Silvia Schwarzböck

Silvia Schwarzböck

Silvia Schwarzböck has a PhD in Philosophy from the University of Buenos Aires.

Aesthetic Dictating, as Regular Regular Professor, in the Department of Philosophy of the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters of the University of Buenos Aires (since 2012), as Associate Professor, in the Department of Philosophy of the Faculty of Humanities and Sciences of the University Nacional del Litoral (since 2006) and, as Assistant Professor, at the School of Philosophy of the Faculty of Humanities and Arts of the National University of Rosario (since 2005).

It integrates the Editorial Board of Kilometer 111. Essays on cinema and the Advisory Council of Another part. Magazine of letters and arts.

She was a Regular Adjunct Professor of Aesthetics and researcher in the Philosophy Area of ​​the Department of Social Sciences of the National University of Quilmes (2006-2011).

He taught postgraduate subjects and seminars (2005-2011) at the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters of the UBA, in the Doctorate in Humanities of the National University of the Coast, in the Master in Social Sciences and Humanities of the National University of Quilmes, in the Doctorate in Philosophy of the National University of Lanús, and in the Masters in Documentary Cinema of the University of the Cinema.

She was a Postgraduate Scholar of the National Council of Scientific and Technological Research (CONICET) (1998-2003) and the Goethe-Institut of Munich (2000).

He published the books The Heritage of Prometheus (1996), Critical Study on Chronicle of a Fugue (2007), Adorno and the Political (2008), Critical Study on A Red Bear (2009), in addition to numerous essays and articles on aesthetic issues , political philosophy, contemporary philosophy, art and cinema.

He made the critical edition and the prologue of the Foundation of the metaphysics of customs, by Immanuel Kant (1998), the translation (together with Luis Rossi) of Political Romanticism, by Carl Schmitt (2000) and the translation and the prologue of Aesthetics ( 1958-1959), by Theodor W. Adorno (2012).

 

Email: silvia [dot] schwarzbockgmail [dot] com