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I have had the privilege to study and teach at great institutions and each has supported my scholarly work beyond measure. I was taught how to do political theory by Wendy Brown and her mentorship allowed me to believe that I might be suited to it. Wendy supervised my work, wrote letters on my behalf, gave essential commentary on several drafts of this work, and responded to every single email. Beyond that, she offered steady encouragement and guidance, patience, and humanity. I am grateful to many other Berkeley faculty—Judith Butler, Martin Jay, Victoria Kahn, and Paul Thomas—for their feedback on my research. Many thanks, also, to the director and fellows at the Townsend Center for the Humanities and to Jean Day, the associate editor at Representations.
The intellectual and personal relationships that I formed in my Berkeley years remain my most important and enduring. Sharon Stanley read this manuscript in its entirety and offered astute suggestions for revisions. Jimmy Klausen has been a steady and cherished interlocutor. Beyond that, both Sharon and Jimmy have offered that rare experience of friendship that confirms I am never alone. My thinking has been shaped by many conversations with Yves Winter, George Ciccariello-Maher, Abbey Ciccariello-Maher, Ivan Asher, Simon Stow, Dean Mathiowetz, Bibi Obler, James Martel, Libby Anker, Annika Thiem, Jack Jackson, Julie Cooper, Bob Taylor, Michael Feola, Ed Fogarty, and Sebastián Etchemendy. I am grateful that Nick Xenos encouraged me to go to Berkeley so many years ago and that he remains a true comrade. Antonio Vazquez-Arroyo deserves special recognition for being my favorite—and most frequent—copanelist.
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