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Denk' ich an Deutschland in der Nacht, / Dann bin ich um den Schlaf gebracht, / Ich kann nicht mehr die Augen schließen, / Und meine heißen Tränen fließen.
  —Heinrich Heine


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Assistant Professor
Email: kfeldman@berkeley.edu Phone: 642-2973
Office: 5325 Dwinelle    

Karen Feldman's areas of specialization include hermeneutics and phenomenology, the Frankfurt School, German Idealism, feminist theory, literary theory and aesthetics. She received her B.A. from the University of Chicago (1989) and her Ph.D. from DePaul University (1998). Prof. Feldman was a Fulbright scholar at the Herzog August Bibliothek in Wolfenbüttel and in Berlin (1998-2000); and a postdoctoral fellow at the Graduiertenkolleg "Repräsentation, Rhetorik, Wissen." She is the author of Binding Words: Conscience and Text in Hobbes, Hegel and Heidegger (Northwestern University Press, forthcoming in 2005) and co-editor of Continental Philosophy: An Anthology (Blackwell, 1998). She has published articles on early modern and Continental thought in Journal of the History of Ideas, Philosophy and Rhetoric, Word and Image, Angelaki, Philosophy Today, and in edited collections. Her current research concerns figurality and literariness in the wake of Kant's aesthetics.


Publications
 

Book:

Binding Words: Conscience and Text in Hobbes, Hegel and Heidegger, Northwestern University Press, 2006.

Edited book:

McNeill, William, and Feldman, Karen S., eds., Continental Philosophy: An Anthology. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1998.

Articles:

"On Vitality, Figurality and Orality in Hannah Arendt, " in Thinking Allegory Otherwise, ed. Brenda Machosky. Stanford: Stanford University Press, forthcoming.

"The Fictional and the Figural: On Derrida, Kant and the Textual Event, "in Cardozo Law Review 27.2, January 2006. "Reading by Example, "coauthored with Ellen Cox, in Intersubjektivität und Praxis, eds. Georg Bertram and Stefan Blank. Paris: L‚Harmattan, 2005.

"Heidegger and the Hypostasis of the Performative, "in Angelaki: Journal of the Theoretical Humanities 9.3, December 2004. "The Binding Word: Conscience and the Rhetoric of Agency in Hegel‚s Phenomenology of Spirit, in Qui Parle 14.2, Spring 2004.

"‘Per canales Troporum’: On Tropes and Performativity in Leibniz’s Preface to Nizolius," in Journal of the History of Ideas, forthcoming December 2004.

"Johann Fischart," coauthored with Niklaus Largier, in Harvard History of German Literature, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 2004.

"The Binding Word: Conscience and the Rhetoric of Agency in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit," in Qui Parle 14.1, Fall/Winter 2003.

"The Naming of the Hymn: Heidegger’s Reading of Hölderlin’s ‘Der Ister’," in Thinking Between Poetry and Philosophy, ed. Hugh Silverman. New York: Continuum Press, 2002.

"Die Endlichkeit des Performativen: Das Gewissen in Hegels Phänomenologie des Geistes," in Diesseits des Subjektprinzips: Körper-Sprache-Praxis, eds. Thomas Bedorf and Stefan Blank. Berlin: Edition Humboldt, 2002, pp. 55-68. Reprinted in En-deçà du principe du sujet, eds. Thomas Bedorf and Stefan Blank. Paris: L’Harmattan, 2002.

"Conscience and the Concealments of Metaphor in Hobbes’ Leviathan," in Philosophy and Rhetoric 34.1 (2001): 21-37.

"On the Performative Difficulty of Being and Time," in Philosophy Today 44.4 (2000): 366-379.

Book reviews:

Review of Slavoj Zizek, Sehr innig und nicht zu rasch. In Texte zur Kunst 11.42 (June 2001): 115-117.

Review of Miguel de Beistegui and Simon Sparks, eds. Philosophy and Tragedy. In Philosophy in Review 21.3 (June 2001): 167-169.

Review of Drucilla Cornell, Just Cause: Freedom, Identity and Rights. In Philosophy in Review 21.6 (December 2001): 409-411.