I’m on holiday in Canada but those back home just sent this horrifying footage from my front garden 😱
Snake catcher came and eventually caught this “very angry” cobra, took it into the country park and released it far from human habitation.
English Translations of Karoline von Günderrode’s Works
For your convenience and reading pleasure, a list of all the English translations I could find of Günderrode’s published and unpublished works, arranged alphabetically by German title. (For a list arranged alphabetically by name of…
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For your convenience and reading pleasure, a list of all the English translations I could find of Günderrode’s published and unpublished works, arranged alphabetically by German title. (For a list arranged alphabetically by name of translator, as well as secondary literature in English, German and French, see the “Read Günderrode” page on this website.) Where I found more than one translation of a piece, the entries are arranged alphabetically by translator’s name.
Kabiri 5 is now live! I am particularly excited to share this volume--my first as Editor-in-Chief--edited together with an amazing team. We had the pleasure of working with creative contributions from a talented set of contributors.
It's open access 🙂:
journals.library.mun.ca/index.php/ka...
Cfp: Brill JHWP Women and the Abolition of Transatlantic Slavery, Guest Editors S. Bergès and A. Coffee
Journal of the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists, Volume 6, Issue 2 Women and the abolition of transatlantic slavery Guest editors Sandrine Bergès and Alan Coffee While the enslaved…
Until June 24: read a chapter from "Karoline von Günderrode: Philosophical Writings" for free here:
academic.oup.com/book/62113/c...
Learn about Günderrode's life & contributions to 19th century debates on metaphysics, epistemology, identity, life after death, the human vocation & more!
Journal of the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists, Volume 6, Issue 2 Women and the abolition of transatlantic slavery Guest editors Sandrine Bergès and Alan Coffee While the enslaved had always fought their condition, and a few isolated philosophers wrote against slavery, the late eighteenth and the early nineteenth century saw the birth of a new way of resisting it: the social movement of abolitionism.
feministhistoryofphilosophy.wordpress.com
I learned yesterday from Federica Gregoratto that a similar view was held by Karoline von Günderrode 150 years earlier.
📣Interested in studying history and philosophy of science and/or logic? Come around to learn more about our HPS+Logic M.A. program at @ruhr-uni-bochum.de on Thurs, 11/06, 12:00 (CET)! In person and zoom: ruhr-uni-bochum.zoom-x.de/j/6842065321...
More info: www.hpsplus.org
#PhilSci #HistSci #HPS #STS
Interested in women's & gender studies w a critical theoretical & feminist pedagogical twist? Apply now & join our cohort at @ucc.ie (non-EU internationals deadline is 15/6).
Use the QR code or find out more via www.ucc.ie/en/cke03/.
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Until June 24: read a chapter from "Karoline von Günderrode: Philosophical Writings" for free here:
academic.oup.com/book/62113/c...
Learn about Günderrode's life & contributions to 19th century debates on metaphysics, epistemology, identity, life after death, the human vocation & more!
Until June 24: read a chapter from "Karoline von Günderrode: Philosophical Writings" for free here:
academic.oup.com/book/62113/c...
Learn about Günderrode's life & contributions to 19th century debates on metaphysics, epistemology, identity, life after death, the human vocation & more!
Kyla Bruff
Sandrine Berges
academic.oup.com
Abstract. Philosophical Fragments is a volume of translations of short pieces by the German philosopher and poet Karoline von Günderrode (1780–1806), with
Abstract. Philosophical Fragments is a volume of translations of short pieces by the German philosopher and poet Karoline von Günderrode (1780–1806), with