Dena Shottenkirk writes in the field of epistemology and aesthetics, emphasizing the intersection of the two. The author of the monograph titled Nominalism and Its Aftermath: The Philosophy of Nelson Goodman (Springer) which tracks the relationship between his metaphysics, epistemology, and aesthetics, she is also the author of a book on censorship in art titled Cover Up the Dirty Parts (Cambridge Scholars Press). She has also co-edited two volumes, the most recent one titled Perception, Cognition, and Aesthetics (Routledge). An Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at City University of New York’s Brooklyn College, she is also a practicing artist and formerly an art critic for such publications as Artforum; in addition, she is the founder of the public philosophy non-profit talkPOPc (Philosophers’ Ontological Party club), which currently sponsors public conversations between participants and philosophers.