After completing his doctorate in 2009, Kotsko taught for two years at Kalamazoo College, a liberal arts college in Michigan. commencement ceremony in Chicago in May 2012 In 2011, Kotsko was hired by Shimer College, a small great-books college in Chicago. He was one of three new Shimer professors hired that year, the school's largest intake of new faculty in more than a decade. In his first year at Shimer, Kotsko participated in a reworking of the school's upper-level core humanities courses. He also served on numerous committees in Shimer's self-governance body, the Shimer College Assembly. In April 2013, Kotsko was elected parliamentarian of the assembly.
Writing
Kotsko is known for his writings on the philosopher Slavoj Žižek, whom he has credited for causing him to "break out of one particular intellectual ghetto and into another" by changing his self-identification from "non-Republican" to leftist. His first book, which was published in 2008 was on Žižek, titled Žižek and Theology. In 2012, Kotsko published a more popular article, "How to Read Žižek" in the Los Angeles Review of Books. Kotsko has also published three book-length translations of works by Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben. He has also published and delivered a number of papers on Agamben. Kotsko has published three short books on popular culture, Awkwardness: An Essay, Why We Love Sociopaths: A Guide to Late Capitalist Television, and Creepiness. Each book draws out a specific theme found in contemporary American television shows; Awkwardness addressing the curious rise of "awkward humor" in the 21st century, Why We Love Sociopaths addressing the trend toward a certain type of deeply antisocial protagonist, and Creepiness uses a Freudian lens to distinguish a discomfiting strain of popular culture from the topic of the first book. In 2015, Kotsko was the subject of controversy when he tweeted that all white people, regardless of their ancestry or whether their ancestors owned slaves, are "complicit" in slavery. While the tweets were later deleted, Kotsko has said he stands by his statements. Due to this controversy, Kotsko was named in an online "watch list" of college professors who discriminate against conservative students. In 2016, Kotsko published a book about the Devil in Christianity, The Prince of This World. In 2018, Kotsko published a book that examines neoliberalismthrough the lens of political theology, Neoliberalism's Demons: On the Political Theology of Late Capital. Kotsko blogs chiefly on a group blog titled An und für sich, but also posts on a personal blog, titled The Weblog.
Books
Žižek and Theology..
Politics of Redemption: The Social Logic of Salvation..
Awkwardness: An Essay..
Why We Love Sociopaths: A Guide to Late Capitalist Television..
Creepiness..
Agamben's Coming Philosophy, co-author with Colby Dickinson...
The Prince of This World..
Neoliberalism's Demons: On the Political Theology of Late Capital..
Translations
The Sacrament of Language: An Archaeology of the Oath ..