Simone Weil was a French philosopher, teacher and political activist whose works had particular influence on French and English social thought. Simone Weil came from an educated, Jewish but agnostic family. Intellectually precocious, she also displayed an awareness for social matters at an early age. After studying mathematics and philosophy, she became a teacher, her chief employment during her life. Weil was a supporter of revolutionary socialism and committed herself to the fight for worker’s rights.
Within theNew Voices network, several members engage with Simone Weil’s thought from diverse philosophical perspectives:
Annabelle Bonnet – Associate researcher at CESPRA, EHESS-CNRS, Paris Research: Feminist thought, sociology of intellectuals, women philosophers of the 19th and 20th centuries
Silvia Conti – PhD Student, LUMSA University (Rome) Research: Iris Murdoch, moral philosophy, contemporary philosophy, feminism
Małgorzata Hołda – University of Łódź, Poland Research: Phenomenology, philosophical hermeneutics, modernism, postmodernism
Marina Lademacher – University of Sussex Research: Social and political thought
Megan Jane Laverty – Teachers College, Columbia University Research: Moral philosophy, philosophy of education, pre-college philosophy education
Piergiacomo Severini – Università G. d’Annunzio di Chieti-Pescara, Italy Research: Jeanne Hersch, existentialism, contemporary women philosophers