RT @mneesha_gellman: Congratulations, Lida! I look forward to learning from you. https://t.co/QcGtRxVhvE
RT @LidaMaxwell: This is one of my favorite things I've ever written - on how Foucault's parrhesiastes (truth-teller) is gendered and why t…
Congratulations, Lida! I look forward to learning from you.
RT @LidaMaxwell: This is one of my favorite things I've ever written - on how Foucault's parrhesiastes (truth-teller) is gendered and why t…
RT @LidaMaxwell: This is one of my favorite things I've ever written - on how Foucault's parrhesiastes (truth-teller) is gendered and why t…
This is one of my favorite things I've ever written - on how Foucault's parrhesiastes (truth-teller) is gendered and why that matters for how we understand the politics of truth-telling. It's open access this week, so I invite you to take a look. More on t
RT @PalgraveJournal: Article of the week: 'The politics and gender of truth-telling in Foucault’s lectures on parrhesia' by @LidaMaxwell. R…
Article of the week: 'The politics and gender of truth-telling in Foucault’s lectures on parrhesia' by @LidaMaxwell. Read for free here: https://t.co/qWbW23ITDu https://t.co/3CsXZZ9Zs9
This https://t.co/5c2YASRiQJ by @LidaMaxwell is simply fantastic. Difficult read at times (especially Foucault's elision of seduction, rape, and 'exchange'?!) but powerful analysis of how political criticism is gendered. Fifth-century Greek play - but so