Ellie Anderson specializes in continental European philosophy, with emphasis on 20th-century French philosophy and feminist theory. A vocal advocate for philosophical pluralism, including continental philosophy and global traditions, Anderson received her Ph.D. from Emory University in 2016. She serves on the editorial board of Continental Philosophy Review and the outreach committee for the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy (SPEP).
Jordan Daniels works at the intersection of critical theory and environmental thought. Her research and teaching are especially informed by Adorno and Foucault, and she regularly teaches courses on environmental philosophy, animal ethics, and ecological feminism.
Oona Eisenstadt holds the Fred Krinsky Chair in Jewish Studies at Pomona. Most of her work treats the philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas; in addition, she has published on Derrida, Rosenzweig, Blanchot, Plato, and Shakespeare.
Jennifer Friedlander (Edgar E. and Elizabeth S. Pankey Professor of Media Studies, Pomona College). She specializes in Lacanian psychoanalytic theory, and also publishes on the work of Jacques Rancière and Roland Barthes, as well as feminist film theory.
Jordan Kirk (Associate Professor of English at Pomona College) is a scholar of medieval literature. The philosophers that matter to him are Plato, Nagarjuna, Augustine, Boethius, Anselm, Longchenpa, Nietzsche, Wittgenstein, Levinas, and Agamben.
James Kreines is Edward S. Gould Professor of Philosophy, at Claremont McKenna College. His research focuses on Hegel, Kant, Schelling, Spinoza, F. H. Jacobi, Fichte and Classical German Philosophy generally. He teaches in the history of European philosophy, including some new courses teaching that history in a way that also decenters it.
Henry Krips retired as Andrew W. Mellon all-Claremont professor of humanities from Claremont Graduate University, where he is professor emeritus in cultural studies. He specializes in the work of Foucault, Lacan, and philosophy of Quantum Mechanics.
Thomas Lambert is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Pitzer College. His interests lie at the intersection of ethics, moral psychology, and the philosophy of action. I take a historical approach to these topics, and my research to date has primarily focused on themes of value and agency in the writings of Friedrich Nietzsche.
Mukasa Mubirumusoke’ s research and teaching interests are rooted in black critical theory and include Africana philosophy, politics, ethics, and aesthetics.
Peter Thielke is a scholar of the history of philosophy, with an emphasis on Kant and German Idealism, as well as the rationalist and empiricist traditions leading up to Kant. He also has a research interest in epistemology and aesthetics.
David Seitz is Associate Professor of Cultural Geography at Harvey Mudd College. He has abiding interests in the implications of feminist and queer affect and psychoanalytic theories for geographical responses to problems like climate change and gentrification, and has written on Klein, Berlant, and Sedgwick.