Kim Leighton was raised in the Boston area, and has spent much of her
life in New York and Western Mass. She received her BA from Sarah
Lawrence College and her MA and PhD in philosophy from the University
of Massachusetts. Her areas of research are social/political
philosophy, continental philosophy, feminist philosophy, and ethics.
After finishing her dissertation on understandings of self-knowledge
in modern and post-modern philosophy, she spent two years as a Mellon
Humanities Postdoctoral Fellow at Cornell. There her work explored
continental and analytic approaches to questions regarding the self,
identity, and ethics. Her current research continues to interrogate
the intersections of epistemology and moral and political philosophy
as she examines the ways self-knowledge is operative in some of the
key concepts of contemporary and modern political theory (e.g.,
agency, identity, autonomy, and authenticity). She is also interested
in how knowledge productions about the self, the body, the psyche, and
the human, motivate and limit political theory. Bringing bio-ethics
and political philosophy together, one question she asks is: how might
current sciences of identity such as genetics and genomics, and the
ethical problems they purportedly raise, affect current political,
social, and legal critique, particularly in regards to articulations of rights and freedom?
kim.leighton@tufts.edu
617-627-4931
Miner 03
OHs: TBA