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Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2019
Series: Contributions to Phenomenology
ISBN (Hardback): 9783319991832
Full citation:
Michela B. Ferri, Carlo Ierna (eds), The reception of Husserlian phenomenology in North America, Berlin, Springer, 2019
The reception of Husserlian phenomenology in North America
Contents
Phenomenology's inauguration in English and in the North American curriculum
Winthrop Bell's 1927 Harvard course
Jason M. Bell
25-45
The Freiburg encounter
Aron Gurwitsch and Edmund Husserl on transformations of consciousness
Daniel Marcelle
47-70
The Golden age of phenomenology
at the New school for social research, 1954–1973
Lester Embree, Michael Barber
99-106
The checkered legacy of Marvin Farber's idiosyncratic understanding of phenomenology
Eric Chelstrom
107-129
The role of Dorion Cairns in the reception of phenomenology in North America
the first "born American" phenomenologist
Richard Zaner
131-142
Philosophy and the integrity of the person
the phenomenology of Robert Sokolowski
Molly Brigid McGrath
187-204
A.-T. Tymieniecka
a phenomenologist in the United States. the adventures of a Polish-born American
Daniela Verducci
205-223
The history of the Husserl archives established in memory of Alfred Schutz at the New school for social research
Michela B. Ferri
227-238
The impact of North American phenomenological organizations
the chronicle revisited
Daniel Marcelle
239-260
The Simon Silverman phenomenology center at Duquesne university and phenomenology in North America
Jeffrey McCurry, Chelsea R. Binnie
293-313
Importing phenomenology
the early editorial life of "philosophy and phenomenological research"
Gabriel R. Ricci
317-336
Two North American phenomenological journals
"Husserl studies" and "The new yearbook for phenomenology and phenomenological philosophy"
William R. McKenna, Burt C. Hopkins
337-341
From consciousness to being
Edith Stein's philosophy and its reception in North America
Antonio Calcagno
417-431
The analytic reception of Husserlian phenomenology in the united states
history, problems, and prospects
Paul Livingston
435-459