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Gayle Salamon

she/her

Professor of English, Princeton University
GayleSalamon_112922_0016---Gayle-Salamon

Professor of English

Gayle Salamon’s research interests include phenomenology, feminist philosophy, queer and transgender theory, continental philosophy and disability studies. She is the author of “Assuming a Body: Transgender and Rhetorics of Materiality,” which received the Lambda Literary Award in LGBT Studies. Her most recent book, “The Life and Death of Latisha King: A Critical Phenomenology of Transphobia,” uses phenomenology to explore the case of Latisha King, a 15-year-old trans girl who was shot and killed in her Oxnard, California, junior high school by a 14-year-old classmate. Her co-edited volume with Gail Weiss and Ann Murphy, “Fifty Concepts for a Critical Phenomenology,” was published in 2020. She is currently at work on two projects: a manuscript on imagination, experimentation and ethics in mid-20th century phenomenology, and a monograph exploring narrations of bodily pain and disability in contemporary memoir entitled “Painography: Metaphor and the Phenomenology of Chronic Pain.”

Events

Because of Sex: Understanding Anti-Trans Legislation

Friday, September 20

This talk will address anti-trans legislation in the United States, tracing the legal status of trans identity in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in Bostock v. Clayton County and exploring recent efforts at the state level to legislate transness out of existence.

Introduced by: Martha Ferguson ’11, Director of Development, Stanford Law School