Julie Maybee

maybee

Julie E. Maybee (B.J., B.A., Carleton University; M.A., Ph.D., Cornell University) is Professor of Philosophy and the director of the interdisciplinary Disability Studies Program at Lehman College. She also teaches in the Disability Studies Masters Program for CUNY's School of Professional Studies. Her research areas include 19th century Continental philosophy, particularly the work of G. W. F. Hegel, African philosophy, race and philosophy, and Disability Studies. What unites her specialties is an overriding interest in the way socially defined differences as well as time and place shape people’s identities, knowledge and experiences. Prof. Maybee is currently finishing a book on Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit as well as a book on disability and embodiment.

E-mail: julie.maybee@lehman.cuny.edu
Office: Carman 371

Recent Publications

  • “Disability and African Philosophy,” in The Bloomsbury Guide to Philosophy of Disability, ed. Shelley Tremain (Bloomsbury Academic, 2023)
  • “Homelessness, Disability and Oppression,” in The Ethics of Homelessness: Philosophical Perspectives, ed. G. John M. Abbarno (Brill Rodopi, 2020)
  • Hegel's Dialectics,” The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2020 [substantive revision], 2016 [first published])
  • Making and Unmaking Disability: The Three-Body Approach, (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2019)
  • “African Philosophy, Disability and the Social Conception of the Self,” in Debating African Philosophy: Perspectives on Identity, Decolonial Ethics and Comparative Philosophy, ed. George Hull (Routledge, 2019)
  • Dialogues on Disability: Shelley Tremain Interviews Julie Maybee.” Discrimination and Disadvantage (blog). July 18, 2018
  • "Em'body'ment and Disability: On Taking the (Biological) 'Body' Out of Em'body'ment," Journal of Social Philosophy 48 (2017)
  • “The Political is Personal: Mothering at the Intersection of Acquired Disability, Gender and Race”, in Disability and Mothering: Liminal Spaces of Embodied Knowledge, eds. Cynthia Lewiecki-Wilson and Jan Cellio (Syracuse University Press, 2011)
  • “Audience Matters: Teaching issues of race and racism for a predominantly minority student body,” Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (2011)
  • Picturing Hegel: An Illustrated Guide to Hegel's Encyclopaedia Logic (Lexington Books, 2009)