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Presentation
Jon Wittrock is Doctor of Political and Social Sciences and Associate Professor (Docent) in political science. He completed his PhD at the European University Institute and has been active as a researcher and teacher at several universities, in Sweden and abroad. His research focuses on human rights and political philosophy, with a particular emphasis on the potential implications of investigating the empirical and conceptual borderlands between the religious and the secular, as well as on how different dimensions of autonomy do and may impact on human rights.
Selected publications
2020 “Constituent Power and Constitutive Exceptions: Carl Schmitt, Populism and the Consummation of Secularisation” in Matilda Arvidsson, Leila Brännström and Panu Minkkinen (eds.) Constituent Power: Law, Popular Rule and Politics. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 199-214.
2018 Contemporary Democracy and the Sacred: Rights, Religion and Ideology. London: Bloomsbury.
2018 “Which Way I Fly: Reforming Nihilism in the Anthropocene” in Richard Polt and Jon Wittrock (eds.) The Task of Philosophy in the Anthropocene. London/New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 153-174.
2018 (with Richard Polt) “The Task of Philosophy in the Anthropocene: Axial Echoes in Global Space” in Richard Polt and Jon Wittrock (eds.) The Task of Philosophy in the Anthropocene. London/New York: Rowman & Littlefield, ix-xix.
2017 “The EU as a ‘Large Space’? Carl Schmitt and the Contemporary Dilemmas of Political Rituals and Cultural Borders” in Mats Andrén, Thomas Lindkvist, Ingmar Söhrman and Katharina Vajta (eds.) Cultural Borders of Europe: Narratives, Concepts and Practices in the Present and the Past. New York/Oxford: Berghahn, 170-183.
2016 “Sacred Nature and the Nature of the Sacred: Rethinking the Sacred in the Anthropocene”. Telos 177, 107-126.
2016 (with Richard Polt) “Introduction: The Nature of Nature and the Politics of Fate”. Telos 177, 3-15.
2015 “Processes of order and the concreteness of the sacred: on the contemporary relevance of Carl Schmitt's critique of nihilism” in Matilda Arvidsson, Leila Brännström and Panu Minkkinen (eds.) The Contemporary Relevance of Carl Schmitt: Law, Politics, Theology. New York: Routledge, 195-207.
2015 “Heidegger within the Boundaries of Mere Reason? ‘Nihilism’ as a Contemporary Critical Narrative” in Sven Eliaeson, Lyudmila Harutyunyan and Larissa Titarenko (eds.) After the Soviet Empire: Legacies and Pathways. Leiden/Boston: Brill, 87-107.
2014 “Nihilism and the Resurrection of Political Space: Hannah Arendt's Utopia?” in Elena Namli, Jayne Svenungsson and Alana Vincent (eds.) Jewish Thought, Utopia, and Revolution. Amsterdam/New York: Rodopi, 161-171.
2012 "Radical Ambiguity: The Dilemma of Progressive Politics and the Reification of Language” in Jonna Bornemark and Hans Ruin (eds.) Ambiguity of the Sacred: Phenomenology, Politics, Aesthetics. Huddinge: Södertörn Philosophical Studies 12, 147-153.