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1pm on 4th July to 6pm on 5th July
Keynote Addresses
Beauvoir and the Greeks: Tragedy, Philosophy, History Meryl Altman (DePauw University)
The Other of the I: Deleuze and Sartre on the Transcendental Field Henry Somers-Hall (Royal Holloway, University of London)
Selected Presentations
Pictures of Parenthood and Childhood in Sartrean Existentialism Ciro Adinolfi (Catholic Institute of Toulouse)
Sartre's and Beauvoir's Divergent Philosophies of Death Kiki Berk (Southern New Hampshire University)
Reapproaching Sartre: New Developments in the Reception of Sartre's Thinking Alfred Betschart (independent scholar)
Reading Simone de Beauvoir's Old Age in the 21st Century: Is this Critical Essay Still Relevant? Marlene Bichet (independent scholar)
Writing and Reading Existentially: Sartrean Littérature Engagée as a Framework for Literary Theory and Criticism Danielle Cervantes Stephens (Point Loma Nazarene University)
Ambiguity, Freedom, and Virtue: Reading Simone de Beauvoir as a Virtue Ethicist David Collins (University of Oxford)
Sartre's Theology-Proof Ontology Matthew C. Eshleman (UNC Wilmington)
Thinking Shyness Through Sartre Darren Gillies (independent scholar)
Old Age and the Question of Authenticity Sonia Kruks (Oberlin College)
Complicity in Ones Oppression as an Ethical Fault Filipa Melo Lopes (University of Edinburgh)
On létat cadavérique de lâme: Medical Discourse and the Representation of Subjectivity in Le Mur Louise Mai (Sorbonne Université)
Exalting Black Thought: Jean-Paul Sartre's Commitment to Black Existence and Black Liberation LaRose T. Parris (Lehman College, City University of New York)
Lived Value and the Experiential Self: An Alternative Account of Pre-Reflective Self-Consciousness Robin Pawlett-Howell (University of York)
Dismantling Fused Groups: A Sartrean Account of Political Solidarity Maria Russo (Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan) and Francesco Tava (University of the West of England)
Sartre's Simple Indeterminism Joshua Tepley (St Anselm College)
Identifying with the Reflected Object: Theoretical Relevance of the Mirror Theme in Huis clos Simone Villani (Università degli Studi di Padova)
** Conference Dinner will be at Regent's Park College on the Monday evening. This is a three-course meal. Please register for this in addition to the conference itself and indicate dietary preferences on the next page. **
All registrations include lunch on Tuesday and tea/coffee breaks on both days.
For accommodation, we recommend using https://www.universityrooms.com to book into one of these colleges: Keble, St Hugh's, Wadham, Christ Church, or Magdalen.
Conference begins 1pm on Monday 4th July and ends 6pm on Tuesday 5th July. The schedule will be emailed to registrants towards the end of June.
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LocationMaison française d'Oxford (View)
2-10 Norham Rd
Oxford OX2 6SE
United Kingdom
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Kid Friendly: Yes! |
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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