create the possibility for breaking the frame of Eurocentrism. I argue that for this philosopher of the future, the concept (...)
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  5. Religion' or 'Dharma' : Meaning and motivation primarily in indian context.R. S. Bhatnagar - 2005 - In Ashok Vohra, Arvind Sharma & Mrinal Miri (eds.), Dharma, the categorial imperative. New Delhi: D.K. Printworld.
     
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  6.  15
    The Emergence of the Basic Ethical Concepts in the First Book of the Rig Veda.R. S. Bhatnagar - 1993 - Social Philosophy Today 9:185-194.
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  7.  11
    Gendered Agency in Skilled Migration: The Case of Indian Women in the United States.Namita N. Manohar - 2019 - Gender and Society 33 (6):935-960.
    This article examines how skilled middle-class Tamil women—an Indian regional group—negotiate with gender to strategize immigration to and settlement in the United States by drawing on life-history interviews with 33 first-generation professional women, most of whom entered the United States as family migrants. I find that the women negotiate with gender to configure Tamil Brahminical relations of subordination, thereby asserting their subjectivity through “strident embedded agency” in immigration. In this way, they realize gender non-normative desires for immigration, engage in gender (...)
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  8.  7
    Brāhmaṇa Evaṃ Bauddha Śikshā-Paddhati.Namitā Siṃha (ed.) - 2012 - Pratibhā Prakāśana.
    On ancient Indian education with reference to Brahmanical and Buddhist education system.
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  9.  12
    Mental Imagery as Facilitator to Lexical Learning-Blocked and Random Trials.Bhatnagar Subhash, Zmolek Bridget, Khan Yasmeen, Sheikh Anees & Buckingham Hugh - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  10.  9
    Paradigm shifts in malaria parasite biochemistry and anti‐malarial chemotherapy.Namita Surolia, Satish P. RamachandraRao & Avadhesha Surolia - 2002 - Bioessays 24 (2):192-196.
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  11.  5
    Role of Visuospatial Sketchpad in Second Language Acquisition.Somya Bhatnagar & Pankaj Singh - 2024 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 24 (1-2):35-50.
    In the prior studies, the significance of working memory is linked to language acquisition which helped in understanding these disorders better (Wen, & Li, 2019). However, there is one component that is not being taken into consideration with Second Language Acquisition (SLA) (Choi, 2019). This study collected data from 122 adolescents and young adults (Female = 61, Male = 61) in the age range 15–22 years. Using four subtests of David’s Battery of Differential Abilities (DBDA), measures of VSSP and verbal (...)
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  12.  40
    Raddi, phisaddi, and bekar : Locating spivak’s originary queerness in Salman rushdie’s shame.Namita Goswami - 2021 - Angelaki 26 (5):38-56.
    Spivak refers to “originary queerness” as a concept she cannot yet theorize. If concepts convey and uphold heterogeneous lived experience, then the paradoxical missing-ness of a corresponding “what...
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  13.  22
    The (M)other of All Posts.Namita Goswami - 2013 - Critical Philosophy of Race 1 (1):104-120.
    Paul Gilroy's subtle use of Theodor Adorno in Postcolonial Melancholia misses the opportunity to forge for the postcolonial world a sense of responsibility for the colonial cultures that this postcolonial world helped to create. Gilroy rightly emphasizes the naïveté often associated with attempts to “dwell convivially with difference”. His negatively dialectical reading of the deterministic logics of racial difference brings into view an already present demotic multiculturalism. He neglects, however, how Adorno's conception of negative dialectics can be understood as postcolonial (...)
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  14.  9
    Consumer Sovereignty and the Ethics of Recognition.Kushagra Bhatnagar, Julien Cayla, Delphine Dion & Gregorio Fuschillo - 2024 - Journal of Business Ethics 192 (1):1-19.
    The rising prominence of consumer sovereignty, wherein businesses prioritize customers as kings, presents complex ethical dilemmas. This paper delves into the ethical implications of consumer sovereignty by examining the lack of recognition to which service workers are subjected in their interactions with customers. Applying the sensitizing lens of recognition theory, we investigate how the relational domination inherent in the service industry ultimately results in four main recognition gaps: visibility, status recognition, affective recognition, and capacity recognition gaps. These gaps considerably hinder (...)
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  15.  95
    Whence Muslim Women? A Response to Alia Al-Saji’s “The Racialization of Muslim Veils: A Philosophical Analysis”.Namita Goswami - 2012 - Symposia on Gender, Race, and Philosophy 9 (1):875-902.
  16.  7
    Repairs Are Pending.Namita Goswami - 2023 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 13 (1):124-159.
    This essay responds to the polyphonic and prismatic reflections stemming from Subjects That Matter: Philosophy, Feminism, and Postcolonial Theory (2019), especially as the connective and creative works included in this forum seek holistic, profoundly interdisciplinary, and transcontinental discussions on intersectionality and philosophical practice. I seek vibrant, productive connections between diverse projects by attempting to engage a few salient aspects of these contributions as they intersect with the book’s overall stated aims, primarily because my interlocutors’s work leads out of the book (...)
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  17.  4
    The Nātha philosophy and Ashṭāṅga-yoga.V. S. Bhatnagar - 2012 - New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan.
  18. Philosophy, postcolonialism, african-american feminism, and the race for theory.Namita Goswami - 2008 - Angelaki 13 (2):73 – 91.
  19.  6
    Author and subject index of the Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research, volumes I-X, 1983-1993.R. S. Bhatnagar - 1994 - New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers. Edited by Daya Krishna.
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  20. Primarily in Indian Context.R. S. Bhatnagar - 2005 - In Ashok Vohra, Arvind Sharma & Mrinal Miri (eds.), Dharma, the categorial imperative. New Delhi: D.K. Printworld. pp. 6.
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  21. Yudhishthira's Doubt.R. S. Bhatnagar - 2004 - In Kusuma Jaina (ed.), Foundations of Indian moral thought. Jaipur: Dept. of Philosophy, University of Rajasthan. pp. 11--1.
     
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  22.  85
    Why Race and Gender Still Matter: An Intersectional Approach.Namita Goswami, Maeve M. O'Donovan & Lisa Yount (eds.) - 2014 - London: Pickering & Chatto.
    Intersectionality, the attempt to bring theories on race, gender, disability and sexuality together, has existed for decades as a theoretical framework. The essays in this volume explore how intersectionality can be applied to modern philosophy, as well as looking at other disciplines.
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  23.  30
    Thinking Problems.Namita Goswami - 2012 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 26 (2):189-199.
  24.  18
    Amongst Letters I Am the Vowel A.Namita Goswami - 2019 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 9 (2):20-44.
    This essay conducts a comparative reading of Gayatri Spivak’s discussion of the Hindu epic Mahabharata and Mahasweta Devi’s story “Draupadi.” While scholars have examined Devi’s tribal protagonist Draupadi in conjunction with the high Hindu goddess Draupadi of the epic, I suggest that the former’s viswarupadarshana should be read in contrast to the role of the Mahabharata’s Hindu God Krishna. This comparison shows the feminist and postcolonial import of Devi’s story, as it demonstrates the continuity of caste-based tribal exploitation from antiquity (...)
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  25.  16
    Amongst Letters I Am the Vowel A: Spivak, "Draupadi," and Anagogizing the Political.Namita Goswami - 2019 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 9 (2):20-44.
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  26.  9
    The Empire Sings Back: Aesthetics, Politics, and Postcolonial Whimsy.Namita Goswami - 2009 - Contemporary Aesthetics.
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  27.  50
    Can curative or life-sustaining treatment be withheld or withdrawn? The opinions and views of Indian palliative-care nurses and physicians.Joris Gielen, Sushma Bhatnagar, Seema Mishra, Arvind K. Chaturvedi, Harmala Gupta, Ambika Rajvanshi, Stef Van den Branden & Bert Broeckaert - 2011 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 14 (1):5-18.
    Introduction: Decisions to withdraw or withhold curative or life-sustaining treatment can have a huge impact on the symptoms which the palliative-care team has to control. Palliative-care patients and their relatives may also turn to palliative-care physicians and nurses for advice regarding these treatments. We wanted to assess Indian palliative-care nurses and physicians’ attitudes towards withholding and withdrawal of curative or life-sustaining treatment. Method: From May to September 2008, we interviewed 14 physicians and 13 nurses working in different palliative-care programmes in (...)
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  28.  31
    Metabolic aberrations in fronto-parietal brain regions in recently detoxified alcohol dependent individuals: contribution to impaired abstract reasoning abilities.Bagga Deepika, Singh Namita, Khushu Subash, Kaur Prabhjot, Garg Mohan & Bhattacharya Debajyoti - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  29.  22
    Emergent Synergistic Grasp-Like Behavior in a Visuomotor Joint Action Task: Evidence for Internal Forward Models as Building Blocks of Human Interactions.Lin Lawrence Guo, Namita Patel & Matthias Niemeier - 2019 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 13.
  30.  4
    Schooling for All in India: Can We Neglect the Demand?Santhakumar Velappan Nair, Namita Gupta & Rama Murthy Sripada - 2016 - Oxford University Press India.
    The volume critically analyses the primary drawbacks of the Indian education system-non-enrolment, dropouts, irregular attendance, and inadequate learning. It establishes the need to strongly encourage parents to recognize the importance of education for their children's future. Arguing that supply-side strategies-free education, midday meals, opening more schools-have not proved effective since the problem of inadequate demand is much larger, the authors delineate the measures that are required to boost the demand for education in India.
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  31.  11
    A Tablet-Based Assessment of Rhythmic Ability.Theodore P. Zanto, Namita T. Padgaonkar, Alex Nourishad & Adam Gazzaley - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  32.  14
    Portuguese Contributions to Indian Botany.R. N. Kapil & A. K. Bhatnagar - 1976 - Isis 67 (3):449-452.
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  33. India : citizens, courts, and the right to health : between promise and progress.Sharanjeet Parmar & Namita Wahi - 2011 - In Alicia Ely Yamin & Siri Gloppen (eds.), Litigating health rights: can courts bring more justice to health? Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
     
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  34.  42
    Book Reviews Section 1.D. Cecil Clark, Booker Gardener, Raymond Bell, Howard L. Sparks, Lucien Morin, Norma J. Irwin, Hilary E. Bender, E. Dean Butler, Joti Bhatnagar, Richard Lasko, Bernard Mehl, Gilbert L. Noble, William C. Fish, Donald P. Hannon, Phillip T. Mcclung & Singnan Fen - 1973 - Educational Studies 4 (4):200-210.
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  35. Philosophy, society, and action: essays in honour of Prof. Daya Krishna.Daya Krishna, K. L. Sharma & R. S. Bhatnagar (eds.) - 1984 - Jaipur, India: Aalekh.
    Festschrift honoring Daya Krishna, b. 1924, professor of philosophy; comprises contributed articles.
     
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  36.  57
    Oral vaccines: new needs, new possibilities.Mohd Azhar Aziz, Shuchi Midha, Syed Mohsin Waheed & Rakesh Bhatnagar - 2007 - Bioessays 29 (6):591-604.
    Vaccination is an important tool for handling healthcare programs both in developed and developing countries. The current global scenario calls for a more‐efficacious, acceptable, cost‐effective and reliable method of immunization for many fatal diseases. It is hoped that the adoption of oral vaccines will help to provide an effective vaccination strategy, especially in developing countries. Mucosal immunity generated by oral vaccines can serve as a strong first line of defense against most of the pathogens infecting through the mucosal lining. Advances (...)
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  37.  4
    Going Polyphonic I: With Namita Goswami et al.Alyson Cole & Kyoo Lee - 2023 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 13 (1):1-2.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Going Polyphonic I: With Namita Goswami et al.Alyson Cole and Kyoo LeeThis time around, we go polyphonic.The articles in the next two issues, Vol. 13 and Vol. 14, explore critical questions, paradigm-shifting idseas, and fresh connections arising from the intimately networked fields of intersectional, decolonial, and trans studies today. “Polyphonia,” a term we borrowed from music, is meant to characterize ways in which each piece as in a (...)
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  38.  8
    The Splendour of Negation: R. S. Bhatnagar Revisited with a Buddhist Tinge.C. D. Sebastian - 2020 - Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research 37 (3):343-360.
    Negation has occupied a unique place in the history of ideas. Negation as opposed to truth-conditional affirmation has been very much present in Indian and Western thought from very early times. R. S. Bhatnagar of happy memory (1933–2019) in his “Many Splendoured Negation” (Bhatnagar in J Indian Counc Philos Res XXII(3):83–906, 2006) had shown many a facet that could be construed in “negation”. This paper is an attempt to revisit the notion of negation that R. S. Bhatnagar (...)
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  39.  3
    Book Reviews : Namita Unnikrishnan and Shailaja Bajpai, The Impact of Television Advertising on Children. New Delhi: Sage Publications, 1996, 426 pp., Rs 450. [REVIEW]B. K. Chatterjee - 1996 - Journal of Human Values 2 (2):197-199.
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  40.  9
    Book Reviews : Namita Unnikrishnan and Shailaja Bajpai, The Impact of Television Advertising on Children. New Delhi: Sage Publications, 1996, 426 pp., Rs 450. [REVIEW]B. K. Chatterjee - 1996 - Journal of Human Values 2 (2):197-199.
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  41.  11
    On Suffering.Daniel Raveh - 2021 - Journal of World Philosophies 6 (1):186-199.
    This paper is a tribute to Rajendra Swaroop Bhatnagar. Bhatnagar Saab was a philosopher of the here and now, of the worldly, of the social, who did not hesitate to look into violence, poverty, pain, and suffering. He was an activist through his writings, and worked to establish social awareness. Metaphysics and the spiritual, considered by many as a central leitmotif of Indian philosophy, he saw as secondary or even marginal. The first part of the paper surveys and (...)
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  42.  10
    Matters of Interest: Difference and Responsibility in Goswami’s Subjects That Matter.Russell Ford - 2023 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 13 (1):84-98.
    Namita Goswami’s book, Subjects That Matter: Philosophy, Feminism, and Postcolonial Theory, challenges its reader not only to attend to how one philosophizes about difference but also how one might philosophize differently. It is concerned with how we, now, practice philosophy as well as what we philosophize about. In this response, I raise a series of questions meant to challenge and expand Goswami’s work from the standpoint of someone rooted in the dominant framework of the Anglo-European academic discourse on difference. (...)
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  43.  10
    The Postcolonial and the Post-Traumatic: Specters and Syndromes of White Feminist Canon.Jennifer Scuro - 2023 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 13 (1):25-40.
    Following Namita Goswami’s call for a “non-antagonistic understanding of difference” in Subjects That Matter: Philosophy, Feminism, and Postcolonial Theory (2019), I want to challenge the canon of white feminism that still lingers in the emerging discourses on trauma care and trauma recovery, specifically utilizing concepts from Critical Disability Theory and, to some degree, Critical Trauma Studies. As Joy DeGruy asks in Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome [PTSS]: “debilitating beliefs and assumptions are... part of the legacy of trauma.... How are such (...)
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  44. Der junge Marx im Licht einer afrikanischen Ethik: Zwei Ansichten der Selbstverwirklichung.Thaddeus Metz - 2022 - Polylog: Zeitschrift Für Interkulturelles Philosophieren 47:69-93.
    German translation by Namita Herzl and Juri Wald of ‘The Young Marx and an African Ethic: Two Views of Self-realization’.
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  45.  4
    Outside and Outside: Plastic Passages—of Philosophy and Literature.Tyler M. Williams - 2023 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 13 (1):99-123.
    In Subjects That Matter, Namita Goswami attends to philosophy’s institutional and disciplinary failures to reconcile its identitarian claims to universality and reason with the feminist and postcolonial modes of thinking it traditionally keeps at bay. This essay places Goswami’s critique within a context of “the thought from outside,” which, beginning with Foucault’s reading of Blanchot, continuing through the geopolitics of Dussel’s philosophy of liberation, and prominent in Catherine Malabou’s conceptualization of plasticity, demonstrates how political critiques of philosophical hegemony contain (...)
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  46.  6
    Heterogeneity Matters: Feminism, Postcolonial Theory, and Ethics in the Archives.Lauren Guilmette - 2023 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 13 (1):41-49.
    This essay draws upon Namita Goswami’s 2019 book Subjects That Matter: Philosophy, Feminism, and Postcolonial Theory for the insights she brings to an ethics of archival encounters, particularly regarding the files of those whose only record is their judgment and/or objectification by existing dominant institutions. First, I briefly summarize some key insights, with attention to Goswami’s careful exegesis of Spivak. In the next section, I consider these postcolonial feminist questions about infamous women in conjunction with Saidiya Hartman’s 2008 essay (...)
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  47.  12
    Crises of the Political Imagination: The Aesthetics of Colonial and Planetary Violences.I. I. I. Alfred Frankowski - 2023 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 13 (1):4-15.
    In this article, I focus on intersections between colonial violence, aesthetics, and ecological crises as reflections of a crisis of the political imagination. I engage Namita Goswami’s Subjects That Matter and argue that the ways in which her text pursues forms of questioning racialized and gendered colonial violences provides a context for approaching variations of colonial violence collectively. By engaging Goswami’s text, I propose a postcolonial aesthetics as a way of rethinking our planetary bonds, aesthetically. I further argue that (...)
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  48.  9
    Can the Transsexual Speak?Luce deLire - 2023 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 13 (1):50-83.
    Can the Transsexual speak? I investigate this question through the case of Ella Nik Bayan who self-immolated in Berlin (Germany) on September 14, 2021. I first argue that this self-immolation is unreadable within the current frameworks of Western democracies. The case, however, paradigmatically demonstrates that emancipation within the confines of neoliberal capitalism can only be read under the pretense of a toxic protection. I then move on to claim that Ella Nik Bayan’s self-immolation calls for a completely different political order (...)
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  49.  9
    Subject to Difference: Heterogeneity, Antagonism, and Coercion.Falguni A. Sheth - 2023 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 13 (1):16-24.
    In this article, I explore Namita Goswami’s Subjects That Matter. Goswami has laid out an extensive excavation of the variety, depth, and breadth of antagonistic encounters between the Western world and subaltern subjects. I am interested in Goswami’s take on the production of the unknowable women of color who are constructed either as good wives, animate objects without wills of their own, or transgressors of the genre of producing women of color as oppressed. I argue that the question of (...)
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