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Melissa A Orlie

Associate Professor

Research Interests

Classical, modern, and contemporary political theory
Marx, Nietzsche, Freud
Democratic theory and practice
Psychoanalysis
Ecological thinking and practice

Research Description

Melissa Orlie's teaching and writing engage tensions and convergences among political, ecological, psychoanalytic and ethical concerns.

Orlie is currently finishing a book manuscript entitled The Nietzsche we need now (including chapters on "Nietzsche's new materialism," "Masochism as a developmental achievement," "Making beautiful by learning to love what is necessary" "Wakefulness itself," "Singularly loving earthly life: Becoming lover, parent, land steward" and "Commonly loving earthly life: From modern political economy to ecological commonwealth").

Her next project, Changing Nature and Politics (a number of essays for which are already published or in press), elaborates distinctly democratic and ecological criticisms and alternatives to modern political economy. Drawing upon the impersonal materialism of Nietzsche's most affirmative thinking, Orlie argues we need to confront the disjunctures between the scale of space and time imagined by modern political economy and those required for the cultivation of ecological resilience and political efficacy.

Orlie's longest term work in progress, Local Wisdom, is a collection of essays on thinkers who explain and exemplify the important relationship between wise judgment and the cultivation of intellectual and affective capacities attentive to the singularity of place and time (including essays on Socrates, Machiavelli, Montesquieu and Tocqueville, Darwin, Nietzsche, Simone Weil, D.W. Winnicott, Aldo Leopold, and Wendell Berry). While each figure is well aware that the aim of thinking is to generalize, each also presses us to acknowledge how the singular features of locale effect wise judgment and advisable action. Each figure explores practical ways of incorporating such singularity into meaningful theoretical statements.

Education

Department of Politics, Ph.D., Princeton University
Department of Politics, M.A., Princeton University
Department of Politics, B.A., University of California at Santa Cruz

Courses Taught

Classical Political Theory (PS 371 & PS 571)
Modern Political Theory (PS 372 & PS 572)
Contemporary Political Theory (PS 377 & PS 579)

Additional Campus Affiliations

Associate Professor Emerita, Political Science

Highlighted Publications

Orlie, M. A. (1997). Living Ethically, Acting Politically. (Contestations: Cornell Studies in Political Theory). Cornell University Press.

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Recent Publications

Orlie, M. A. (2017). The psychoanalytic Winnicott we need now: On the way to a real ecological thought. In D.W. Winnicott and Political Theory: Recentering the Subject (pp. 87-109). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-57533-3_4

Orlie, M. A. (2014). For the Love of Earthly Life: Nietzsche and Winnicott between Modernism and Naturalism. In N. Kompridis (Ed.), The Aesthetic Turn in Political Thought (pp. 169-188). Bloomsbury Academic. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781501302251.ch-007

Orlie, M. A. (2014). Postmodernism. In M. T. Gibbons (Ed.), The Encyclopedia of Political Thought Wiley-Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118474396.wbept0814

Orlie, M. A. (2014). Tragic Realism and Credible Democratic Hopes: Practical Means for an Ecological Future. In R. Coles, M. Reinhardt, & G. Shulman (Eds.), Radical Future Pasts: Untimely Political Theory (pp. 459-488). University Press of Kentucky. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt6wrs84.24

Orlie, M. A. (2012). Making Sense of Negative Liberty: Berlin's Antidote to Political Rationalism. In B. Baum, & R. Nichols (Eds.), Isaiah Berlin and the Politics of Freedom: ‘Two Concepts of Liberty’ 50 Years Later (pp. 143-154). (Routledge Innovations in Political Theory). Routledge Taylor & Francis.

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