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Joseph Kisolo-Ssonko
@jkisolo.bsky.social
Philosopher @ Nottingham University. Interested in social and political philosophy understood broadly. Lately been thinking about how recreation & play shape our agency. Like to climb mountains and cycle roads. Training for MLQ. ✊⛰️
257 followers282 following98 posts
Reposted by Joseph Kisolo-Ssonko
DKaphilosopher.bsky.social

People in #Dundee#philosophy fun!

Poster with a drawing of people enjoying various things around a table with the text PHILOSOPHY PLAYTIME 
By a philosopher...walks ...talks ...makes 
Enjoy exploring ideas through compelling conversation with professional philosopher Dr Kathrine Cuccuru 
At EH9, Annfield, DD1 5JH, where adults come to play with ideas. A new topic each week. Every Wednesday 18:30-20:00 £6 cash on the door
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JKjkisolo.bsky.social

This is the kind of content I'm on socials for, but alas its mainly depressing US poltics 😢

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JKjkisolo.bsky.social

@nikvenkatesh.bsky.social I thought I'd seen you somewhere before, maybe it was just in this online space? Anyway thanks for the great talk at the Nottingham Research Seminar.

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Reposted by Joseph Kisolo-Ssonko

A while back Baggrund asked me to reflect on philosophy queens 👑 - these thoughts evolved into an essay in @philosophynow.bsky.social#philskyphilosophynow.org/issues/164/P...

Screen shot of text: As a minority – as a non-stereotypical philosopher – you’re thus caught in a double bind. Your legitimacy is questioned, so scholasticism becomes your primary weapon: “Look, I know the jargon; look, I distance myself from the body, from (my) culture, and from (my) history.” But meanwhile, scholasticism helps to perpetuate a philosophy that’s incomplete, conservative, and rigid, discouraging engagement with new topics. The battle for identity as a philosopher is thus filtered into the battle for credibility and against bias.
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JKjkisolo.bsky.social

After initial enthusiam have fallen back off engagement with this site. Not sure whether to let it slide or get stuck back in. Relatedly (or possibly not) really thinking I should give up coffee, at least for a bit. 💻☕

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JKjkisolo.bsky.social

Looking forward to running this Wild Play conference - we'll probably be talking about Sex, Drugs & Dangerous Rock Climbing - all stuff I am well into (I mean "into" in a strictly academic sense of course) philevents.org/event/show/1...

Wild Play
Wild Play

Many games, sports, and leisure activities take place in artificially constructed and safely controlled environments. However, it is not hard to find aspirations for liberation from the monotony of our domesticated existences, expressed in desires for ‘wilder’ leisure. From children’s activities promoted as wholesome muddy antidotes to screen time, to urban axe-throwing experiences marketed at pseudo-deviant stag night parties, sometimes we yearn to escape into what Jack Halberstam calls “unbounded and unpredictable spaces” that we believe (rightly or not) offer sources of opposition to “modernity's orderly impulses”. (2020)  We invite philosophical and interdisciplinary contributions exploring “wild play” in the broadest sense. Questions might include, but are not limited to:   What does it mean to be wild? Is 'wild play' even a coherent category? What connection (if any) is there between wild play and 'nature sports'?' What role does ‘natural beauty’ have in wild play? Can there be wild play in urban environments, e.g. ‘capture the flag’ or Parkour? Does the idea of play in the wilderness reinforce or undermine a human/nature duality? Is there actual justification in lamenting children apparently playing outdoors less? Does technology necessarily undermine 'authentic' wildness?  We are also interested in direct explorations of particular activities. For example, an examination of the way in which non-mainstream sexual activities are seen as deviant or an exploration of whether aesthetic qualities can really be said to inform line choice in the game of rock-climbing.  Invited Speakers: Professor Quill R Kukla, Kennedy Institute of Ethics at Georgetown University, "Power Play, Play Spaces, and the Edges of Sexual Consent" Karl Egerton, University of Nottingham, “The riddle of the forager” Sasha Garwood, University of Nottingham, “From athletocracy to wild swimming: love, sexuality, and Edwardian masculinity’?”  Contributions are especially welcomed from scholars who are junior, precarious and/or from non-traditional backgrounds Please submit anonymised extended abstracts of up to 500 words for individual papers (20 mins presentation + 25 mins Q&A), using the following form https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=7qe9Z4D970GskTWEGCkKHuOq0cYCKBBOt6T693SFHS5UN0oyNjFWMkczQVQ0NFg1SkRBVFRSWUo0Si4u The conference will be primarily in person, but there may be limited options to present online if there is a particular need. Please include a request to present online in your abstract if you require this. If you have any questions please feel free to email us at PoP@nottingham.ac.uk   

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JKjkisolo.bsky.social

Knocked up an image to illustrate our upcoming workshop exploring Wild Play. Quite pleased with it.

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JK
Joseph Kisolo-Ssonko
@jkisolo.bsky.social
Philosopher @ Nottingham University. Interested in social and political philosophy understood broadly. Lately been thinking about how recreation & play shape our agency. Like to climb mountains and cycle roads. Training for MLQ. ✊⛰️
257 followers282 following98 posts