An epigraphic analysis of the lives of female ex-slaves in the west of the Roman Empire.
A multi-layered analysis of continuity, fold, and event and their heteropoietic character in Deleuze’s metaphysics of genesis.
An autobiography written by one of the world’s foremost legal scholars of the twentieth century.
A keystone work within Laruelle’s body of work, which highlights major themes around democracy, human identity and the critique of the judgement of humanity.
Explores the intersection of American literature and language politics through the curiously understudied subject of grammar.
Redefines Jihadi-Salafism by uncovering its diverse premodern influences over centuries of Islamic political thought.
An experiment in reading and interpretation, which shows how different interpretive metaphors transform our experience of literature.
Explores the interaction between law and commerce in late medieval Bruges and its impact on the concept of justice.
Traces a shared critical agenda highlighting the emancipatory force of difference and otherness.
Explores how Jacques Derrida’s deconstruction can help analyse political concepts including justice, democracy, sovereignty, populism and post-truth.
A feminist critique of security sector reform and its interactions with militarisation and patriarchal gender relations in Uganda.
Studies how the claims of people with lived experiences of precarity and displacement refuse, disrupt and enact various alternatives to violent bordering practices.