Kiasha Naidoo Profile Picture

Kiasha Naidoo


Fellow: Department of Philosophy, MA

Kiasha Naidoo is an MA Philosophy student at the University of the Western Cape and an Andrew W. Mellon Masters Fellow at the Centre for Humanities Research. She recently completed a BA Honours (cum laude) in Philosophy from UWC during which time she was an Honours Fellow at the Centre for Humanities Research on the Recentring AfroAsia Project. Kiasha also holds a BA in PPE (Political Science, Philosophy and Economics) from Stellenbosch University.

Kiasha’s research has to do with thinking neoliberalism as a governing rationality in the domain of means and ends. Moreover, to consider the way that such a rationality might bear on the human subject in terms of its ontology as fundamentally futural. She draws on the work of Michel Foucault and Wendy Brown in order to consider the functioning, limits, and high points of the exercise of power on subjects and collectivities with regard to life and death. Her research interest includes the effects of a neoliberal governmentality on our democratic ideals, notions of political collectivity, as well as on virtues and ends such as freedom, equality, and justice.

Naidoo has been invited to take up a period of research and study in 2022 at the Department of Philosophy and the Research Centre “The Formation of Normative Orders” at Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main. Her research project focuses on the ontological presuppositions and paradoxes of neo-liberal governmentality.

Publications:

Naidoo, Kiasha. “Neoliberalism’s Last Breath: Thinking Politico-economic Well-being During and Beyond COVID-19” Revista de Filosofie Aplicată, vol. 3 (Summer 2020) http://filosofieaplicata.ro/index.php/filap/article/view/67/40

Naidoo, Kiasha. Review of Pandemic! COVID-19 Shakes the World, by Slavoj Žižek (OR Books), Teaching Philosophy, vol. 44, no. 3 (2021) https://doi.org/10.5840/teachphil2021443151

Tollon, Fabio, and Kiasha Naidoo. “On and Beyond Artifacts in Moral Relations: Accounting for Power and Violence in Coeckelbergh’s Social Relationism.” AI & SOCIETY (2021) https://doi.org/10.1007/s00146-021-01303-z

Related News


Winter School 2021: Fragment and Form

CHR Winter School 2021 on the theme of Fragment and Form was a hybrid event, hosted online and in-person at the Retreat at the Boschendal Estate in Franschhoek.

List of Articles (2016-present)

Staff and Fellows of the Centre for Humanities Research regularly publish articles and reviews in local and international journals, applying the centre’s intellectual inquiries across a wide range of disciplines and interests.

May Graduation 2021

The CHR is proud to announce the graduation of fellows Dr Emma Minkley, Dr Shingirai Nyakabawu, Leslé Ann Arendse, and Kiasha Naidoo.

Re-Centring Afro Asia Conference

The CHR presented a panel with the Centres’ Patricia Hayes, Luis Gimenez and Kiasha Naidoo, chaired by Ross Truscott discussing the possibilities and approaches to the invocation of the precolonial at the recently convened Afro-Asia Conference.

Neoliberalism’s last breath: thinking politico-economic well-being during and beyond COVID-19

The CHR is delighted to announce the publication of honours fellow, Kiasha Naidoo’s latest journal article “ Neoliberalism’s last breath: thinking politico-economic well-being during and beyond COVID-19” in Revista de Filosofie Aplicată.