Staff Profile
Dr Stephen Seely
NU Academic Track Fellow (NUAcT)
- Email: stephen.seely@ncl.ac.uk
- Telephone: +44 (0) 191 208 5575
- Personal Website: http://www.stephendseely.com
- Address: B.12, Sociology Building
18-20 Windsor Terrace
Newcastle University
Newcastle Upon Tyne
NE2 4HE
Background
I am a Newcastle University Academic Track (NUAcT) Fellow in the School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology. I earned my PhD in 2017 from the Department of Women's & Gender Studies at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, where I specialised in feminist, queer, decolonial/postcolonial theory and continental philosophy. Broadly, my work is concerned with counter-hegemonic ontologies and politics of sex/sexualities, particularly as these shape and are shaped by the rapidly mutating lineaments of global 'modernity' (e.g., racial capitalism, democracy, secularity, technology, forms of governmentality).
These interests have lead to research into the influence of technoscientific rationality on the conceptualisations of sex(uality) within Anglophone gender studies and the ways that this shapes its imagination of sexual futurities; political spirituality as an alternative to 'new materialist' turns to science in feminist and queer theory and as a way of linking the struggle for erotic transformation to decolonial, anticapitalist, and environmental struggles; and the possibilities of shifting the geographies of reason in sexualities studies by rethinking Euro-American queer and decolonial critiques of 'sexual democracy' from the perspective of the Global South.
My previous research has been supported by a Marie Curie Horizon 2020 COFUND grant (2017-2019) and stipendary fellowships from the Institute for Research on Women (Rutgers, 2012-2013), the Zentrum Gender Studies (Universität Basel, 2015), and the Institute of Advanced Study (University of Warwick, 2016). I have received awards from the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy (2014), the Luce Irigaray Circle (2014), and PhiloSOPHIA: A Continental Feminist Society (2015). My work has appeared in Sexualities, Feminist Formations, Social Text, Women's Studies Quarterly, and the Australian Feminist Law Journal, and my first book, The Spirit of Revolution: Beyond the Dead Ends of Man (co-authored with feminist philosopher Drucilla Cornell) was published by Polity Press in 2016.
Qualifications
PhD, Women's & Gender Studies, Rutgers University
MA, Women's & Gender Studies, Rutgers University
BA (Hons), Women's & Gender Studies and Media, Rhetorical, & Cultural Studies, The University of Illinois at Chicago
Previous Positions
Warwick Interdisciplinary Research Leaders (WIRL) Postdoctoral Fellow, Institute of Advanced Study, University of Warwick (2017-2019)
Visiting Positions
Visiting Researcher, Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research (WiSER), University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa (2019)
Visiting Fellow, Institute of Advanced Study, University of Warwick (2016)
Visiting Fellow, Zentrum Gender Studies, Universität Basel (2015)
Research Areas
Critical social and political theory (feminist, queer, postcolonial/decolonial, European/continental); Gender and sexualities studies; Science and technology studies; International political sociology and global studies; Political spirituality and (post)secularism; Biopolitics, governmentality, political economy; Sexual democracy and erotic politics
Current Projects
I am currently working on two major projects:
(1) I am completing the manuscript for my previous research project, 'Participatory Differences: South Africa and the Politics of Sexual Democracy,' which was supported by a Marie Curie Horizon 2020 COFUND grant at the University of Warwick. Reading four cases of sexuality politics in South Africa through the framework of 'southern epistemologies,' I reframe queer and decolonial critiques of the intersection between sexuality and democracy in modernity and argue for a rethinking of 'sexual democracy' as a praxis of participatory difference. The first publication from this research is forthcoming in Sexualities.
(2) As the core of my NUAcT fellowship, I will be undertaking a major 5-year project entitled 'Queer Commonwealth: Remapping Global Sexuality Politics,' which aims to provide a mapping of the new transnational sexuality politics—modes of governance and dissidence—emerging amidst shifting global assemblages of capital, nationalism, religion, and technology. The interdisciplinary mixed-methods project will have three phases, examining three scales: (1) the local, which will consist of field research in Nigeria, East Africa, India, Trinidad and Jamaica; (2) the global, which will analyse how these political formations, strategies, and concepts are circulating transnationally; and (3) the virtual, which will use innovative methods from digital studies to examine how technologies are facilitating new networks of political participation. This project will demonstrate the importance of sexuality as a driving factor in the rapidly shifting geopolitics taking shape in the ongoing global crisis of neoliberal democracy.
In addition to these projects, I am continuing my collaborative work with feminist philosopher Drucilla Cornell about political spirituality. Our next piece, 'Why Political? Why Spirituality? Why Now?' will be published in a forthcoming issue of the CLR James Journal on 'Decolonizing Spiritualities.'
My personal website has more details about each of these projects
Modules
I am not currently teaching.
Supervision
I would be eager to supervise postgraduate research in any of my research areas, particularly projects with strong theoretical components. I am especially keen to support interdisciplinary work.
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Articles
- Cornell D, Seely SD. Setting Struggle in Motion: From 'Non-Violence' to Revolutionary Anti-Violence. Philosophy & Social Criticism 2023, 49(9), 1027-1045.
- Cornell D, Seely S. Why Political? Why Spirituality? Why Now?. The CLR James Journal: A Review of Caribbean Ideas 2021, 27(1/2), 25-38.
- Seely S. Queer theory from the south: A contribution to the critique of sexual democracy. Sexualities 2020, 23(7), 1228-1247.
- Seely S. Individuation, Sexuation, Technicity. Theory, Culture & Society 2020, 38(4), 23-45.
- Seely S, Irigaray L. What Does It Mean to Be Living?. PhiloSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 2018, 8(2), 1-12.
- Seely S. Sexual Difference in/and the Queer Beyond of Ethics. Feminist Formations 2017, 29(3), 163-171.
- Cornell D, Seely S. Saksonun Devrimci Bir Yanı Yok (Translation of 'There's Nothing Revolutionary About a Blowjob'). KaosQ+ 2017, 6, 6-19.
- Seely SD. Irigaray Between God and the Indians: Sexuate Difference, Decoloniality, and the Politics of Ontology. Australian Feminist Law Journal 2017, 43(1), 41-65.
- Cornell D, Seely S. There's Nothing Revolutionary About a Blowjob. Social Text 2014, 32(2), 1-23.
- Seely S. How Do You Dress a Body Without Organs? Affective Fashion and Nonhuman Becoming. WSQ: Women's Studies Quarterly 2013, 41(1-2), 247-265.
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Authored Books
- Irigaray L, Seely S, Pluháĉek S, Pont A. A New Culture of Energy: Beyond East and West. New York: Columbia University Press, 2021.
- Cornell D, Seely S. The Spirit of Revolution: Beyond the Dead Ends of Man. Cambridge UK: Polity, 2016.
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Book Chapters
- Seely SD. One, Two, Many? Sexual Difference and the Problem of Universals. In: Mary C Rawlinson & James Sares, ed. What Is Sexual Difference? Thinking With Irigaray. New York: Columbia University Press, 2023, pp.59-78.
- Cornell D, Seely S. What Has Happened to the Public Imagination and Why?. In: Faessel V; Falk R; Curtin M, ed. On Public Imagination: A Political and Ethical Imperative. New York: Routledge, 2019.
- Seely S. Irigaray Between God and the Indians: Sexuate Difference, Decoloniality, and the Politics of Ontology. In: Gustafsson R, Hill R, Ngo H, ed. Philosophies of Difference: Nature, Racism, and Sexuate Difference. New York: Routledge, 2018.
- Seely S. Does Life Have a Sex? Thinking Ontology and Sexual Difference with Irigaray and Simondon. In: Sharp H, Taylor C, ed. Feminist Philosophies of Life. Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press, 2016, pp.108-127.
- Seely S. Coming Out of the (Confessional) Closet: Christian Performativities, Queer Performativities. In: Chambers, CM; du Toit, S; Edelman, J, ed. Performing Religion in Public. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013, pp.219-236.
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Online Publication
- Cornell D, Seely S. Seven Theses On Trump. Critical Legal Thinking, 2016. Available at: http://criticallegalthinking.com/2016/11/28/seven-theses-trump/.
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Review
- Seely S. The Ethics of Impossibility: A Review of Mikko Tuhkanen's The American Optic: Psychoanalysis, Critical Race Theory and Richard Wright. borderlands e-journal: new spaces in the humanities 2013, 12(1), 1-11.