Kelly E. Happe

3 articles
University of Georgia
  1. Complicating Marx’s Role in Rhetorical Studies
    doi:10.1080/02773945.2025.2561833
  2. Utopia and Crisis
    Abstract

    ABSTRACT This essay thinks through the relationship between dystopia and utopia, in particular, how the constellation of past and present in radical demands amid state and economic violence (what Weinbaum calls black feminism's philosophy of history) is that which creates “crisis”—an estrangement from the present, a reclaiming of past insurgency, and the possibilities for other worlds.

    doi:10.5325/philrhet.53.3.0272
  3. <i>Parrhēsia</i>, Biopolitics, and Occupy
    Abstract

    ABSTRACT This article considers Michel Foucault's theories of ethical speech and militant life in the context of Occupy Wall Street's encampments in Zuccotti Park. Focusing on the encampments and the production and circulation of resources to meet bodily needs, the article concludes that occupation was a self-inflicted form of precarity as well as an extension of an already existing vulnerability, a living that is at once a form of social death. I read the occupations as a mode of militant life, which is to say, that which enacts precarity while at the same time transforming it into the object of radical speech.

    doi:10.5325/philrhet.48.2.0211