Education
University of Memphis.
University of Memphis.
Much of her work has focused on increasing diversity within philosophy, and she is the founding director of the Collegium of Black Women Philosophers. Gines received her bachelor"s at Spelman College and went on to receive a master"s and doctorate in philosophy from the University of Memphis in 2001 and 2003, respectively. Gines has been at Pennsylvania State University since 2008.
Prior to her appointment at Penn State, Gines was an assistant professor of Africana and diaspora studies at Vanderbilt University, with a cross-appointment in the department of philosophy.
Collegium of Black Women Philosophers Gines founded the Collegium of Black Women Philosophers in 2007 to provide a positive place and support network for black women philosophers, and also to simply help identify how many black women were active as academic philosophers. At the time that Gines launched the Collegium, she was able to identify only 29 black women who were professors of philosophy in the United States, although the American Philosophical Association had more than 11,000 members.
The Collegium"s annual conference now hosts around thirty visiting Black women faculty and students of philosophy, offering a variety of professional development workshops and other tracks. Lucius Outlaw, writing in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, suggests that Gines" efforts in founding the Collegium of Black Women Philosophers broke important new ground in advancing the field of Africana philosophy.
She has also co-edited an anthology, Convergences: Black Feminism and Continental Philosophy. Much of Gines" research has focused on critical approaches to issues of race, racism, feminism, and intersectionality. In Sartre, Beauvoir, and the Race/Gender Analogy: A Case for Black Feminist Philosophy (a piece Gines contributed to Convergences: Black Feminism and Continental Philosophy,) Gines argues that the absence of black feminist thought from continental philosophy has resulted in a significant void that has prevented continental analysis from coming to grips with how systems of oppression intersect and shape phenomenology.
She has published numerous peer-reviewed papers, including pieces in journals such as Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy, the Southern Journal of Philosophy, the Journal of Social Philosophy, and Sartre Studies International. Gines" primary areas of interest include Africana philosophy, Continental philosophy, Black feminist philosophy, critical philosophy of race.