Katy Fulfer

Philosophy in the world

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February 17, 2020 by Katy

First thoughts on public scholarship

Philosophers want their work to matter. At least I do. This hope partially explains my website tagline, "philosophy in the world." In my first blog post, I wrote, "I seek for my philosophical work to be embedded in the world and in service to maintaining it as a space for speech and action." Philosophy can be helpful for public matters. Philosophers often clarify ambiguous or muddled concepts or phenomena. Or, alternatively, philosophers point out that some concepts are treated too … [Read more...]

Filed Under: At Home with Arendt Tagged With: academics, applied philosophy, Hannah Arendt, Ibram X. Kendi, public scholarship, refugees, responsibility, Sara Ahmed, solidarity

January 20, 2020 by Katy

A state of unwelcome

It was chilling to read about Texas Governor Greg Abbott's statement that Texas would not resettle refugees in 2020. In recent years, Texas has been the state to resettle the largest number of refugees. Echoes of Arendt's Origins of Totalitarianism The Governor's decision reminds me of Hannah Arendt's discussion of the decline of the nation-state in the Origins of Totalitarianism. The phenomenon of statelessness tested the limits of national sovereignty. Some states stripped their unwanted … [Read more...]

Filed Under: At Home with Arendt Tagged With: belonging, Hannah Arendt, human rights, immigration, refugees, the family

December 8, 2019 by Katy

Even more sabbatical downtime

My final few weeks in New York were frantic. I submitted a paper for review, began to think about Winter syllabi, and finished (mostly) the massive pile of books I had checked out from the library. But, I managed to have some downtime too. Challenging borders I attended a few events at Where No Wall Remains, the 2019 biennial Live Arts Bard festival at the Fisher Center for the Arts. I like the intellectual grounding of the festival. Artists submit items for inclusion in the festival syllabus, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: news and updates Tagged With: dance, human rights, immigration, refugees, science fiction, Star Trek, theatre

November 25, 2019 by Hershy Jaiprakash

Home grounds belonging

Imagine the following scenarios: -You return to your parents’ home for the holidays, your family greets you with smiles and warm words. You enter your childhood room, ah, at home at last. -You’ve been swamped at work; projects, meetings, and emails consuming your time. You finally catch a break one Sunday afternoon and meet with a good friend. It feels so relieving, you feel like you’re home. -You’re somewhere new and foreign, you don’t know the language, you’re trying to get … [Read more...]

Filed Under: At Home with Arendt Tagged With: belonging, Hannah Arendt, home, homelessness, refugees, statelessness

October 14, 2019 by Katy

Private sponsorship and community solidarity

The most recent issue of Refuge: Canada's Journal on Refugees is devoted to private sponsorship. Reading it encouraged me to return to themes I raised in a previous post about Canada's Private Sponsorship of Refugees Program. And good news--Refuge is open access, so anyone can read these articles! I find private sponsorship for refugee resettlement to be an opportunity to think through Hannah Arendt's claims about the blurring of private and public concerns. For Arendt, the private, the realm … [Read more...]

Filed Under: At Home with Arendt Tagged With: biopolitics, community, Hannah Arendt, immigration, pity, private, refugees, solidarity, sponsorship, the social

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