American philosopher
Alice Crary
|
---|
Alice Crary, Berlin, 2017
|
Born
| 1967
[2]
|
---|
Alma mater
| AB, Philosophy,
Harvard University
, 1990; PhD, Philosophy,
University of Pittsburgh
, 1999
[3]
|
---|
Notable work
| - The Good it Promises, the Harm it Does: Critical Essays on Effective Altruism
(2023)
- Animal Crisis
(2022)
- Inside Ethics
(2016)
- Beyond Moral Judgment
(2007)
- The New Wittgenstein
(2000)
|
---|
Awards
| |
---|
|
Era
| Contemporary philosophy
|
---|
Region
| Western philosophy
|
---|
School
| |
---|
Doctoral advisor
| John McDowell
|
---|
Other academic advisors
| Stanley Cavell
,
Hilary Putnam
|
---|
Main interests
| Moral philosophy
,
philosophy and literature
,
epistemology
,
feminist philosophy
,
feminist epistemology
,
conceptualism
,
animal ethics
,
disability studies
,
The Frankfurt School
,
objectivity
|
---|
Notable ideas
| Wider objectivity and rationality; critical animal theory; All human beings and animals are inside ethics
|
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|
Website
| www.alicecrary.com
|
---|
Alice Crary
(
; born 1967) is an American
philosopher
who currently holds the positions of University Distinguished Professor at the Graduate Faculty,
The New School for Social Research
in New York City and Visiting Fellow at
Regent's Park College
,
University of Oxford
, U.K. (where she was Professor of Philosophy 2018?19).
Philosophical work
[
edit
]
Crary works in the fields of
moral philosophy
,
feminism
,
animal ethics
, and
Wittgenstein
scholarship. She has written about cognitive disability,
[4]
critical theory,
[5]
propaganda,
[6]
nonhuman animal cognition,
[7]
effective altruism
,
[8]
and the philosophy of literature and narrative.
[9]
Her work is especially influenced by
Cora Diamond
,
[10]
John McDowell
,
Stanley Cavell
,
[11]
Hilary Putnam
,
bell hooks
,
[12]
Kimberle Crenshaw
,
[12]
Charles W. Mills
, and
Peter Winch
.
Ethics and moral philosophy
[
edit
]
Crary's first monograph,
Beyond Moral Judgment
,
[13]
discusses how literature and feminism help to reframe moral presuppositions. Her
Inside Ethics
[14]
argues that ethics in disability studies and animal studies is stunted by a lack of moral imagination, caused by a narrow understanding of rationality and by a philosophy severed from literature and art.
[15]
[16]
[17]
Feminism
[
edit
]
Crary's work on feminism is critical of standard views of
objectivity
in
analytic philosophy
and
post-structuralism
. In her view, both traditions mistakenly conceive of objectivity as value-neutral, and thus incompatible with ethical and political perspectives.
[12]
According to Crary, these "ethically-loaded perspectives" invite both cognitive and ethical appreciation for the lives of women, in ways that count as objective knowledge.
[18]
Like her moral philosophy, her feminist conception of objectivity is informed by Wittgenstein, who she understands as proposing a "wide" view of objectivity: one in which affective responses are not merely non-cognitive persuasive manipulations but reveal real forms of suffering that give us a more objective understanding of the world.
[19]
Wittgenstein
[
edit
]
Crary is associated with the so-called "therapeutic"
[20]
or "resolute"
[21]
reading of Wittgenstein. In her co-edited collection of essays of such readings,
The New Wittgenstein
, her own contribution argues against the standard use-theory readings of Wittgenstein that often render his thought as politically conservative and implausible.
[22]
Since then, she has contributed to numerous collections of Wittgenstein scholarship, including
Emotions and Understanding
[23]
and interpretations of Wittgenstein's
On Certainty
.
[24]
Animals in Ethics and Politics
[
edit
]
Crary has promoted (e.g., in her 2024 Cambridge Union opposition
[25]
) the view that humans and animals have moral worth above and beyond any quantitative valuation.
[26]
This view is further expounded in the 2022 monograph
Animal Crisis: A New Critical Theory
co-written with
Lori Gruen
.
Public philosophy
[
edit
]
Crary frequently participates in and organizes events for public discussion,
[27]
[28]
[29]
such as public debates on the valuation of life
[30]
and the treatment of animals and the cognitively disabled.
[31]
[32]
[33]
She has also written for the
New York Times
.
[34]
[35]
Crary has contributed to international educational activities focusing on the intersection of philosophy with critical theory and political philosophy. These include summer philosophy workshops at
Humboldt University
in
Berlin, Germany
, the Transregional Center for Democratic Studies/New School for Social Research Europe Democracy and Diversity Institute in
Wroclaw, Poland
,
[36]
and the
Kritische Theorie in Berlin
Critical Theory Summer School (Progress, Regression, and Social Change) in
Berlin, Germany
,
[37]
which she co-organized with
Rahel Jaeggi
.
Personal life
[
edit
]
Crary was a 1983-4
exchange student
with
Youth for Understanding
in the southern German town of
Achern
. She was also a national champion rower at the
Lakeside School (Seattle)
in
Seattle, Washington
and placed 6th in the Junior Women's Eight at the 1985 World Rowing Junior Championships in
Brandenburg, Germany
.
[38]
In the 1980s, after studying liberation theology with
Harvey Cox
at
Harvard Divinity School
, Crary researched
Christian base communities
in southern Mexico and Guatemala. In the early 1990s, she was a teacher at the Collegio Americano in
Quito, Ecuador
.
Bibliography
[
edit
]
Books ? monographs
- Animal Crisis
(Polity, 2022 (co-written with
Lori Gruen
), translated into Spanish (Ediciones Catedra, 2023) and forthcoming in 2024 in French (
Vrin
). Discussed at/on
Yale Law School
,
Living Philosophy
,
New Books Network
,
The Philosopher
,
Wild Connection
,
Knowing Animals Podcast
,
Factually Podcast
,
Storytelling Animals Podcast
,
The Animal Turn Podcast
,
Species United Podcast
,
The Annual Weissbourd Conference, University of Chicago (May 2023)
.
- Inside Ethics: On the Demands of Moral Thought
(Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 2016). (Reviewed in
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
and
Hypatia
as well as
Environmental Philosophy
, the
Nordic Wittgenstein Review
,
La Vie des Idees
,
Choice
, the
Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
, and
The Journal of Animal Ethics
). The book's philosophical content and linkage with liberal arts education are discussed in recent interviews at the
APA blog
and
Social Research Matters
as well as
Il Sole 24 Ore (in Italian)
.
Inside Ethics
is also the subject of a 2018
Symposium
at
The Syndicate Network
featuring commentary by
Stanley Hauerwas
, Anne-Marie Søndergaard Christensen, Aaron Klink, and Avner Baz, with extensive author responses (convened and edited by Sean Larson, Timothy J. Furry, and Ethan D. Smith).
- Beyond Moral Judgment
(Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 2007). (Reviewed in Analytic Philosophy, Choice, The European Journal of Philosophy, Ethics (twice), Hypatia, Metapsychology Online Reviews, Mind, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, Philo, and The Pluralist and discussed at a 2008 "Author Meets Critics" session at the Eastern Division Meeting of the APA.)
Books ? edited volumes
- The Good it Promises, the Harm it Does: Critical Essays on Effective Altruism
(Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2023 (co-edited with
Carol J. Adams
and
Lori Gruen
)). Foreword by
Amia Srinivasan
, with contributions by animal activists and academics criticizing the impact of effective altruism on the pro-animal movement and overlapping social justice movements. Reviewed in
Sciences Humaines
,
EcoLit Books
,
L’Amorce: Revue contre le specisme
,
oxford public philosophy
, and
Mind
)
- Here and There: Sites of Philosophy
by
Stanley Cavell
(Harvard University Press, 2022, co-editor with
Nancy Bauer
and
Sandra Laugier
, forthcoming in Spanish translation (Prensas Universitarias de Zaragoza (PUZ)). Reviewed in
The New York Review of Books
,
The Nation
,
The LA Review of Books
, and
The London Review of Books
.
- Wittgenstein and the Moral Life: Essays in Honor of
Cora Diamond
(Cambridge, MIT Press, 2007).
- Reading Cavell
(New York, Routledge, 2006 (co-edited with Sanford Shieh)).
- The New Wittgenstein
(New York, Routledge, 2000 (co-edited with
Rupert Read
)).
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Bauer, Nancy; Beckwith, Sarah; Crary, Alice; Laugier, Sandra; Moi, Toril; Zerilli, Linda (February 25, 2015).
"Introduction"
.
New Literary History
.
46
(2): v?xiii.
doi
:
10.1353/nlh.2015.0012
– via Project MUSE.
- ^
"Crary, Alice 1967- (Alice Marguerite Crary) | Encyclopedia.com"
.
www.encyclopedia.com
.
- ^
"Alice Crary - Professor of Philosophy"
. Newschool.edu
. Retrieved
2017-09-01
.
- ^
Cureton, Adam; Wasserman, David T, eds. (2018).
The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Disability
.
doi
:
10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190622879.001.0001
.
ISBN
9780190622879
.
- ^
Crary, Alice (June 2018).
"Wittgenstein Goes to Frankfurt (and Finds Something Useful to Say)"
.
Nordic Wittgenstein Review
.
7
(1).
- ^
Crary, Alice (October 1, 2017).
"Putnam and Propaganda"
.
Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal
.
38
(2): 385?398.
doi
:
10.5840/gfpj201738220
.
- ^
Crary, Alice (April 14, 2012). "Dogs and Concepts".
Philosophy
.
87
(2): 215?237.
doi
:
10.1017/S0031819112000010
.
S2CID
170697605
.
- ^
Crary, Alice (Summer 2021).
"Against Effective Altruism"
.
Radical Philosophy
.
2.10
: 33?43.
- ^
Crary, Alice (2012). "W.G. Sebald and the Ethics of Narrative".
Constellations
.
19
(3): 494?508.
doi
:
10.1111/j.1467-8675.2012.00691.x
.
- ^
"Wittgenstein and the Moral Life"
.
The MIT Press
.
- ^
"Reading Cavell"
.
Routledge & CRC Press
.
- ^
a
b
c
Crary, Alice (2018).
"Alice Crary: The methodological is political / Radical Philosophy"
.
Radical Philosophy
(202): 47?60.
- ^
"Beyond Moral Judgment ? Alice Crary"
.
www.hup.harvard.edu
.
- ^
"Inside Ethics ? Alice Crary"
.
www.hup.harvard.edu
.
- ^
"Alice Crary On Her Newest Book, Inside Ethics"
. September 7, 2016.
- ^
Cleary, Skye (November 2, 2016).
"Why Philosophy Needs Literature: Interview with Alice Crary"
.
- ^
"Inside Ethics | Syndicate"
.
- ^
Crary, Alice (August 24, 2015). "Feminist Thought and Rational Authority: Getting Things in Perspective".
New Literary History
.
46
(2): 287?308.
doi
:
10.1353/nlh.2015.0010
.
S2CID
143046249
.
- ^
See "What Do Feminists Want in an Epistemology?," in Feminist Interpretations of Ludwig Wittgenstein, ed. Naomi Scheman and Peg O'Connor (University Park, PA: University of Pennsylvania, 2002), pp. 112?113.
- ^
Alice Crary, introduction to The New Wittgenstein, ed. Alice Crary and Rupert Read (New York: Routledge, 2000), p. 1.
- ^
Silver Bronzo, "The Resolute Reading and Its Critics: An Introduction to the Literature," Wittgenstein-Studien 3 (2012), p. 46.
- ^
Crary, Alice (August 9, 2000). Crary, Alice; Read, Rupert J. (eds.).
Wittgenstein's Philosophy in Relation to Political Thought
. Routledge. pp. 118?145 – via PhilPapers.
- ^
Gustafsson, Ylva; Kronqvist, Camilla; McEachrane, Michael, eds. (2009).
Emotions and Understanding - Wittgensteinian Perspectives | Y. Gustafsson | Palgrave Macmillan
. Palgrave Macmillan UK.
doi
:
10.1057/9780230584464
.
ISBN
978-1-349-29958-4
– via www.palgrave.com.
- ^
Moyal-Sharrock, D.; Brenner, W., eds. (August 9, 2005).
Readings of Wittgenstein's On Certainty
. Palgrave Macmillan UK.
doi
:
10.1057/9780230505346
.
ISBN
978-0-230-53552-7
– via www.palgrave.com.
- ^
"Prof. Alice Crary:This House Believes You Can Put A Number On Human Life"
.
The Cambridge Union
.
- ^
"Animals"
.
Political Concepts: A Critical Lexicon
.
- ^
"Five Questions"
.
Anchor FM
.
- ^
"ETHICS, WITTGENSTEIN AND THE FRANKFURT SCHOOL, AND CAVELL"
.
3:16
.
- ^
"Social Visibility"
.
Social Visibility
.
- ^
"Prof. Alice Crary:This House Believes You Can Put A Number On Human Life"
.
The Cambridge Union
.
- ^
Petrou, Michael; Crary, Alice (January 24, 2018).
"Can trophy hunting ever be justified?"
.
Prospect magazine
.
- ^
"Comparisons Between Cognitively Disabled Human Beings and Non-human Animals: Do They Have a Role in Ethics?"
.
University Center for Human Values
.
- ^
"How Much Should We Care About Animals? with Alice Crary, Elizabeth Harman, Dale Jamieson, and Shelly Kagan"
.
The Academy for Teachers
. Archived from
the original
on 2021-04-11.
- ^
Bauer, Nancy; Crary, Alice; Laugier, Sandra (July 2, 2018).
"Opinion | Stanley Cavell and the American Contradiction"
.
The New York Times
.
- ^
Crary, Alice; Wilson, W. Stephen (June 16, 2013).
"The Faulty Logic of the 'Math Wars'
"
.
- ^
"Transregional Center for Democratic Studies"
.
Transregional Center for Democratic Studies
.
- ^
"Progress, Regression and Social Change"
.
- ^
"Alice CRARY"
.
worldrowing.com
.
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