Philosophical assumptions about identity, being and belonging have, as is well know, historically been bound together; their classical nexus being Plato’s Socrates, who because of this figures as the first philosopher of the city. Especially during moments of crisis, the impulse, both philosophically and politically, even today, is to make abject those who appear not to conform to the appropriate ideal identity of what ought to be. In the first part of our paper we consider the philosophical logic of this pedagogy of the city and its cultural context and implications; and in the second part, we demonstrate this pedagogy of the city as a practice, using ethnographic data derived from a study of a homeless couple and their struggle to become ...
AbstractThe paper addresses an inquiry into Nietzsche's main corpus of works (the Kritische Studiena...
In the labyrinth of the Nietzschean interpretations, what is missing is a chapter which investigates...
Some scholars maintain that there is no logical progression between the first three cities construct...
The majority of people on Earth now live in cities, and estimates hold that 60 percent of the world’...
Since the 1960s, the field of urban studies has blossomed in the United States and the United Kingdo...
The deindustrialization of cities represents a moment of cultural and political weakness and insecur...
The death of God, announced by Nietzsche in Beyond Good and Evil (1886), and in his earlier works, h...
My dissertation details what Nietzsche sees as a normative and philosophical crisis that arises in m...
Throughout his corpus Nietzsche makes frequent and apparently contradictory assertions about Socrate...
If I were to say that the architecture in our public spaces is ‘really speaking to us’, you would be...
My dissertation explores Nietzsche’s claims to originality as a new kind of philosophical psychologi...
In this paper, I argue that the Genealogy of Morals is, in part, a work of philosophical therapy. Fi...
This chapter is a call to philosophers to philosophize for their cities and not merely in them. As ...
The argument in this dissertation revolves aroundapositive reading of Nietzsche on the tragic nature...
I focus on exploring Nietzsche’s conception of the optimal psychological structure of the self as we...
AbstractThe paper addresses an inquiry into Nietzsche's main corpus of works (the Kritische Studiena...
In the labyrinth of the Nietzschean interpretations, what is missing is a chapter which investigates...
Some scholars maintain that there is no logical progression between the first three cities construct...
The majority of people on Earth now live in cities, and estimates hold that 60 percent of the world’...
Since the 1960s, the field of urban studies has blossomed in the United States and the United Kingdo...
The deindustrialization of cities represents a moment of cultural and political weakness and insecur...
The death of God, announced by Nietzsche in Beyond Good and Evil (1886), and in his earlier works, h...
My dissertation details what Nietzsche sees as a normative and philosophical crisis that arises in m...
Throughout his corpus Nietzsche makes frequent and apparently contradictory assertions about Socrate...
If I were to say that the architecture in our public spaces is ‘really speaking to us’, you would be...
My dissertation explores Nietzsche’s claims to originality as a new kind of philosophical psychologi...
In this paper, I argue that the Genealogy of Morals is, in part, a work of philosophical therapy. Fi...
This chapter is a call to philosophers to philosophize for their cities and not merely in them. As ...
The argument in this dissertation revolves aroundapositive reading of Nietzsche on the tragic nature...
I focus on exploring Nietzsche’s conception of the optimal psychological structure of the self as we...
AbstractThe paper addresses an inquiry into Nietzsche's main corpus of works (the Kritische Studiena...
In the labyrinth of the Nietzschean interpretations, what is missing is a chapter which investigates...
Some scholars maintain that there is no logical progression between the first three cities construct...