Renata Salecl (born in 1962) is a Slovenian philosopher, sociologist and legal theorist. She is a senior researcher at the Institute of Criminology, Faculty of Law at the University of Ljubljana. She has been a visiting professor at London School of Economics for several years and is about to take over similar tasks at Birkbeck College University of London, lecturing on the topic of emotions and law. Every year she lectures for a couple of weeks at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in New York, on Psychoanalysis and Law. Renata Salecl is a leading scholar on this particular subject.[1]
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She was born in Slovenj Gradec, Slovenia (then part of former Yugoslavia). She studied philosophy at the University of Ljubljana, graduating with a thesis on Foucault's theory of power under the supervision of the Marxist philosopher Božidar Debenjak. In the 1980s, she became associated with the intellectual circle known as the Ljubljana school of psychoanalysis, which combined the study of Lacanian psychoanalysis with the philosophic legacy of German idealism and critical theory. In the late 1980s, she became active in the left liberal opposition to the ruling Slovenian Communist regime.[2] In the first democratic elections in Slovenia in April 1990, she unsuccessfully ran for the Slovenian Parliament on the list of the Alliance of Socialist Youth of Slovenia - Liberal Party.[3] After 1990, she left party politics, but remained active in the public life, especially as a commentator.
From 1986, she started working as a researcher at the Institute of Criminology at the Faculty of Law in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
In 1991, she obtained a PhD at the Department of Sociology at the University of Ljubljana under the supervision of Drago Braco Rotar.
Her work focuses on bringing together law, criminology and psychoanalysis. She has worked on the theories of punishment, and on the analysis of the relation between late capitalist insistence on choice and the increased feelings of anxiety and guilt in post-modern subjects. The book also analyses how matters of choice apply to law and criminology.
Salecl is associated with the critical legal studies movement. She was Centennial Professor at the department of law at the London School of Economics (LSE) and is now visiting professor at the LSE's BIOS Centre for the Study of Bioscience, Biomedicine, Biotechnology and Society, as well as visiting professor at the School of Law at the Birkbeck College in London.[4] She often teaches as Visiting Professor at Cardozo School of Law in New York. She has been fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (1997/8), visiting professor at the Humboldt University in Berlin, visiting humanities professor at George Washington University in Washington, DC, and visiting professor at Duke University.
She also writes columns in various European newspapers, including Delo (Ljubljana) and La Vanguardia (Barcelona).
She was married to the Slovenian Marxist-Lacanian philosopher Slavoj Žižek.[5] They have one son.
In 2010, Renata Salecl was awarded the title of "Slovenian woman scientist of the year".[6] In December of the same year, she was named "Slovenian person of the year" by the daily newspaper Delo.[7] On March 8, 2011 she was named the most successful woman in Slovenia and got the title ONA 365 by the women magazine Ona (She in English translation).
Her books were translated into ten languages.