- In Our Name: A Message from Jewish Students at Columbia University The following is an open letter from Jewish students at Columbia University. We reproduce it here by permission of the letter's authors. To view the original letter, which currently includes over 650 signatories at the time of this posting, click here. To the Columbia Community: Over the past six months, many have spoken in our name. Some are well-meaning alumni or… (continue reading)
- New Webinar: China Keywords: The Greeks The third webinar of the Telos-Paul Piccone Institute’s “China Keywords” series, entitled “The Greeks according to Chinese Nationalist Intellectuals," will take place on Thursday, May 16, from 10:00 to 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time (16:00 to 17:00 Central European Time). Our guest will be Prof. Shadi Bartsch, who will discuss the reception and use of ancient Greek philosophers in contemporary Chinese political thought. Plato… (continue reading)
- Open Letter to the American Association of University Professors The following is an open letter to the American Association of University Professors, in response to the AAUP's statement on the recent campus protests. Earlier this week the author also wrote about the anti-Zionism on display in the trans community. My name is Corinne Blackmer, and I am professor of English and director of Judaic Studies at Southern Connecticut State University.… (continue reading)
- Our Troubled Institutions: The End(s) of Higher Education, Post-Journalism, and Antisemitism after October 7 The video of the fifth webinar in the Telos-Paul Piccone Institute’s Israel initiative is now available and can be viewed here. Titled “Our Troubled Institutions: The End(s) of Higher Education, Post-Journalism, and Antisemitism after October 7,” the panel featured Russell A. Berman, Gadi Taub, and Paulina Neuding, and their conversation was moderated by Israel initiative director Gabriel Noah Brahm. The next webinar… (continue reading)
Telos has always celebrated rejuvenation and renewal, and in recent years we’ve embraced that change in a variety of ways. We’ve taken Telos online and digitized our complete archive, allowing institutional subscribers from around the world to access the journal over the Internet. We’ve created a regular conference series in New York City and another more recently in Europe, which have brought together an increasing number of scholars to discuss today’s critical issues in politics and philosophy . . . (continue reading) |
For over fifty years, readers from around the globe have turned to Telos to engage with the sharpest minds in politics and philosophy, and to discover emerging theoretical analyses of the critical issues of the day. Subscribe now and don’t miss a single issue! As a small independent publisher, we rely on both our individual and institutional subscribers. If your university does not subscribe to Telos, please encourage your librarian to begin a subscription. A printable recommendation form is available here. |