Hello, my name is Nicholas T. Cox. For those of you who don't know me: I graduated from Princeton University in June 2010 with an A.B. in Religion. During my time at Princeton I published a number of pieces in The Nassau Weekly, the alternative student paper, and I also blogged, and continue to blog, for Equal Writes, a Princeton-based feminist blog. Below you will find links to some of these pieces. If you're too busy to read all of them, I've bracketed in ***STARS*** the ones I consider to be especially worth your time. If you have any feedback, or for any other reason would like to get in contact with me, my email address is: xockcin@gmail.com. Thanks for visiting!
Written for The Nassau Weekly
***In Defense of Anscombe***
It's Not Just a Dream: It's Blu-Ray
"Out For Blood": A Genealogy of Darkness
Movies from a Recession Summer
***"If I Could Just Leave My Body For a Night": An Essay on Avatar***
"The True Is the Hole": Of Hegel and the Bagel
***Notes for 20 April 2010***
Written for Equal Writes
NOTE: This summer I am authoring a series of articles on women in pop music today. I will post links to them as they are published.
2. Lady Gaga, you can put your clothes back on now if you want
Gender, Masculinity, and having a real conversation
***Emasculation on Super Bowl Sunday***
***Reflections on feminism (or, How Many Feminists Does It Take To Change a Lightbulb?)***
Corona commercials and female stereotypes
Where the "abortion debate" is going
Primal History of Subjectivity: The Shaman, the Sorcerer, and the Priest
-excerpt from my senior thesis, "Adorno in the Present: An Essay on the Dialectic of Enlightenment", written under Prof. Jeffry Stout
"Portions of Eternity": Subjective History in William Blake's The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
-for Prof. Elaine Pagels, REL 349 Revelations: The New Testament Book of Revelation & Contemp. Jewish, Christian, & Pagan "Revelations"
Blood and Cash: A Marxian Interpretation of Hitchcock's Shadow of a Doubt
-for Prof. Jeffry Stout, REL 222 Religion in Modern Thought and Film
"The Greatest of All Shrubs": Gnosticism and the Elusive Gospel of Mark
-for Prof. Elaine Pagels, REL 352 Jesus: From Earliest Sources to Contemporary Interpretations