Kristofer J. Petersen-Overton
I earned my BA in Political Science from San Diego State University in 2006 and my MSS in International Relations/Development Studies from Aalborg Universitet in 2009. Since then, I’ve been a full-time doctoral student majoring in political theory at the CUNY Graduate Center in New York. To subsidize my existence, I teach Middle East politics at Brooklyn College and American politics at Lehman College.
My research is broadly concerned with the perpetration of atrocities by self-described liberal nation-states and the frequent dissonance between state actions and national myths.
I am primarily concerned with the tension between the universalist aspirations of the liberal tradition and the tendency for nations to reduce these lofty ideals to particularistic national myths. How does the national subject reconcile atrocities committed on behalf of the nation—especially when the nation’s constitutive myths come into conflict with the reality of state violence? How does the visibility of extreme violence shape the state’s deployment of violent tactics? My dissertation explores these questions by looking at Israel’s use of violence in the occupied Palestinian territories and the use of torture and drone attacks by the United States.
Besides academic publications, my writing has appeared in The Guardian, Electronic Intifada, and the Palestine Chronicle. I have also appeared on Democracy Now!, PressTV, and Russian Television.
Location
New York City, NY
Disciplines
Affiliation
CUNY Graduate Center
Website
http://www.petersen-overton.com