The Centre for Philosophy and Critical Thought, Goldsmiths University of London

Research Centre run jointly between the Departments of Sociology and English and Comparative Literature at Goldsmiths University, London


Leave a comment

Arun Saldanha (U Minnesota; CPCT Visiting Professor): Sexuation and the ontology of race: notes towards a Darwin after Fanon (21 November 2025 @5pm; hybrid)


The Centre for Philosophy and Critical Thought (CPCT), Goldsmiths, cordially invites you to


Arun Saldanha (U Minnesota; CPCT Visiting Professor)

Sexuation and the ontology of race: notes towards a Darwin after Fanon

Friday, 21 November 2025 from 5-7 pm GMT
RHB 137a and online

[Click here for the Zoom registration]

Psychoanalytical theory has done systematic work to ontologize sex as the irrepressibly insistent question spurring human existence. But is there only one such question? While for obvious ethico-political reasons Lacanian theorists of race relegate it entirely to the symbolic register and to modernity, perhaps the fact bodies become objects of such strongly racialized desires indexes a second profound ontological compulsion. Perhaps, as Darwin speculates with his theory of sexual selection, the aesthetic and psychic economies of sex itself necessitate a sensitivity to phenotype. Both sexuality and kinship remain riddled by lack and misinterpretation. It is important to stress that as subset of phenotypical variation “race” is entirely contingent on European colonization and capital. The talk will end by addressing the implications of the immanent critique of evolutionary theory for a renewed politics of universality. 

About the speaker

Arun Saldanha is Professor in the School of Geography, Environment & Society at the University of Minnesota (Twin Cities) as well as Visiting Professor at CPCT in Autumn 2025. The author of Space after Deleuze (Bloomsbury, 2017) and Psychedelic White: Goa Trance and the Viscosity of Race (U of Minnesota Press, 2007) as well as co-editor of books on sexual difference, Deleuze studies, and food geographies, he is currently working on a new book tentatively titled Phenotypically: A Materialist Theory of Race, which seeks a critical “return to” Darwin after Fanon in light of a resurgence of far-right fantasies around human biology.

Contact: j.ng [at] gold.ac.uk


Leave a comment

New partnership with Shakespeare in Philosophy (ShiP), Symposium on “Shakespeare and the Slovenian School of Philosophy and Psychoanalysis” (14 June 2025)


Dear Friends of CPCT,

We’re pleased to announce a new partnership with Shakespeare in Philosophy (ShiP), a non-profit symposium series exploring the relation between Shakespeare and the philosophical work that has taken inspiration from his oeuvre. Its goal is to create a space for dialogue and discussion involving Shakespeare scholarship, wider philosophical and socio-political issues, and the general public. Events are held in collaboration with Garrick’s Temple to Shakespeare at the Temple built by the pre-eminent actor David Garrick beside the Thames in 1755.

ShiP’s next event is on 14 June 2025 on ‘Shakespeare and the Slovenian School of Philosophy and Psychoanalysis’—for booking, please register here.

Continue reading


Leave a comment

NEW PUBLICATION: “Singularity’s -Abilities,” a Special Dossier on Samuel Weber, Modern Language Notes: Comparative Literature Issue 139.5 (December 2024)



Dear Friends of CPCT,

We’re pleased to announce the publication of “Singularity’s -Abilities,” a Special Dossier of the Modern Language Notes: Comparative Literature Issue 139.5 (December 2024), which has just been made openly accessible on Project Muse. The dossier collects reworked versions of most of the talks that were delivered at a conference at CPCT (online) and co-organized with Northwestern University in December 2020 in celebration of Samuel Weber’s 80th birthday and in honor of his distinguished career and far-reaching influence on several generations of critical theorists now spread around the globe. The dossier also includes a new piece by Sam entitled “Transference: A Cliché?”.

Continue reading