Staff profile
Biography
I am a PhD student in the philosophy department, and my research is supported by a Durham Doctoral Studentship. My thesis analyses a series of underexplored examples of sexual objectification, including masculine sex objects, objectification within healthcare, and contemporary forms of pornography. I use these examples to critique and enrich our understandings of sexual objectification, its ethics, and its politics. I adopt a broadly pluralistic approach to my research, drawing from a range of traditions including contemporary analytic philosophy, feminist philosophy, and some continental philosophy.
Beyond the philosophy of love and sex, I also have research interests in ethics more broadly, feminism, political philosophy, post-Kantian philosophy, and social philosophy.
I have taught on a variety of modules at Durham (see below).
Research Interests
- Ethics
 - Feminism and gender studies
 - Love, sex, relationships
 - Political philosophy
 - Post-Kantian philosophy
 - Social philosophy
 
Teaching
Guest lecturer
- Current Issues in Ethics (PGT module)
 - Issues in Contemporary Ethics (3rd year module)
 
Discussion group/tutorial leader
- Moral Theory (2nd year module)
 - Political Philosophy (2nd year)
 - Being Human (1st year module)
 - Ethics and Values (1st year)
 - Knoweldge and Reality (1st year)
 - Reading Philosophy (1st year)
 
Other Roles
- Eidos President - The departmental PGR society; organising the weekly PhD work-in-progress seminar and social events.
 - Departmental Staff Student Consultative Committee PGR Representative.
 
Publications
Journal Article
- Beauvoir on how we can love authenticallyRobson, M. (2023). Beauvoir on how we can love authentically. Inquiry. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/0020174x.2023.2168300