Adi Ophir Explained
Adi Ophir (he|עדי אופיר; born September 22, 1951) is an Israeli philosopher.
Early life
Adi Ophir was born on September 22, 1951.[1] He received his BA and MA from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and his PhD from Boston University.[2]
Ophir is married to Ariella Azoulay.
Career
Ophir teaches philosophy at the Cohn Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Ideas at Tel Aviv University. He is also a fellow at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute where he directs an interdisciplinary research project on "Humanitarian Action in Catastrophes: The Shaping of Contemporary Political Imagination and Moral Sensibilities."
Works
- Plato's Invisible Cities: Discourse and Power in the "Republic" (1990). Routledge.
- "The Identity of the Victims and the Victims of Identity: A Critique of Zionist Ideology for a Post-Zionist Age." (2000) In Laurence Jay Silberstein (ed.), Mapping Jewish Identities (pp. 174–200). NYU Press. .
- The Order of Evils: Toward an Ontology of Morals (2005). MIT Press. Translated by Rela Mezali and Havi Carel.
- (ed. with Michal Givoni and Sari Hanafi) The power of inclusive exclusion: anatomy of Israeli rule in the occupied Palestinian territories, Zone Books, 2009.
- (with Ariella Azoulay) The One-State Condition. Stanford University Press, 2012.
- אלימות אלוהית : שני חיבורים על אלוהים ואסון [Divine Violence: Two Essays on God and Disaster]. The Van Leer Institute, 2013.
- (ed. with J. M. Bernstein and Ann Laura Stoler) Political Concepts: A Critical Lexicon. Fordham University Press, 2017.
- (with Ishay Rosen-Zvi) Goy: Israel's Multiple Others and the Birth of the Gentile. Oxford University Press, 2018.
- In the Beginning Was the State: Divine Violence in the Hebrew Bible. Fordham University Press, 2023.
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Ophir, Adi . Library of Congress Name Authority File . 3 March 2023.
- Book: Ram, Uri. Israeli Nationalism: Social conflicts and the politics of knowledge. 2010-12-16. Routledge. 978-1-136-91994-7. en.