Dr. Miri Rozmarin
CV
Dr. Miri Rozmarin is a senior lecturer of feminist philosophy and critical theory, in the Gender Studies Program. She is also a senior research fellow, and the head of the research lab “Contemporary feminist political subjectivity” at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute. Her areas of specialization are feminist philosophy social philosophy and ethics. Her research interests include different aspects of social transformation such as temporality, affects, and agency as elements of political lives. Her first book titled Creating Oneself, (Peter Lang 2011) addresses the question of agency in a post-liberal philosophy. In 2017 she published her second book titled Vulnerable Futures Transformative Pasts. On Vulnerability, Temporality and Ethics (Peter Lang 2017), in which she provides an account of transformative temporality which mobilizes vulnerability as an affective resource for social transformation. Dr. Rozmarin has also published numerous papers in leading journals on the topics of political subjectivity, vulnerability and maternal subjectivity. Her present research further explores vulnerability as an aspect of political subjectivity and agency.
Research
Feminist theory
Political subjectivity
Ethics of vulnerability
Critical theory
Maternal subjectivity
Psycho-social theory
Publications
Books
Rozmarin, Miri. 2017. Vulnerable Futures, Transformative Pasts: On Vulnerability, Temporality and Ethics. Oxford and Berlin: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers.
Rozmarin, Miri.2012. Creating Oneself: Agency, Desire, and Feminist Transformations. Oxford and Berlin: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers.
Chapters in Books:
Rozmarin, Miri. 2017. "The Medea Chick." In Bad Mothers: Regulation, Representations, and Resistance, edited by Michelle Hughes Miller, Tamar Hager, and Rebecca Bromwich. Demeter Press.
Articles:
Rozmarin Miri. Simhi Shlomit. “Non-Matricidal Relations as Maternal Radical Care”. Forthcoming in Hypatia: Journal of Feminist Philosophy
Rozmarin, Miri. 2021. “Critical Belonging: Cohabitation, Plurality, and Critique in Butler’s Parting Ways”. Redescriptions: Political Thought, Conceptual History and Feminist Theory. 24(1): 27–41. DOI: http://doi.org/10.33134/rds.340
Rozmarin, Miri. 2021. “Navigating the Intimate Unknown: Vulnerability as an Affective Relation". NORA: Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research. 29 (3): 190-202, DOI: 10.1080/08038740.2021.1899284
Rozmarin, Miri. 2020. "Those who gather in the streets: Butler’s vulnerable political subjects". Philosophy Today 64(3):599-616. https://doi.org/10.5840/philtoday2020105350
Rozmarin, Miri. 2017. “Vulnerability and Reconciliation: Managing Vulnerability as Part of Peacemaking.” Israel Affairs 23 (3). https://doi.org/10.1080/13537121.2017.1306926.
Rozmarin, Miri. 2016. “Staying Alive: Matricide and the Ethical-Political Aspect of Mother-Daughter Relations.” Studies in Gender and Sexuality 17 (4): 242-253. https://doi.org/10.1080/15240657.2016.1236540.
Rozmarin, Miri .2013. “Living politically: Reading Irigaray as a suggestion for a feminist way of life”, Hypatia: Journal of Feminist Philosophy 28, (3): 469-482. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1527-2001.2011.01258.x
Rozmarin, Miri .2013. “Thy signet and thy bracelets: Identity, becoming and vulnerability in the biblical story of Tamar.” Journal of Research in Gender Studies 3, (1): 88-101.
Rozmarin, Miri. 2012. “Maternal Silence.” Studies in Gender and Sexuality 13 (1):4-14 https://doi.org/10.1080/15240657.2012.640216.Reprinted: 2015. In Women, Mothers, Subjects: New Explorations of The Maternal, edited by Maura Sheehy. New York: Routledge.
Rozmarin, Miri. 2012. “Recognition, Gender, and the Negotiation of a Non-Violent Future.” Isreael Affairs 18 (1): 107–22. Reprinted: 2013. In People-to-People Diplomacy in Israel and Palestine: The Minds of Peace Experiment, edited by Sapir Handelman. New York: Routledge.
Rozmarin, Miri. 2011. “Living Values: Maternal Corporal Subjectivity and the Value of Life and Death.” Studies in Gender and Sexuality 12 (2): 108–23.
Rozmarin, Miri. 2005. “Power, Freedom, and Individuality: Foucault and Sexual Difference.” Human Studies 28 (1): 1–14.
Publications in Hebrew
Books:
Ben Naftali, Michal and Rozmarin, Miri .2015. I Make My Way: An Interview with Julia Kristeva. Tel Aviv: Resling Publishing.
Articles:
Rozmarin, Miri.2020. “Matricide” Maftea’kh. a Lexical review of political thought 15: pp.117-134.
Rozmarin, Miri. 2019. “Feminism, Critique and Political Subjectivity.” Theory & Critique 50: 457-474.
Rozmarin, Miri. 2008. “Desire with no Object”, Block: Architecture, Media, Theory, Tel-Aviv 204-214
Rozmarin, Miri .2006. “Verbal Violence and Social Existence”, Metaphora 6: 193-203
Last Updated Date : 27/07/2022