2018-2019
SPEAKERS
CONFERENCES & PAPER WORKSHOPS
DISCUSSIONS AND PANELS
INFORMAL GET-TOGETHERS
WORKSHOPS/TRAINING
READING GROUPS
FILM SCREENINGS
OTHER ITEMS
- Lana Kuhle (Illinois State University), “Embodied Subjectivity” [University of Cincinatti]
- Charles Mills (CUNY), “Racial Injustice” [University of Miami]
- Christia Mercer (Columbia), “Descartes’ Demons and Debts, or Why We Should Work on Women in the History of Philosophy” [Ohio State University]
- Meghan Szwart (St. Mary's University), "Civil Discourse and Inclusive Pedagogy: Philosophical Prospects and Challenges" [University of Notre Dame]
- Robin Dembroff (Yale University), "Gender Identity: A Conceptual Crisis" [Wayne State University]
- Ryan Hayes (Wayne State University) "Bi-Racialism: The Metaphysics of Race and How to Belong When You Aren't One or the Other" [Wayne State University]
- Jodie Emery, "Stigma around Cannabis Use" [York]
- Tanya Kostochka (University of Southern California), “For Variety Try Moods as Patterns of Attention” [UC Santa Barbara]
- Victor Abundez Guerra (UC Riverside), “Grounding Racial Blame: Blood Money Benefits and White Guilt” [UC Santa Barbara]
- Sam Hesni (MIT/Boston University), "Philosophical Intuitions About Socially Significant Language" [Rutgers University - New Brunswick]
- Kate Ritchie (CUNY), "Essentializing Language and the Prospects for Ameliorative Projects" [Rutgers University - New Brunswick]
- Federico Luzzi (Aberdeen), "Is It Fair to Segregate Sports Competitions By Sex?" [University of Aberdeen]
- Paul C. Taylor (Penn State), "The Ferguson Rebellion, Five Years On; or, Philosophy and the Event, American-Style" [Wayne State University]
- Chike Jeffers (Dalhousie) “Du Bois on Art, Morality, and Truth” [Texas Tech]
- Myisha Cherry (UC Riverside), “Painting Anger with a Broad Stroke” [Loyola University]
- Esa Diaz-Leon (Barcelona) “What should count as a substantive metaphysical debate on race and gender?” (Central European University)
- Patrick Tomlin (Warwick) "Affirmative Action. What is it? What are its advantages and disadvantages?" [University of Warwick]
- Fabienne Peter (Warwick) "Enhancing Social Diversity in Philosophy. What are the epistemic benefits?" [University of Warwick]
- Sergio Alloggio (Rhodes): talk on history of philosophy in South Africa, and how the curriculum, culture and teaching practices continue to replicate Apartheid ideology [Rhodes University]
- Thapelo Tselapedi (Rhodes, Political Science), talk on the need to Africanize the University curriculum in order to become more accessible to African people, as well as to help transform the African society. [Rhodes University]
- María Del Rosario Acosta López (DePaul), Listening to the Erasures of History: Aes-Ethics of Memory in Latin America (A Colombian Case) [Northwestern University]
- Jessica Kean (Sydney), "Thinking non/monogamy: theories and cultures of intimate life" [University of Wollongong]
- Nick Brancazio (Wollongong), "Why does perspective matter? Situatedness and standpoints" [University of Wollongong]
- Stacey Goguen (NIU), "Ignorance and the Ethics of Philosophy 'News’” [Boston University]
- Briana Toole (Baruch), “Resistance is Futile” [Columbia University]
- Therese Cory (Notre Dame), “The Muslim Roots of European Medieval Philosophy” [University of Notre Dame]
CONFERENCES & PAPER WORKSHOPS
- Social philosophy work-in-progress talk series [University of Melbourne].
- Speakers: Paul Mikhail-Podosky (Melbourne), Antonia Smyth (Melbourne), Kelly Herbison (Melbourne) Sakinah Munday (Melbourne), Matilda Millar-Carton (Melbourne), Philippa Malone (Monash), Jasmine Eichperger (Melbourne)
- New York MAP Spring Workshop series. [Columbia, CUNY, NYU, and Rutgers].
- Speakers: Eric Bayruns Garcia (CUNY), Hochan Kim (Princeton), Cameron Domenico Kirk-Giannini (Rutgers), August Gorman (Georgetown), Lyn Radke and Alyssa Lowery (Vanderbilt), and Rose Bell (Syracuse).
- Local Undergraduate Conference [University of Manitoba]
- Third Annual University of Kansas Undergraduate Conference, with keynote by Ryan Preston-Roedder (Occidental College) [University of Kansas]
- Graduate Conference: “Challenging Injustice”, with keynote by Robin Zheng (Yale - NUS) [Temple University]
- Philosophy and Inclusion Conference [CEU].
- Speakers: Natalie Ahston (University of Vienna), Bodi Wang (TU Dortmund University) Shalom Shaleni Chalson (National University of Singapore), Rosa Vince & Nadia Mehdi (University of Sheffield), Zuzanna Jusinska (University of Warsaw), Ingrid Hoofd (Utrecht University), and Antonia Cioanca (CEU).
- MAP and University of Oklahoma Graduate Philosophy Conference, with keynote by Julianne Chung (Louisville) [University of Oklahoma]
- "Curing through Questioning: Philosophy as Therapy Across Ancient Traditions and Modern Applications." Co-hosted with Oxford Philiminality. [Oxford University]
- Speakers: Amber D. Carpenter (Yale-NUS), Jessica Frazier (Oxford), Barbara Jikai Gabrys (Zen Master in the Hakuin-Inzan line of the Rinzai tradition; University of Oxford), Christopher Gill (Exeter), Livia Kohn (Boston University), Karyn Lai (New South Wales), Graham Parkes (Vienna), Graham Priest (CUNG), and Katja Vogt (Columbia).
- "Pluralising Philosophy: Learning From the Case of Chinese Thought." Co-hosted with Oxford Philiminality. [Oxford University]
- Speakers: Robert Bernasconi (Penn State), Carine Defoort (KU Leuven), Bryan Van Norden (Yale-NUS).
- Philosophy Undergraduate Conference [Western University]
- Post-Colonial and De-Colonial Reception of European Thought [University of Bristol]
- Us and Them: Violence, Discrimination, and Minorities Workshop [University of Glasgow]
- Keynote Speakers: Sophie-Grace Chappel (Open University), Jade Fletcher (Edinburgh), Alessandra Tanesini (Cardiff), Mona Simion (Glasgow)
- Chaired Panel on "The Activism of Decolonizing the Curriculum in South Africa" at Decolonizing Critical Theory: Decolonial Aesthetics and Epistemic Violence. [Northwestern University]
- Speakers: Premesh Lalu and Nelson Maldonado-Torres
- Chairs: Leilani Michelle and Jack Sweeney.
- NYMAP - "Oppression and Resistance" conference
- Speakers: Jose Medina, Linda Alcoff, Kate Ritchie, Lori Gruen, Briana Toole, Elise Woodard, Keyvan Shafiei, Carolina Flores, Danny Echikson, Nadia Mehdi, Chris Nickel, Michael Holmes, Allysa Lake, Victoria Emery, Noel Dominguez, Claryn Spies, Rebecca Harrison, Javiera Perez-Gomez, Emmalon Davis, Matt Andler
- Writing Sample Workshop [Oklahoma University]
- Speakers: Amy Olberding, Matt Priselac, Brian Burkhart, and Jerry Green
DISCUSSIONS AND PANELS
- Feminism and Ethics Panel [University of Cincinnati]
- Decolonising Classics [University of Bristol]
- Keynote Speakers: Dr. Mathura Umachandran (Department of Classics University of Oxford), Dr. Justine McConnell (Department of Comparative Literature King´s College)
- Decolonising movements in Africa and South Asia [University of Bristol]
- Keynote Speakers: Dr. Foluke Adebisi (School of Law University of Bristol), Dr. Su Lin Lewis (Department of History University of Bristol)
- Enlightenment revised [University of Bristol]
- Keynote Speakers: Professor Gregor McLennan (School of Social Sciences University of Bristol), Dr. Tzu Chien Tho (Department of Philosophy University of Bristol)
- About Reparations [University of Bristol]
- Keynote Speakers: Dr. Joanna Burch-Brown, Department of Philosophy University of Bristol.
- "Your Future in Philosophy" Round-table Event undergraduate outreach event about graduate school and experience as a grad student in philosophy. [University of Miami]
- Panelists: Haley Mathis, Jisoo Seo, Nathaly Garcia, Michael Lozano
- Discussion with Christina Mercer about her philosophy in prison work [Ohio State University]
- "Feminism and Humor" dinner discussion [Duke University]
- MAP Mentorship Program Panel at the Museum of Contemporary Art (part of the Undergraduate Philosophy Conference) [Loyola University Chicago]
- A series of panels [Bard College]:
- Topics: 1. Stone 2. Crimson Pearl Flower 3.The Fairy Disenchantment, a Buddhist Monk and a Taoist priest 4. Karma Stone and the Land of Illusion
- Panelists: Jackie Zhang, Chloe Wang
- "Doing Diversity Wrong" [Fordham University]
- Panelists: Dr. Anne Fernald, Dr. Shiloh Whitney, and Vita Emery
- "Talk and Teach" (demonstrations of diversifying syllabi) [Fordham University]
- Panelists : Dr. Shiloh Whitney, Dr. Lauren Kopajtic, Dr. Samir Haddad, Dr. Philip Walsh, Johnny Brennan, and Gwen Daugs
- Graduate Application Panel for Undergraduates (Panel of graduate students in philosophy) [University of California Santa Cruz]
- A pedagogy-focused group discussion about factors that can contribute to making students with marginalized identities feel uncomfortable or unsafe, and what we can do as professors and TAs to make things better in that respect in our classrooms, departments, and profession. [University of Southern California]
- Philosophy Society Discussion on the topic “Words that Harm: Speech Acts and Sexism” [University of Aberdeen]
- “Doing Things While Black: a Dialogue on Race” with Chris Horm (Texas Tech University) [Texas Tech University]
- Panel interview with Natali Ashton (University of Vienna) by MAP members Valentina and Jamie [CEU]
- MAP Launch Event: food, socializing, and a “Why Philosophy?” panel interview/discussion with professor Jessica Gordon-Roth, graduate student Qiannan Li, and undergraduates Neeyra Estrada-Peña and Dawn Jiang. [University of Minnesota]
- Meet and Greet with undergraduates interested in graduate school [University of York]
- Q&A with Dr. Christine Gebhardt, the director of the Notre Dame Gender Relations Center [University of Notre Dame]
INFORMAL GET-TOGETHERS
- Women in Philosophy monthly gathering to share experiences and build relationships [University of Cincinnati]
- 3 Informal Coffee breaks (once a month in Jan. Feb. and Mar.), for faculty, graduate students, and undergraduates. [Western University]
- Biweekly “Coffee Chats” where grads and undergrads are invited to check in with each other, informally discuss MAP issues, and discuss future directions [Ohio State University]
- 'Bring a Plato' social picnic, invitation sent to all study levels with a particular focus on undergraduate participation. [University of Melbourne]
- One informal get together at the MAP representer's house to plan next year's events. [Syracuse University]
- Several informal meetings about starting a chapter, campus sustainability events. [UC Santa Cruz]
- Working lunches for MAP graduate students [Duke University]
- Grad-undergrad tea social for students participating in the mentoring scheme [Oxford University]
- Grad-undergrad mixer [Boston University]
- Informal interview with Jennifer Saul by Jamie Elliott and Martia Santuccio [Central European University]
- Group Trip to attend a talk by Alia Al-Saji and Luncheon [Loyola University Chicago]
- MAP launch and then two informal MAP coffee mornings, open to undergraduates and postgraduates [McGill University]
- End of semester de-stressing event for graduate and undergraduate students [Temple University]
- Dinner and Tea following MAP event [York University]
- Women's potluck [York University]
- "So you're thinking of grad school..." info session hosted for undergraduates considering applying to graduate school in philosophy [Fordham University]
- Hike from campus to "Garden of Eden" [University of California Santa Cruz]
- Information Meetings to kick start chapter at undergraduate level [University of California Santa Cruz]
- Coffee and Conversation series to build community among grad students and undergraduates [University of Iowa]
- Grad students in our department were invited to get together to visit a museum exhibition of culturally significant "collections" of items, notably including a collection of matchbooks from southern California's gay and lesbian bars spanning several decades. [University of Southern California]
- LGBTQ+ Philosophers Happy Hour at Stonewall [New York MAP chapters]
- Beginning of the semester meet-and-greet with food, for undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty [Rutgers, New Brunswick]
- Black History Month dinner, for undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty; with informal discussion of the work of black philosophers [Rutgers, New Brunswick]
- Happy hour for MAP graduate students [University of Miami]
- Finals Week Rest & Relexation Drop-In Breakfast for undergraduate and graduate students, with free coffee and food and a study room [Loyola University]
- Monthly coffee breaks for faculty and graduate students, intended to facilitate discussions of MAP relevant topics, sometimes organised around short readings [Western University]
- Weekly undergraduate study sessions [Western University]
- Two informal get togethers for undergraduates and graduate students [Warwick]
- Two informal get togethers with brainstorming MAP activities [Harvard]
- MAP Berlin Social [Freie Universitat]
- Graduate-Undergraduate Philosophy Party [Boston University]
- Graduate-Undergraduate occasional meetings for general discussion [Columbia University]
- Monthly Women in Philosophy Gathering [University of Cincinnati]
- Mentorship Program Study Party for graduate student mentors and mentees, with snacks in the library and informal studying [University of Notre Dame]
- Mid-Term De-Stress Event [Indiana University at Bloomington]
- De-Stressing Event: end-of-the-semester arts & crafts afternoon with snacks and discussion of mental health [Temple University]
- Welcome back event for undergraduate and graduate students interested in MAP [NYU]
- Winter MAP drinks for graduate students and post-docs from under-represented groups [NYU]
- Joint Launch Party with MAP, mentorship program, and the Undergraduate Led Philosophy Club [Notre Dame University]
WORKSHOPS/TRAINING
- Undergraduate Writing for Philosophy Workshop, led by Sahar Heydari Fard [University of Cincinnati]
- Chinese pronunciation workshop for the grad students and the faculty, focused on pronouncing Chinese students' names and let by two Chinese grad students. [Syracuse University]
- Spring workshop related to graduate school applications for interested undergraduates [UC Santa Cruz]
- Inclusive Teaching Workshop [Boston University]
- Mentoring Workshop, Applying to Summer Diversity Programs, led by Josh Wilburn [Wayne State University]
- Registration Q&A--presentation and Q&A about choosing philosophy classes for next semester, led by Rebecca Valeriano-Flores with panel: Hanne Jacobs, Claire Lockard, Capone, and Gina Lebkuecher [Loyola University Chicago]
- Mental Health Workshop for graduate students led by on-campus staff [Temple University]
- Undergraduate Reading & Writing Philosophy Workshops for first time philosopher-undergrads, run by TAs and MAP reps [Columbia University]
- Applying to Graduate School Workshop for juniors and seniors, run by first-year PhDs [Columbia University]
- Inclusive Pedagogy Workshop (for graduate students and faculty), led by Zoe Johnson-King (NYU) [Rutgers, New Brunswick]
- Inclusive Pedagogy Workshop lead by Nicole Fice [Western University]
- Mini-workshop on diversity and inclusion for faculty and graduate students led by Valerie Tiberius.
- Presentation on the new MAP chapter by Diversity Committee Chair, Grace Cebrero.
- Presentation on the National High School Ethics Bowl by Presidential Postdoc Catharine Saint-Croix [University of Minnesota]
- Diversifying Syllabi, an inclusive teaching workshop for grad students and faculty, Valerie Williams (Weber State University) [Boston University]
- Undergraduate Writing Workshops led by MAP graduate students and TAs [Columbia]
READING GROUPS
- University of Cincinnati: Black Rights/white Wrongs: The Critique of Racial Liberalism, Charles W. Mills
- Oxford University: "Feminisms: Being a woman and...", on intersectional feminism
- University of Indiana, Bloomington: Angela Davis' "Are Prisons Obsolete?"
- Vanderbilt University: Post-colonial Theory (authors discussed: Achille Mbembe, Frantz Fanon, Robert Blauner, Glenn Coulthard, Kyle Powys Whyte)
- University of Oklahoma: Kate Manne's Down Girl
- University of Pennsylvania: Philosophy of Race; Indian Philosophy
- Wayne State University: Philosophy of Race and Racism
- Bard College: The Story of the stone
- Temple University: Miranda Fricker, 'Epistemic Injustice'; Jose Medina, "Imposed Silences and Shared Hermeneutical Responsibilities"; Linda Martin Alcoff, "Epistemologies of Ignorance"; Maria Lugones and Joshua Price, "Faith in Unity: the Nationalist Erasure of Multiplicity"
- University of Wisconsin-Madison: Reading group in feminist philosophy (authors: Claudia Card, Scott Anderson, Hallie Rose Liberto, Judith Jarvis Thomson, Maria Lugones, Audre Lorde, Kate Manne)
- Fordham University: Topic: Power dynamics in the university, discussed work from Sara Ahmed
- University of Warwick: 4 MAP seminars on 4 topics: impostor syndrome, the nature of prejudice, epistemic injustice, speaker silencing
- Columbia University: Non-Western Philosophy Reading Group (Dao De Jing)
- Rutgers, New Brunswick: Feminist Philosophy Reading Group (weekly)
- University of Cincinnati: Feminist Ethics Reading Group
- University of Aberdeen: Katrina Hutchison’s “Sages and Cranks: The Difficulty of Identifying First-Rate Philosophers”
- Wayne State University: Paul C. Taylor's "Black Aesthetics" in conjunction with Beyoncé and Jay-Z's "Apeshit" song and video
- University of Miami: Minority Issues in Academia Reading Group: "How is this Paper Philosophy?" By Kristie Dotson, "Philosophy's Civil Wars" by Linda Martin Alcoff, and Underrepresentation of Women in Prestigious Ethics Journals" by Krishnamurthy, Liao, et al.
- Western University: Reading group on Jay Dolmage’s "Academic Ableism"
- Rhodes University: Five weekly MAP Seminars in the form of a short lecture followed by discussion led by Dr Sergio Alloggio, themed around deconstructing the foundationally hegemonic conceptions of reason, rationality, and truth
- Northwestern University: Weekly reading group. Topics included: Black feminist theory (Kimberle Crenshaw and Charlene Carruthers), White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo, The Meaning and Origin of Race and Racism, Settler Colonialism, Gender and Sexuality
- University of Wollongong: Summer reading group for undergraduates, topic: philosophy of race
- University of Memphis: Reading group on selection of Saba Mahmood's “The Politics of Piety,” "Migrants as Educators," by Senem Saner, Kristie Doston's "Concrete Flowers," and "The Arab That Cannot Be Killed: An Orientalist Logic of Genocide," by John Harfouch
- Columbia University: Non-western philosophy reading group on Zhuangzi
- University of Cincinnati: Reading group on Charles Mills’ Black Rights White Wrongs
- University of Notre Dame: Women in Philosophy Reading group centered on Phillipa Foot
- University of Oklahoma: Reading group on Kate Manne's "Down Girl" and related works
- Temple University: MAP Reading Group on Kwame Anthony Appiah's latest book, The Lies That Bind: Rethinking Identity
- Vanderbilt University: Reading group on Post/Decolonial Thought: Edward Said, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Bill Ashcroft, Andre Lefevere, Chinua Achebe, Helen Tiffin, Gayatri Chakracorty Spivak, Josephy W.H. Lough, Thomas Faist, Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Anjali Arondekar, Santiago Castro-Gomez
- Ohio State University: Partnered up with the Early Modern reading group to read Justin Smith's book Nature, Human Nature, and Human Difference
FILM SCREENINGS
- Screening of Black Panther during department's graduate student open house [Western University]
- Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon [Bard College]
- Princess Mononoke -- followed by a discussion period about philosophical themes in the movie [Brandeis University]
- I Heart Huckabees and Our People Will be Healed [University of Manitoba]
- Black Panther - hosted for undergraduates (in conjunction with the Fordham undergraduate Philosophy Club) [Fordham University]
- Screening and Discussion of “Get Out,” the Academy Award winning debut from Jordan Peele, entitled “Race, White Liberals, & The Sunken Place” [Texas Tech]
- Screening and Discussion of “Unlocking the Cage,” attended largely by graduate students and centered around the difficulties that Womxn and Persons of Color face in exclusionary professional spaces [Western U]
- Screening and Discussion of “13th,” a documentary exploration from Ava Duvernay into the history of racial inequality in the American Prison System [USC]
- Screening and Discussion of “The Crimes of Grindalwald,” centered around the discussion of representing philosophical ideas in film, attended by graduate and undergraduate students and facilitated by David O’Conor [University of Notre Dame]
- Screening and Discussion of “Blackkklansman,” the Academy Award nominated films from Spike Lee [Indiana University]
- Screening and Discussion of “Get Out,” centered around the themes of race and racism and attended by both undergraduate and graduate students [Temple University]
OTHER ITEMS
- Undergraduate Philosophy Club [University of Cincinnati]
- Set up official listserv for MAP members in department [Syracuse University]
- Negotiated with department to have a MAP speaker & welcome meeting every year [Syracuse University]
- Received approval for making MAP a paid service position [Syracuse University]
- Started working toward regional collaboration with Cornell [Syracuse University]
- Teamed up with Oxford's People for Womxn in Philosophy (PWIP) chapter to start a mentoring scheme that connects undergraduates with graduate mentors. [Oxford University]
- Undergraduate Mentorship Program [Boston University]
- Undergraduate Mentorship Program [Notre Dame]
- A collaboration with the UCSB Ethics Bowl team to help foster high school ethics bowl. With organizational assistance graduate student coaches and a member of MAP, undergraduate team members coached high school students for an inaugural high school ethics bowl competition in Santa Barbara. [University of California, Santa Barbara]
- A Coffee and Philosophy series, in which faculty present accessible overviews of their work to graduate students, undergraduates, and interested members of the public, over coffee and cookies. The speakers were Voula Tsouna-McKhiran, Dan Korman, and Thomas Holden. [University of California, Santa Barbara]
- MAP Organizer meeting for the "October 17-18, 2019, MAP Inaugural Colloquium Event with Dr. Jose Medina" [UC Santa Cruz]
- MAP Organizer Recruitment Meeting with pizza and refreshments served [UC Santa Cruz]
- MAP Mentorship Program: 6 undergraduates from underrepresented groups paired with 6 grad students for a year-long mentorship program—events to follow in Spring semester [Loyola University]
- MAP Organizing Meeting: An attempt at gathering interests and planning for the future, given the infrequency of events [UC Irvine]
- Grad-Undergrad Mentorship Program: A program pairing undergraduate philosophy majors with graduate student mentors [Boston University]
- Inter-Departmental Happy Hours: attended by students in the Pitt HPS and CMU philosophy departments [University of Pittsburgh]
- MAP Mentorship Program [University of Cincinnati]
- MAP Berlin inaugural event including a talk by Rebecca Kukla [Free University]
- Collaborated with the Department's new Climate Committee [Temple University]
- Ethics Bowl Coaching [UCSC]
- Mentorship Program for undergraduates interested in philosophy [Notre Dame University]
- The Secret World of Academic Philosophy: An Interactive Experience. [Notre Dame University]