Linda Martín Alcoff

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Linda Martín Alcoff (born July 25, 1955 in Panama) is a philosopher at the City University of New York who specializes in epistemology, feminism, race theory and existentialism. From 2012 to 2013, she served as president of the American Philosophical Association (APA), Eastern Division.[1] Alcoff has called for greater inclusion of historically under represented groups in philosophy and notes that philosophers from these groups have created new fields of inquiry, including feminist philosophy, critical race theory, and LGBTQ philosophy.[2][3] To help address these issues, with Paul Taylor and William Wilkerson, she started the Pluralist Guide to Philosophy.[4] She earned her PhD in Philosophy from Brown University. She was recognized as the distinguished Woman Philosopher of 2005 by the Society for Women in Philosophy and the APA.[5] She began teaching at Hunter College and the City University of New York Graduate Center in early 2009, after teaching for many years at Syracuse University.[5]

Education and career

Alcoff is originally from Panama. She began studying philosophy at Georgia State University, earning a BA with honors in 1980 and an MA in 1983. She did her doctoral work at Brown University; completing her dissertation under the direction of Ernest Sosa, Martha Nussbaum, and Richard Schmitt and receiving her PhD in 1987. She then spent one year as assistant professor of philosophy at Kalamazoo College. She then moved to Syracuse University, where she taught for the next ten years. She was tenured and promoted to the rank of Associate Professor in 1995 and to full professor in 1999. She also accepted various visiting positions at Cornell University (1994-1995), Aarhus University in Denmark (November 1999), Florida Atlantic University (Fall 2000), Brown University (Spring 2001). She took a position as Professor of Philosophy and Women's Studies at SUNY Stony Brook during the 2002-2003 academic year. In 2009 she moved to her present position as Professor of Philosophy at Hunter College and the CUNY Graduate Center.[5]

Alcoff has received a number of honors or awards, including receiving an honorary doctorate from the University of Oslo in September 2011, winning the Caribbean Philosophical Association's Frantz Fanon Prize for 2009 for her book Visible Identities: Race, Gender and the Self, being recognized as a Distinguished Woman in Philosophy by the Society for Women in Philosophy in 2005, and holding the Meredith Professorship for Excellence in Teaching at Syracuse University from 1995-1998, among a number of other awards.[5]

Research areas and publications

Alcoff has written widely on subjects including Foucault, sexual violence, the politics of epistemology, gender and race identity, and Latino issues.[5] She has authored two books - Real Knowing : New Versions of Coherence Theory (1996) and Visible Identities: Race, Gender and the Self (2006).[5] She has also edited ten volumes, written a large number of peer-reviewed articles, and contributed a large number of book and encyclopedia chapters and entries.[5]

Visible Identities: Race, Gender and the Self attempted to offer a unified account of social identity by bridging her previous work in epistemology, metaphysics, and the politics of ethnicity, race, and gender.[6] In it, Alcoff suggested that geographic location has significant implications for social identity above and beyond those conveyed by other contributors to identity (although she does view such implications as deterministic.)[6]

Other publications

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See also

References

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External links