Before she ever studied them as an academic, Rebecca Kukla was fascinated by cities. Growing up in the middle of Toronto, she spent her days walking the city and noticing the way people and place interact. That fascination stayed with her, and motion, embodiment, and place has become a subtle through line in both her professional philosophy and personal interests.
In her conversation with Tyler, Kukla speaks about the impossibility of speaking as a woman, curse words, gender representation and “guru culture” in philosophy departments, what she learned while living in Bogota and Johannesburg, what’s interesting in the works of Hegel, Foucault, and Rousseau, why boxing is good for the mind, how she finds good food, whether polyamory can scale, and much more.
Follow Tyler on Twitter
More CWT goodness:
Shaka Senghor on Incarceration, Identity, and the Gift of Literacy
Lunch with Fuchsia Dunlop at Mama Chang (Bonus)
Ted Gioia on Music as Cultural Cloud Storage
Henry Farrell on Weaponized Interdependence, Big Tech, and Playing with Ideas
Ben Westhoff on Synthetic Drugs, Dive Bars, and the Evolution of Rap
Alain Bertaud on Cities, Markets, and People
Samantha Power on Learning How to Make a Difference
Hollis Robbins on 19th Century Life and Literature
Masha Gessen on the Ins and Outs of Russia
Kwame Anthony Appiah on Pictures of the World
Neal Stephenson on Depictions of Reality
Eric Kaufmann on Immigration, Identity, and the Limits of Individualism
Hal Varian on Taking the Academic Approach to Business
Russ Roberts on Life as an Economics Educator
Ezekiel Emanuel on the Practice of Medicine, Policy, and Life
Karl Ove Knausgård on Literary Freedom
Margaret Atwood on Canada, Writing, and Invention (Live at Mason)
Ed Boyden on Minding your Brain
Emily Wilson on Translations and Language
Raghuram Rajan on Understanding Community
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
In the Great Khan’s Tent
Visualize Meditations
The No-Frills Teacher Podcast
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
The Mel Robbins Podcast