I am a PhD candidate in political theory at The New School for Social Research, with research interests in the history of political and social thought, democratic and critical theory, constitutional law, race and empire, aesthetics and art theory.
My work explores the conceptual history of slavery in Western political thought with a special focus on abolitionist politics. In my dissertation project, titled A Long Nineteenth Century of Abolition: The Slavery of Chattel, Coverture, and Wages, I examine the conceptual reverberations of the abolitionist movement in the philosophy of the Enlightenment as well as in early feminist and proletarian movements. I argue that the abolitionist tradition inaugurated "modernity" as the very age in which universal emancipation became declared as the categorical imperative of all politics, making possible universalist struggles for women’s rights and proletarian liberation.
My research is published in Political Concepts: A Critical Lexicon and Constellations: An International Journal for Critical and Democratic Theory. I have been generously supported in my work by the Prize Fellowship of The New School, a DAAD Exchange Fellowship from Humboldt University of Berlin, and a Dissertation Fellowship from the Mellon Initiative for Inclusive Faculty Excellence. For my teaching at the New School's Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts, I was honored with the Outstanding Graduate Teaching Award.
You can reach me at schmj813@newschool.edu