University of Mary Convocation on My Book!

I received a Faculty Excellence Award and had the opportunity to present a convocation at the University of Mary on November 4, 2022 on my book.

University of Mary did an excellent recording of this convocation which you can view here.

Convocation on Madness in Experience and History

To purchase a book, you can go to Amazon and Routledge. Discount code for Routledge: AEVV22.

Here is the flyer that went up around campus.

Conference Presentation: Reimagining the Relationship between Suffering and Disability with Merleau-Ponty and Kierkegaard

I had the opportunity to present at the International Merleau-Ponty Circle in Washington D.C. on November 11, 2022. I was so excited that the theme of the conference was disability. The conference was titled: FITS AND MISFITS: RETHINKING DISABILITY, DEBILITY, AND THE WORLD WITH MERLEAU-PONTY.

Here is an abstract of my paper:

Equating the experience of suffering with the experience of disability runs contrary not only to a general understanding of human life, but also to a thoughtful approach to disability. To assume that disability is the same as suffering is certainly to misunderstand disability, as many others have shown. But, as I will argue, to assume that disability is the same as suffering is also to misunderstand suffering. Could it be that our incorrect view of suffering impacts the way that we see disability? I propose that, in order to understand the role that suffering may play in disability, we need to rethink what we mean by suffering and what kind of suffering could be present in disability.

To do so, I will briefly present some of the difficulties — philosophical, social, and practical — that are found in even discussing a relationship between suffering and disability. Second, drawing on Merleau-Ponty and Kierkegaard, I will argue for an expanded view of suffering where the good of suffering is not found in a future result, but in its placement in the present world and in its manifestation of joy in the present moment. Third, I will apply this expanded notion of suffering to disability in order to suggest what a reimagined relationship might look like between disability and suffering. While this new relationship is not meant to be universal nor comprehensive for all areas of disability, it does provide a helpful vocabulary that adds to a rich phenomenological account of disability.

Conference Presentation: Sketching a New Approach to Art and Ordinary Flourishing

I had the opportunity to return to the Baylor Symposium on Faith and Culture after not attending for several years to present a joint paper on art with my friend and colleague, Mark Allen. Our presentation was on Wednesday, October 26, 2022. We worked really hard on our abstract and paper as we hope that it will form the foundation for a future book to write together.

Here is our abstract:

The divide between traditional and modern conceptions of art has created a rift between the artworld and the general public. The artworld wonders if the public cares about art because so few seem interested in expanding their tastes beyond traditional modes, but the public sees little coming out of the modern artworld that resonates with common aesthetic sensibilities. This project takes the position that great works of art and deep experiences of art are not out of reach for the ordinary person and that both the artworld and the public can be brought into fruitful dialogue with each other.

Early in the twentieth century, the artworld began shifting its focus toward qualities like meaning, progress, and originality. Ultimately, this led to radical forms of conceptualism that minimized values like craftsmanship and beauty, diminishing the connection between art and everyday living. And so, whether actively disregarded or passively overlooked, ordinary people tend to dismiss modern art as an abstract, high-brow enterprise, deflating the motivation to participate in art in general. What’s the point in trying to engage works that are culturally, conceptually, and aesthetically inaccessible? Maybe seeking understanding in art is a waste of time?

Of course, good art can be and often is difficult—to make and to make sense of—but far too often work that is promoted as “complex” is merely opaque—front-loaded with philosophical assumptions and foreign grammar administered by artworld elites.

The authors of this project, however, believe that everyone is adequately qualified to freely engage works of art simply by virtue of being human. In fact, it is in our ordinary humanity that we find the purest, most primordial experience one can have with a work of art. To be clear, we are not calling for a renaissance of art that is easy or crude, but for a reawakening of common sensibilities from common folk who are empowered in their ordinariness to both create and engage works of art. Drawing on philosophers like Sartre and Danto, and artists like Cézanne and Duchamp, we establish a clearer picture of what art is so that we can establish why art is so important for human flourishing.

First, we argue that a philosophy of art centered around the qualities of meaning, craftsmanship, and beauty aids a proper understanding of art through a flexible but discerning “two-out-of-three” conditional. If works characterized mostly by meaning can be reclassified as a new form of philosophy, while works characterized by beauty, craftsmanship, and meaning remain under the conventional category of art, then we can more fully appreciate both traditional and modern works, making sense of them on their own terms.

Second, we insist that works of art must spill out of the frame, the museum, and the music hall, in ways that are lived-out in human flourishing. Through creation or participation, art has the unique ability to expose human suffering and cultivate freedom. More than this, we shape our lives as works of art through self-creation and, in this way, are drawn beyond the material world toward transcendence.

In summary, this project attempts to bridge the divide between the artworld and ordinary people by narrowing the definition of art on the one hand, but expanding it on the other. This approach is informed by the diverse backgrounds of the authors, both of whom have doctorates in philosophy, but one is a professional artist who teaches advertising and design while the other is a trained musician who teaches philosophy and aesthetics.

Conference Presentation: The Secret of Madness: Foucault’s Overarching Nonrational or Le secret de la folie : le nonrational global de Foucault

I had the opportunity to do a full presentation for the first time at the International Network of Philosophy of Religion hosted in Paris, France on June 16, 2022. The conference is both in French and English so I worked hard to prepare my abstract in French and English. I read my paper in English but read all the quotations in the original French. I practiced before I went to make sure that I pronounced things correctly!

Abstract. In the spirit of our conference, titled, “En commun : Altérité, communauté et solitude,” this paper turns to the darker side of human community, the otherness of community, that can be displayed in cases of madness. To understand this otherness, we must consider the differing ways that historical and modern communities have shaped and responded to madness. It is here that we will uncover the human experience of the nonrational (déraison) lurking behind the narrative of madness. In this paper, I argue that even though madness depends on societal perceptions, there is an overarching nonrational, which cuts across history and remains the secret force behind the differing variations of madness. To make this argument, I will first create the milieu of madness according to three ages of European history as described in Michel Foucault’s History of Madness. Second, I will present the key themes of the overarching nonrational by looking closely at Foucault’s text. And third, I will offer some brief thoughts on how this approach can be applied to our view of mental illness today.

Le secret de la folie : la déraison globale de Foucault

L’abstrait. Dans l’esprit de notre conférence, intitulée, <<En commun : Altérité, communauté et solitude>>, ce papier se penche sur le côté sombre de la communauté humaine, l’altérité de la communauté, qui peut être affichée dans les cas de folie. Pour comprendre cette altérité, nous devons réfléchir aux différentes manières dont les communautés historique et moderne ont fabriqué et répondu à la folie. C’est là que nous découvrirons l’expérience humaine de la déraison (nonrational) tapie derrière le narratif de la folie. Dans ce papier, je soutiens que bien que la folie dépende des perceptions sociétales, il y a une déraison globale, qui traverse l’histoire et reste la force secrète derrière les variantes différentes de la folie. Pour le démontrer, je présenterai tout d’abord le milieu de la folie selon les trois âges de l’histoire européenne tels que décrits Histoire de la folie à l’âge classique de Michel Foucault. Ensuite, j’exposerai les thèmes importants de la déraison globale en examinant de près le texte de Foucault. Et enfin, j’offrirai quelques petites réflexions sur comment l’approche peut être appliquée à notre vision de la maladie mentale aujourd’hui. 

Summer Update 2022

I am continuing my tradition of giving a summer update. It helps to see what I have accomplished this past year and what plans I have for the future.

Recently Published

My Book! Madness in Experience and History: Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology and Foucault’s Archaeology. This was published in November 2021!  You can order it now through Routledge and Amazon.

Chapter in Edited Book: “The Need for Merleau-Ponty in Foucault’s Account of the Abnormal.” In Normality, Abnormality, and Pathology in Merleau-Ponty, edited by Talia Welsh and Susan Bredlau, 97-115. New York: SUNY Press, 2022. You can purchase the hardcover on Amazon or at SUNY press. The paperback should come out in late summer 2022.

Upcoming Publications

Chapter in Edited Book: “Foucault’s Care of Self: A Response to Modern Technology.” In Routledge International Handbook for Psychoanalysis, Subjectivity and Technology, edited by David Goodman and Matthew Clemente. Forthcoming with Routledge.

Book Review: “Centrality of Touch: A Review of Richard Kearney’s Touch.” The review will be published along with one or two other reviews and Kearney’s response to them in the journal: Crossing: The International Network of Philosophy and Religion. The book, Touch, is an excellent introduction to approaching the world in a phenomenological way. I recommend it!

Currently Working On

Conference Presentation: “The Secret of Madness: Foucault’s Overarching Nonrational” for the International Network of Philosophy and Religion being held this June 2022 in Paris, France.

Conference Presentation for the International Merleau-Ponty Circle (and hopefully later an article for the new Journal of Philosophy of Disability). No title yet. Something on disability as a way of accessing the world but also a mode of suffering in the world.

Convocation Presentation: “Madness in Experience and History.” I’ve won a Faculty Excellence Award and will be presenting on my book on November 4, 2022 at the University of Mary.

Future Work

Joint Book Project with Dr. Mark Allen. Tentative title: Art and the Flourishing of the Ordinary. Related to Mark’s dissertation on art and philosophy and my master’s thesis on existential aesthetics.

Article: No title yet. Something on Foucault’s unreason (déraison) and Victor Hugo’s display of madness in Les Miserables

Joint Article with Dr. Mary Schwarz. Tentative title: “Reclaiming our Lost Identity with Marcel: A Response to Suicide and Other Acts of Self-Harm.” Planning on submitting this to the journal Marcel Studies.