Amy Gais

Amy Gais

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

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

Early Political Thought: Text & Traditions L93 IPH 203C

A selected survey of the political and moral thought of Europe from the rise of Athenian democracy to the Renaissance, with emphasis on analysis and discussion of writers such as Thucydides, Plato, Aristotle, St. Augustine, Castiglione, and Machiavelli. The course aims to introduce students to basic texts in the intellectual history of Western Europe, understood both as products of a particular time and place and as self-contained arguments that strive to instruct and persuade. The texts are simultaneously used to chart the careers of such fundamental notions as liberty, virtue, and justice. Preference given to Text and Tradition and IPH students

Modern Political Thought: Text & Traditions

This course offers a critical survey of Western political thought from the 16th century onward, focusing on the modern notion of "politics" that first and foremost designates the relationship between the nation state and its subjects, social individuals. What is the state and how does the state structure social life? How does it legitimize its power? And finally, what does philosophy offer us in terms of critiques of and alternatives to the bourgeois nation state? To answer these questions, we will read a number of important texts by political theorists and critical social theorists such as Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, G.W.F. Hegel, Karl Marx, W.E.B Du Bois, Rosa Luxemburg, and Angela Davis. Our discussion will focus on topics such as ideology, state and violence; labor, property and freedom; and finally, the entanglement of race, class, and gender.

Introduction to Political Theory

This course offers an introduction to the field of political theory through the lens of three core concepts: justice, freedom, and democracy. We will engage with an interdisciplinary group of authors, such as Thomas Hobbes, Karl Marx, Frederick Douglass, Martin Luther King, Jr., and John Rawls.