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Johanna Braun: The American Girl and the Horror of (In)Justice
The American Girl and the Horror of (In)Justice
(p. 119 – 133)

Johanna Braun

The American Girl and the Horror of (In)Justice

PDF, 15 pages

  • history of philosophy
  • affects
  • the girl
  • gender
  • subjectivity
  • cultural studies
  • psychoanalysis

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English

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Johanna Braun

holds a MFA and Ph.D. from the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. The emphasis of Braun’s academic and artistic research lies on the girl’s symbolic urgency in relation to media philosophy, US-American literature, film and television studies, and its intermediality.
Elisabeth von Samsonow (ed.): Epidemic Subjects—Radical Ontology

Modern philosophy continues to grapple with the idea of subjectivity—and, as the concept of subjectivity has been refined and redefined, the struggle has spread to the ways we conceive of sovereignty, collectivity, nationality, and identity. Yet, in the absence of an authoritative account of these concepts, new ways of thinking have emerged which continue to evolve.
Epidemic Subjects—Radical Ontology brings together a team of contributors who forge a radically inclusive definition of subjectivity. Drawing on Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari’s concept of the “girl” as a heuristic device for examining modern society, they tie together recent trends in philosophy and offer a concrete way forward from the conception of the “thing” or “object” privileged by new materialism, speculative realism, and other theories of subjectivity.