Amy Gais

Amy Gais

Amy Gais

Lecturer in Comparative Literature and Thought and Political Science
PhD, YALE UNIVERSITY
research interests:
  • Political Theory
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contact info:

mailing address:

  • Department of Comparative and Thought
    MSC 1104-146-319
    Washington University
    1 Brookings Drive
    St. Louis, MO 63130-4899

Dr. Amy Gais is a political theorist specializing in political freedom, specifically the question of how individuals resist and confront oppression.

Dr. Gais is a Lecturer in the Department of Political Science and Comparative Literature and Thought at Washington University in St. Louis. Previously, Dr. Gais was a Modeling Interdisciplinary Inquiry Postdoctoral Fellow at the Interdisciplinary Project in the Humanities at WUSTL. Dr. Gais received her Ph.D. in Political Science with Distinction from Yale University, where she was the recipient of the Robert C. Wood Prize and an American Council of Learned Societies Emerging Voices finalist, and her M.A. from University of Chicago. She is the author of The Coerced Conscience (Cambridge University Press, 2024). She is working on a second book project on freedom and dissimulation in African American political thought, Freedom, Dissimulation, and Resistance in African American Political Thought. Her work has been published by Political Theory, Review of Politics, and History of European Ideas, and funded by the Andrew J. Mellon Foundation and the Beinecke Rare Books & Manuscripts Library. Dr. Gais often teaches "Modern Political Thought" and the "Intellectual History of Race and Ethnicity" for the Department of Comparative Literature and Thought.

Recent Courses

COMPLITTHT 2109-02 - Modern Political Thought: Text & Traditions


Description
What is modernity? What kinds of politics are characteristic of modern politics? How did early modern figures imagine the modern world? What view of politics were they rejecting in creating this new world? This course begins by examining two early modern figures, Thomas Hobbes and John Locke, and the guiding ambitions of the modern project, such as the nation state, modern notions of freedom, and private property. Next, we will consider some of the most influential critics of modernity, such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Mary Wollstonecraft, Karl Marx, W.E.B. Du Bois, and Hannah Arendt, asking how they challenge our modern commitments.

COMPLITTHT 2108-01 - Early Political Thought: Text & Traditions

This course engages with texts in ancient, medieval, and Renaissance political thought, focusing specifically on ancient Greek political thought, medieval Islamic and Christian political thought, and Renaissance political thought. We will pay attention to central political concepts underlying this intellectual tradition, such as justice, sacrifice, glory, and political rule. We will attend to tensions between many of these concepts, such as the tension between justice and power, religion and politics, and obligation to family and state.

Selected Publications

"'To Tell the Truth Freely': Ida B. Wells on Sacrificial Death and Political Resistance," forthcoming in Political Theory.

"Ida B. Wells Taught Us that Care and Justice Go Hand in Hand," TIME Magazine.

The Coerced Conscience (Cambridge University Press, 2024).

"The Politics of Hypocrisy: Baruch Spinoza and Pierre Bayle on Hypocritical Conformity," Political Theory.