The following list of philosophers from who completed PhDs at the New School is almost certainly incomplete. But it does show that NSSR philosophers are far from inactive. Indeed, the reason I have put together this list and posted it here is to counteract the common notion among NSSR grad students (at one time held by so great a mind as yours truly) that no one hires New School philosophers.
The New School does not, to my knowledge, publish any data of this sort. A good reason might be that the school does not want to play into the hands of the Leiter-Reportesque “professionalization” of the discipline. After all, one would like to believe that an education in the immortal things is not merely a commercial endeavor.
On the other hand, a more cynical explanation of the same phenomenon would be that the New School simply does not maintain such data. This seems likely as the administrative organization of the school is often conducted in the most ad hoc and cursory manner.
I have included only the information from the websites of the relevant academic institutions. For the same reason, the information is often incomplete. If I have omitted anyone or any important information, please let me know at humpj990@newschool.edu and I will make the relevant changes. I can also remove an institution, name, AOS, or year by request.
Bard College:
Adam Rosen-Carole
The nature and status of psychoanalytic knowledge, philosophy and the claims of suffering (pathos, pathology), political philosophy after Adorno and Derrida
Bishop’s University
Don Dombowsky
Boston University
Henry E. Allison
Aaron Garrett
Clemson
Bill Maker
19th and 20th century Continental Philosophy, especially Kant, Hegel, Marx, and Nietzsche
Concordia
Pablo Gilabert
Gordon College
Lauren S. Barthold
Hobart and William Smith College
John Krummel (Ph.D.1999)
Comparative theology, Phenomenology, Heidegger, Kant, Nishida, Nietzsche, Mishima, Dostoevsky, Buddhist philosophy, Kyoto school philosophy, Existentialism, Post-modern thought, History of philosophy, Philosophy of religion, Death & Dying, Nihilism, Critique of modernity
Marquette University
James P. Flaherty
Classical American pragmatism and contemporary neo-pragmatism
Miami University
William McKenna
Phenomenology, Epistemology, History of Philosophy
Muhlenburg College
Marcia Morgan
Purchase College
Jared Russell
Philosophy, psychology, psychoanalytic studies
Penn State
Christopher Long (Ph.D. 1998)
Ancient Philosophy, Aristotle, Continental Philosophy, Critical Theory
Roanoke College
Monica Vilhauer
Ethics, social-political philosophy, feminist philosophy, ancient philosophy, and 19th and 20th Century European philosophy
Rochester Institute of Technology
Katie Terezakis (Ph.D. 2004)
Aesthetics, German Idealism, Political Philosophy and the history of philosophy
Sarah Lawrence
Roy Brand
Continental philosophy, modern and contemporary aesthetics, philosophy of film and new media, and trauma and popular culture
Seton Hall University
Judith Stark
Augustine of Hippo, feminist theories, and environmental issues
Siena College
John Blanchard (Ph.D. 2001)
Plato, Aristotle, pre-Socratic philosophy, metaphysics, Nietzsche, Heidegger, food and politics
Pablo Muchnik (Ph.D. 2002)
Kant, modern philosophy, and political philosophy
St. Johns Annapolis
William Jon Lenkowski
Matthew S. Linck
Stewart Umphrey
Michael Weinman
John F. White
St. Johns College Santa Fe
Anthony James Carey
Russell Winslow
SUNY Stony Brook
Megan Craig
Eduardo Mendieta
University of Alaska Anchorage
James Liszka
University of Louisville
Osborne P. Wiggins
Philosophy & Psychiatry, Phenomenology
University of Massachusetts Boston
Steven Levine
University of Northern Iowa
William W. Clohesy
Moral and political philosophy, German philosophy, American pragmatism, existential phenomenology
University of Windsor
Radu Neculau.
Social and Political Philosophy and in 19th and 20th Century European Philosophy
University of Wisconsin Green Bay:
Gilbert Null (Emeritus)
University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Aaron Vlasak
History of Ancient Philosophy
This blog does not represent any policy or opinion held by the New School for Social Research. I do not represent NSSR in any capacity, official or otherwise. All opinions represented here are my own.
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
The Old New School
NSSR students don't have space. They don't have a library. But things used to be really bad. According to John McCumber, who taught philosophy at the New School in the 80s, American philosophy departments in the 70s had largely removed traditional philosophical texts from their curricula as the result of a philosophical culture that had arisen during the McCarthy era.
Indeed, the dismissal of the philosophical canon from American philosphy departments McCumber writes, "provided another, more timely motive for anguish among the people who met in January 1978 in the Manhattan apartment of Charles Sherover, a professor at Hunter College. An accrediting committee of the state of New York - its personnel supplied by the APA - had just visited the philosophy department at the New School for Social Research. The committee had recommended that the program be disaccredited, on the grounds that it was so far removed from he mainstream of American philosophy as to be overspecialized and sectarian." (Time in the Ditch 51)
Indeed, the dismissal of the philosophical canon from American philosphy departments McCumber writes, "provided another, more timely motive for anguish among the people who met in January 1978 in the Manhattan apartment of Charles Sherover, a professor at Hunter College. An accrediting committee of the state of New York - its personnel supplied by the APA - had just visited the philosophy department at the New School for Social Research. The committee had recommended that the program be disaccredited, on the grounds that it was so far removed from he mainstream of American philosophy as to be overspecialized and sectarian." (Time in the Ditch 51)
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