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Natalie Nenadic

Research Interests:
Post-Kantian Phil.
Arendt, Heidegger, Hegel
Philosophy of Law (especially Global Justice)
War crimes, genocide
#MeToo, sexual abuse, trafficking, pornography
Philosophy of Technology
History of Social and Political Philosophy
Topics in the History and Philosophy of Science
Feminism
What is Philosophy?
Mentoring Students

Undergraduate award won by student in my Philosophy of Law course:

Breathitt Lecture Award

Education
  • Ph.D. Yale University (Philosophy, dissertation advisor: Karsten Harries)
  • M.Phil Yale University (Philosophy and History)
  • M.A. Yale University (Philosophy)
  • M.A. Yale University (History)
  • University of Michigan Law School (two-year Research Scholar position, working with Catharine MacKinnon)
  • B.A. Stanford
Research

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<em>A couple sits to reflect while visiting “IN AMERICA How Could This Happen…” in fall 2020. A team from GW, UMD and Artist Suzanne Firstenberg created a digital exhibition that now gives others the chance to visit the site virtually (Credit: Bruce Guthrie)</em>

My research brings together, in mutually illuminating ways, the two main sources of philosophy

  1. The multifaceted and multidisciplinary expressions of life experiences that reveal genuinely philosophical problems by pointing to a contemporary crisis that demands original concepts to help us see some dimension of it that isn’t yet widely seen. These concepts help us navigate this crisis and inform practical responses.
  2. The ideas of major past thinkers, in an ever-evolving and inclusive canon, which resonate with this contemporary crisis and that we need to creatively tap to help us formulate this original thinking. Some sources I tap are Aristotle, Rousseau, Mary Wollstonecraft, Hegel, Frederick Douglass, Dilthey, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Arendt, and Daoism.

The contemporary crises I focus on

  1. Feminism’s new understanding of pervasive sexual objectification, abuse, and violence and their proliferation through today’s Internet and AI pornography. This understanding includes #MeToo’s intersection with social media technology. I examine how these new concepts guide legal and other responses and help us see how this human condition delivers distinctly psychological and emotional harms. This research extends Catharine MacKinnon’s foundational feminist theoretical and legal work and Heidegger’s analysis of modern technology and is informed by Hegel’s gendered notion of modern freedom. 
  2. My work in conceptualizing “rape as genocide” and prosecuting it, with Catharine MacKinnon, for the first time (Kadić v. Karadžić, Southern District of New York), in a case that pioneered this crime’s recognition in international law and now allows us to see it in other contexts such as Putin’s war on Ukraine. Hannah Arendt’s original insights on the Holocaust, genocide, and the Eichmann trial inform this research.
  3. My efforts to develop new concepts to aid in prosecuting former President Donald Trump that show how his malignant narcissism and psychopathy delivered two crimes: 
  • Hundreds of thousands of avoidable COVID-19 deaths, interpreted as a new means of perpetrating crimes against humanity
  • The January 6 attempted coup, where I show how we may interpret his Tweets and speech as prosecutable criminal commands

    This research makes creative use of Arendt’s insights on authoritarianism, technology, and prosecuting unprecedented criminality; Heidegger’s analysis of technology to identify essential features of social media; and expert insights on authoritarian personality (e.g., Dr. Bandy Lee, The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump: 37 Psychiatrists and Mental Health Experts Assess a President).

    4. The governing Anglo-American academic philosophy’s marginalization of the discipline from relevance to world problems. This condition stems from its redefinition, in recent history, of philosophy that makes philosophy no longer about life concerns and severs it from its past, including learning from great past thinkers about how they used philosophy’s history to deliver their original thinking. 

I have been a recipient of an American Association of University Women (AAUW) Fellowship, a Charlotte W. Newcombe Dissertation Fellowship in Ethics, a Fulbright Scholarship, and was offered a Hannah Arendt Center Fellowship.

Selected Presentations

"January 6 and Breaking the 'Home' of America's Democracy: A Strongman, Technology, and Speech, Pacific Association for the Continental Tradition (PACT) Annual Conference, University of Seattle (September 2023)

"Gender Equality, Violence against Women, and Social Media Technology: Towards a New Global Narrative," Workshop on Dialogue Between Civilizations on Global Commons, The Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, Vatican City (June 2023)

"Dao Holism, Hermeneutical Phenomenology, and the Current Crisis in Western Philosophy: Towards Philosophy that is Genuinely Relevant to Global Challenges," East and West Philosophy in Dialogue -- From Worldview to Sustainable Order, The Pari Center, Italy (June 2023)

"Hermeneutical Phenomenology and the Pre-Cognitive, Practical, and Historical Sources of Concepts," Interlacing Concepts and Practices: Phenomenological Perspectives in Dialogue with Pragmatism and Analytic Philosophy, University of Padua, Italy (June 2023)

“The ‘Trump Pandemic’: How Did He Kill So Many Americans?,” American Philosophical Association (APA) Pacific Division Meeting, San Francisco (April 2023); Pacific Association for the Continental Tradition (PACT) Annual Conference, University of San Francisco (September 2022)

“Over 700,000 Covid-19 Deaths, the Insurrection, and It’s Not Over: Trump’s Pathological Narcissism and the Method to the ‘Madness,’” Pacific Association for the Continental Tradition (PACT) Annual Conference, University of Hawaii, Hilo, (September 2021, withdrew, conflict) 

“Justice is Integral to Renewal and Recovery from the ‘Trump Pandemic,’” American College, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium, Online (May 2021)

“The ‘Trump Pandemic’: Pathological Narcissism and Psychopathy as a ‘New’ Means of Perpetrating Crimes Against Humanity,” Southwest Seminar in Continental Philosophy, Online, (May 2021)

“Legal Responsibility for Mass Covid-19 Deaths in America?” Presentation on a panel on, Publicly Engaged Scholarship, University of Kentucky, Online (April 2021)

“Hauntings, the January 6 Insurrection, and De-coding How a Psychopath Issues Criminal Commands,” Pacific Association for the Continental Tradition (PACT), Online, (February 2021) 

“Philosophy, Covid-19 in America, and Race,” Pacific Association for the Continental Tradition (PACT), Online, (August 2020)

“Thinking with Heidegger in the Age of Coronavirus in America: Trump and a ‘New’ Method of Genocide,” Heidegger Circle, Online, (August 2020)

“Raphael Lemkin, Phenomenology, and the Concept of Genocide,” Society for the Philosophic Study of Genocide and the Holocaust, in association with the American Philosophical Association Central Division, Chicago (February 2020)

“Hannah Arendt, Genocide, and the Task of Philosophy: Between Hermeneutic Phenomenology and Logical Positivism,” Society for Phenomenology and The Human Sciences, in conjunction with the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, Pittsburgh (October 2019)

"Tourism as Transformative Experience," International Symposium: Tourism and Culture in Philosophical Perspective, Hvar, Croatia (October 2019)

"Philosophy, History, and 'Fishes in the Sea,'" Pacific Association for the Continental Tradition (PACT), Seattle University (September 2019)

"Catharine MacKinnon's Thought as Philosophy," Society for Women in Philosophy (SWIP) Conference - Ireland, University College Dublin (May 2018)

"Philosophy in Search of Itself: Reflections on Robert C. Scharff's How History Matters to Philosophy: Rethinking Philosophy's Past After Positivism," (Invited) Panel on his book, Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, Memphis (October 2017)

"Modern Freedom, Technology, and Pornography: A Feminist and Heideggerian Analysis," Southwest Seminar in Continental Philosophy, California State Univ Northridge (June 2017)

"Philosophy, Genocide, and Sexual Atrocities," (Invited) NEH Challenge Grant Colloquium on "Gender, Mass Violence, and Genocide," Kupferberg Holocaust Resource Center and Archives, Queensborough Community College, City University of New York (October 2015)

"Heidegger and the Ubiquity and Invisibility of Pornography in the Internet Age," Presented as part of a panel I organized "Gender, Justice, and Gestell: New Beginnings" at the Heidegger Circle Annual Meeting, Loyola University Maryland, Baltimore (May 2015)

"Catharine MacKinnon, Feminism, and Continental Philosophy," (Invited) Panel celebrating the 25th anniversary of the publication of Catharine MacKinnon's Toward a Feminist Theory of the State, American Philosophical Association (APA) Pacific Division Meeting, Vancouver (April 2015)

"Heidegger, Pornography, and Technology: Rethinking Freedom in the Age of the Internet," Society for Women in Philosophy (SWIP) -- Ireland, University College Dublin (November 2014)

"Pornography and the Ambivalence of Modernity: A Heideggerian Critique," Pacific Association for the Continental Tradition (PACT), Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles (October 2014)

"Sexual Violence and Objectification: A Heideggerian Historical Analysis from Aristotle to Enlightenment Political Thought," American Political Science Association Annual Meeting, Chicago (Aug.-Sept. 2013); also presented as an invited lecture at Kennesaw State University, Georgia (November 2012)

"Pornography, Technology, and Closing off the Possibilities of Authentic Mitsein," Conference on "Discovering the 'We': The Phenomenology of Sociality," University College Dublin, Ireland (May 2013); also presented a version at the Annual Meeting of the Comparative and Continental Philosophy Circle, Fudan University, Shanghai, China (March 2013)

Organized and moderated "A Conversation with Karsten Harries" at The 47th Annual Meeting of the Heidegger Circle, New Haven, CT (May 2013)

"The Imperative of 'Thinking' After Auschwitz: The Genealogy of the Concept of Genocidal Rape," Society for the Philosophical Study of Genocide and the Holocaust at the American Philosophical Association (APA) Central Division Meeting, New Orleans (February 2013)

"Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite: Wollstonecraft contra Rousseau contra Aristotle," Northeastern Political Science Association Annual Meeting, Boston (November 2012)

"Hannah Arendt, the United Nations, and the Srebrenica (Bosnia) Genocide," International Political Science Association World Congress, Madrid, Spain (July 2012)

Courses
  • Philosophy of Law: Feminism (grad/upper division, Spring 2024)
  • What is Philosophy? (graduate seminar, Fall 2023)
  • History and Science in Post-Kantian Philosophy (grad/upper division, Fall 2022, Spring 2019)
  • Hannah Arendt, COVID-19, and Thinking in Dark Times (graduate seminar, Spring 2021)
  • Philosophy, Context, and History (graduate seminar, Fall 2019)
  • Phenomenology (graduate/upper division, Fall 2019)
  • Philosophy of Law: Arendt and International Justice (graduate/upper division)
  • Philosophy of Law: Catharine MacKinnon (graduate/upper division)
  • Philosophy of Law: Sex Equality (graduate/upper division)
  • Modernity, Pornography, Sex Equality (graduate seminar, Heidegger-oriented)
  • Heidegger, Philosophy, and Nazism (graduate seminar)
  • Heidegger's Being and Time (graduate seminar)
  • Advanced Topics in Ethics: Arendt with Heidegger (also covering Hegel, graduate/upper division)
  • Existentialism (graduate/upper division)
  • Hegel
  • Social Theory Graduate Seminar: Justice (co-taught with faculty from Literature, Sociology, and Anthropology)
  • Epistemology and Ethics (upper division)
  • Philosophy, Law, and the #Me Too Movement (Spring 2020, 2019)
  • Introduction to Legal Philosophy
  • Introduction to Feminism and Philosophy
  • Philosophy and Pornography
  • Introduction to Political Philosophy
  • Business Ethics
  • Ethics
  • Introduction to Philosophy
  • Philosophy of Architecture
  • Historical Perspectives on the Holocaust

PHI 537 Philosophy of Law: Feminism (Spring 2024)

This course focuses on feminism’s experience-driven multidisciplinary and philosophical work (a hermeneutical-phenomenological approach) in making visible the widespread sexual objectification, abuse, and violence that target mainly women and girls and are a central means of maintaining their social inequality. Through new concepts, feminism re-framed these experiences in ways that recognized their multifaceted harms (e.g., physical, psychological, emotional, trauma) rather than covering them up as the prevailing understanding does. These new concepts have, in turn, guided efforts to change law so that it might be used to stop these abuses, offer remedies to survivors, and thereby provide justice that is more universally accountable to all citizens. 

We trace two main trajectories that yielded creative legal developments: re-conceptualizing sexual harassment and pornography as sex discrimination. We also consider their intersections with today’s technology. We examine sexual harassment’s relation to the social media #MeToo Movement and pornography in the age of the Internet and AI (artificial intelligence). Finally, we deepen our understanding of the nature of the oppression at issue here by bringing in concepts from psychology, in particular narcissistic personality patterns and psychopathy. 

 

PHI 509 History and Science in Post-Kantian Philosophy (Fall 2022, Spring 2019)

This course centers on principal figures of Post-Kantian Philosophy as treated in Robert C. Scharff’s recent book How History Matters to Philosophy: Reconsidering Philosophy’s Past After Positivism (2015). Some of these figures include Dilthey, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Charles Taylor, and Richard Rorty. We examine how they reassert philosophy’s identity as a historical-humanistic enterprise distinct from the natural sciences, at a time when philosophy was losing its identity as the source of the sciences and was becoming, instead, an emulator of (an idea of) science. Moreover, philosophy was on a path to being reduced to logic and having little to do with life and existential concerns. We explore how they navigate a relation to scientific epistemology in their efforts to spell out an epistemology appropriate to philosophy. In this examination, we interrogate what these figures understood philosophy to be and how they did it. We thereby also appreciate some differences between academic philosophy and how these (and other) canonical figures understood philosophy’s vocation, differences that center on situated knowing of contemporary crises and generative relationships with philosophy’s past.

Student reviews:

  • Perhaps my favorite course in all my philosophical studies. The text was PERFECT; I WANTED to read it. I just really appreciated this class
  • This is the second class I’ve had with prof. Nenadic and with both her enthusiasm for the topic and knowledge of the content made being engaged in class easy. phenomenal professor.
  • [The professor is] very enthusiastic and passionate about the material. This helped everyone become more interested in it.
  • Dr. Nenadic knew the material inside and out, and was able to tie it to real world research…
  • Dr. Nenadic prioritizes her students and it shows. She is very helpful and accommodating to different learning styles.
  • The professor was extremely patient and understanding. The course material was difficult to understand, so she did a wonderful job at presenting the material and breaking it down bit-by-bit for the students.
  • Very knowledgeable. Very respectful to students.
  • I think she is probably one of the best professors that I know.

 

PHI 340 Introduction to Feminism and Philosophy (Fall 2023, Spring 2023)

This course introduces students to treating feminist topics in a philosophical way. This means examining how experiences, which mainly (though not only) affect women and girls, have pushed us to rethink our understanding of matters such as human nature, freedom, awareness of oppression, and notions of victims and survivors. We trace how these experiences have led us to come up with new concepts that now help us see discrimination, abuses, and inequalities that, before, weren’t widely seen and were covered up. We also explore how these new concepts have spurred changes in law and in society.

To this end, this course focuses on feminist topics surrounding the #MeToo Movement such as sexual harassment, sexual abuse, and discrimination in the workplace and in education. We also explore how concepts from psychology such as narcissistic personality and sociopathy may help us better understand these experiences.

 

PHI 715 Hannah Arendt, COVID-19, and Thinking in Dark Times (Graduate Seminar, Spring 2021)

This course centers on close readings of Hannah Arendt’s major works The Origins of Totalitarianism and Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil as well as key essays. Her thought analyzes major political crises of our era focused on authoritarian government -- from totalitarian systems (Nazism and communism) to other types of dictatorship. We will cover her treatment of such topics as: how societies slip into authoritarianism; concurrent shifts in societal and moral norms; systemic inequality, racism, and anti-Semitism; questions of law, criminality, evil, and legal accountability; and ethics and personal responsibility. Arendt evinces the idea that philosophy or thinking is most needed in times of crisis to help us understand and navigate them and that it emanates from a multidisciplinary proximity to these developments and through knowledge of the past that resonates with them. In this way, we will consider how her thought may help us make sense of today’s extraordinary times. We will center on the unique experience of COVID-19 in the United States and will include topics such as its disproportionate health and economic effects on communities of color, Native American nations, and women and its intersections with Black Lives Matter.

Student reviews:

  • Dr. Nenadic has a particular orientation towards philosophy: namely, that it should be about the way we think about and love our lives. It should always be tied to experience, to understanding our moment, ourselves, and ourselves-in-our-moment. She refuses to do philosophy at an overly detached level from real life. As a result, her courses teach me so much about myself and my world. I think she is absolutely wonderful and I greatly admire her dedication.
  • The instructor designed the course so that we would be synthesizing work from the history of philosophy with work in contemporary (and philosophically attuned) psychology, social science, and history. It was a really innovative seminar and served as an exemplar for how to do innovative philosophy that is relevant to life.
  • Dr. Nenadic is an excellent teacher who cares about the material as well as her students. She was extremely encouraging and supportive in helping students develop their own projects.
  • …the Professor encouraged us to think personally and creatively about the way in which philosophy is extremely important for making sense of our current political moment.
  • It has been hugely instructive to participate in a collaborative process of destructive retrieval that is aimed at understanding a current crisis. It is heartening to be part of a course that deals with pressing issues – not just ‘issues’ in a scholarly sense, but existentially pressing real-world problems.

 

PHI 516 Phenomenology (Graduate/upper division, Spring 2021, Fall 2019)

This course introduces students to phenomenology, a largely late 19th century and early 20th century development in philosophy. We center on phenomenology as a response to modern philosophy’s increasing removal of philosophy from life concerns, from other disciplines, and from the great works of its past. We examine how phenomenology reasserted that philosophical problems arise from worldly challenges and crises in their multifaceted expressions and how it cast the relationship between those problems and philosophy’s past. The principal figures we cover are Dilthey, Husserl, and Heidegger, with a focus on the development of Heidegger’s hermeneutic phenomenology in its connections to Dilthey’s beginnings and in its distinction from Husserl’s phenomenology. We conclude by considering philosophy so understood in relation to the multiple crises we are currently in the middle of such as Covid-19, erosion of democratic institutions, Black Lives Matter, and sex inequality.

Student reviews:

  • She brought an excitement that spread through the entire class for a solid 3 months. I felt guilty if I missed one class because of how much I learned in an hour.
  • I wouldn’t “change” any aspects of the instructor or how the instructor approached the class. Dr. Nenadic even arranged it so that the author of the book we were reading visited the class and led us in a discussion. She went above and beyond to make the classroom a place where we felt valued and that our contributions were heard and mattered.
  • The professor allowed us to meet with the author of the text and my God did that inspire me. What an amazing course
  • Her willingness to answer any question and rephrase a concept in several ways was I think what made my success in this course possible.
  • PHI 516 covered foundational ideas in a way I had not encountered before, because most other courses neglect the crucial foundational questions that were the focus of this course. The professor did a stellar job keeping us grounded in the core motivating questions of the course, too. PHI 516 has been a unique and amazingly consequential learning experience for that reason.
  • Dr. Nenadic was very kind and knowledgeable.
  • I would change nothing she is a star.

 

PHI 680 Philosophy, Context, and History (Graduate Seminar, Fall 2019)

Since the rise of modern science and its aspiration to a God’s-eye view, in philosophy we have seen both an emulation of this stance (or some version of it) as well as an increasingly explicit grappling with the contextual and historical nature of thinking. The latter preoccupied 19th century philosophers such as Dilthey and Nietzsche, who considered that stance impossible for philosophy (and ultimately for science) without the alternative being relativism, and culminated in the early 20th century works of Heidegger. More recently, within analytic philosophy, post-positivists have also raised questions of context and history in philosophy. We examine this variety of considerations of the situatedness of thought and its ties to the past. We address issues of epistemology, ontology, and ultimately how we understand the nature and task of philosophy. Figures we may treat include Descartes, Comte, Dilthey, Nietzsche, Husserl, Heidegger, Rorty, and Taylor. The course will center on analysis from Robert Scharff’s How History Matters to Philosophy: Reconsidering Philosophy’s Past After Positivism (2014).

Student review

  • Well, the course content itself was very, very helpful. In particular, it connected the way of an inquiry to the being of the inquirer, and that was just fantastic. PHI 680 was the kind of course that challenges you to not just learn new bits of content, but challenges you to confront yourself as an inquirer and how you understanding yourself in how you do inquiry, and how that self-understanding is intimately connected to how you proceed in inquiry. For me, it brought to light things that were previously invisible. In addition to teaching me all-new things, the perspectives and materials provided by Dr. Nenadic and also my classmates helped me better understand things I’ve been struggling to understand – and even articulate at all – for literally a decade, since when I was in graduate school for an entirely different discipline. This was a terrific class.

 

UKC 182 Philosophy, Law, and the #MeToo Movement (Spring 2020, 2019)

The #Me Too Movement has recently captured the public consciousness as years of unpunished incidences of sexual harassment and assault by high profile figures have come to light and triggered a social media tsunami by scores of other victims coming forward with similar experiences. The course will examine this social and political phenomenon and the implications that it might have on our own lives. We will address questions such as: What are sexual harassment and assault? How has our understanding of them changed over time? What are their relation to civil rights? What impediments are there to seeking justice? What is the role of law in this pursuit? The course explores this issue through focusing on its philosophical dimensions, which also introduces students to what philosophy is and to its central relevance to such problems. We will address philosophical topics such as existentialism, phenomenology, concept formation, human oppression, freedom, human nature, and ethics, among others. Throughout, we will explore the role and limits of law in seeking justice for these violations.

Student reviews:

  • It was most helpful that Dr. Nenadic had real conversations with us instead of throwing information at us. It felt like a discussion most of the time.
  • Dr. Nenadic has a very extensive background in this topic so it was great to learn from someone with so much experience.
  • The weekly responses we turned in seemed like they were going to be a hassle when I first saw them in our syllabus but they were really fun to write! The topics are interesting and engaging so most of the time I was sad I had to limit how much I wrote! The responses helped prepare you for the longer written assignments and definitely helped you be engaged in the discussion in class.

 

Selected Publications:

"Charting an Invisible Domain: Travel and the Genesis of the Concept of Sexual Atrocities as Genocide" in Tourism and Culture in Philosophical Perspective, eds. Marie-Élise Zovko and John Dillon (Springer, 2023), 167-187

"Catharine MacKinnon, Feminism, and Continental Philosophy: Comments on Toward a Feminist Theory of the State -- Twenty-Five Years Later," Symposium on Catharine A. MacKinnon's Toward a Feminist Theory of the State, Feminist Philosophical Quarterly, Vol. 3 (2017), 2, Article 2 (http://ir.lib.uwo.ca/fpq/vol3/iss2/2/)

"Heidegger and the Ubiquity and Invisibility of Pornography in the Internet Age," Final Proceedings of the 2015 Meeting of the Heidegger Circle, March 2016, 191-214

"Heidegger, Feminism, and Pornography" in The Philosophy of Pornography: Contemporary Perspectives, eds. Lindsay Coleman and Jacob Held (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2014), 105-125

Review of Scott M. Campbell, The Early Heidegger's Philosophy of Life: Facticity, Being, and Language, Fordham University Press, 2012, Gatherings: The Heidegger Circle Annual 4 (2014): 96-105. (http://www.heideggercircle.org/Gatherings2014-06Nenadic.pdf)

Review of Hans Maes and Jerrold Levinson (eds.), Art and Pornography: Philosophical Essays, Oxford University Press, 2012, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, 2014.01.18. (http://ndpr.nd.edu/news/45699-art-and-pornography-philosophical-essays/)

"Heidegger, Arendt, and Eichmann in Jerusalem," Journal of Comparative and Continental Philosophy 5, no. 1 (2013)

"Genocide and Sexual Atrocities: Hannah Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem and Karadzic in New York," Philosophical Topics 39, no. 2 (2011): 117-144 (actually published 2013)

"Sexual Abuse, Modern Freedom, and Heidegger's Philosophy," Social Philosophy Today 27 (2011): 83-98

"Philosophy, International Law, and Genocide: The New York Case Against Karadzic," Brief: The Official Journal of the Law Society of Western Australia 38, no. 2 (2011): 20-23

"Pornography, Genocide, and the Law" (with Asja Armanda), in Big Porn Inc: Naming the Harms of the Global Pornography Industry, eds. Melinda Tankard Reist and Abigail Bray (Melbourne: Spinifex Press, 2011), 229-238

"Feminist Philosophical Intervention in Genocide," in Metacide in the Pursuit of Excellence, ed. James R. Watson (New York/Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2010), 135-162