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I have been continually grateful for the support of many friends, family members, colleagues, teachers, and students who helped and encouraged me as I wrote this book. The idea for this project first began to conglomerate while I was living in New York City and Berlin, first as a graduate student at the New School for Social Research and then at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin with the support of a DAAD research fellowship. I thank my teachers and mentors at those institutions who guided this project through its initial stages. Alice Crary’s unwavering support as an advisor, along with the philosophical inspiration provided by her teaching and writing, shaped this book in more ways than I can say. I am especially fortunate that today, years later, she is not only a mentor but a friend and collaborator. Jay Bernstein’s lectures on Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit have never been far from my mind in writing this book, and his generous mentorship has continued to the present, discussing iterations of this project at nearly every stage over the years. I am grateful to Linda Martín Alcoff for the insight she provided on earlier versions of the material presented here. Rahel Jaeggi, my host while at Humboldt, not only gave me the opportunity to test out some of these ideas in her Colloquium for Social Philosophy but was the first to suggest that I turn to Charles Taylor’s notion of articulation to express ideas I was then trying to formulate.
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