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Emmanuel Levinas

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2008)

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  1. Leo Strauss and Emmanuel Levinas: philosophy and the politics of revelation.Leora Batnitzky - 2006 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Leo Strauss and Emmanuel Levinas, two twentieth-century Jewish philosophers and two extremely provocative thinkers whose reputations have grown considerably over the last twenty years, are rarely studied together. This is due to the disparate interests of many of their intellectual heirs. Strauss has influenced political theorists and policy makers on the right while Levinas has been championed in the humanities by different cadres associated with postmodernist thought. In Leo Strauss and Emmanuel Levinas: Philosophy and the Politics of Revelation, Leora Batnitzky (...)
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  • Levinas vivant.Jean-Michel Salanskis - 2006 - Paris: Les Belles lettres.
    "Servi d'appui a sept conferences donnees au cours du premier semestre 2006 dans des colloques d'homage a Emmanuel Levinas, a l'occasion du centenaire de sa naissance"--P. [4] of cover.
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  • Emmanuel Levinas.Danielle Cohen-Lévinas (ed.) - 1998 - Paris: PUF.
    Un hommage à l'œuvre d'Emmanuel Levinas avait été organisé à la Sorbonne, peu après la mort du philosophe, certaines communications ont été publiées dans un numéro de la revue Rue Descartes. Celles-ci déclinent, selon un modèle propre à chaque auteur, un moment de ce que Levinas appelle " l'altérité d'autrui ". Deux directions caractéristiques de la pensée de Levinas sont privilégiées, l'une encline à l'exégèse et à l'étude du Talmud, dérangeant la souveraineté de la raison, l'autre, la philosophie, permettant d'accéder (...)
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  • A theology of alterity: Levinas, Von Balthasar, and Trinitarian praxis.Glenn Morrison - 2013 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Duquesne University Press.
    Strives to radically utilize Emmanuel Levinas's philosophical framework, bringing it into conversation with the theology of Hans Urs von Balthasar, to construct a post-ontotheological account of theology that unites theory and praxis. By allowing Levinas's Judaism to challenge von Balthasar's Catholicism, Glenn Morrison develops a perspective that is both theologically rich and philosophically provocative"--Provided by publisher.
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  • Levinas and theology.Nigel Zimmermann - 2013 - London: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Introduction : the provocation of Levinas -- Being's other -- "Would you like to do a bit of theology?" : Levinas and theological turn -- The disturbance of theology -- Preferring the shadows : the "little faith" of Israel -- The return of God?
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  • Levinas, ethics and Law.Matthew Stone - 2016 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Introduction : the law's other -- The ethics of Emmanuel Levinas -- Can law be ethical? -- Adjudication, obligation and human rights : applying Levinas's Ethics -- The law of the same : Levinas and the biopolitical limits of liberalism -- Law, ethics and political subjectivity.
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  • The ethics of Emmanuel Levinas.Diane Perpich - 2008 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    Introduction : but is it ethics? -- Alterity : the problem of transcendence -- Singularity : the unrepresentable face -- Responsibility : the infinity of the demand -- Ethics : normativity and norms -- Scarce resources? : Levinas, animals, and the environment -- Failures of recognition and the recognition of failure : Levinas and identity politics.
  • The awakening to the other: a provocative dialogue with Emmanuel Levinas.Roger Burggraeve (ed.) - 2008 - Dudley, MA: Peeters.
    Levinas is a thinker for the future, concerned with the future. He inverts the priority of the declaration of the French Revolution "Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood", by designating "brotherhood" first among modern European society's most cherished values. Levinas sees brotherhood as the fundamental condition of our shared humanity and as the foundation of freedom and equality. Thus, he presents himself as a Western thinker who sets modern thought on its head and at the same time enriches it. His radical view of (...)
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  • The Cambridge introduction to Emmanuel Levinas.Michael L. Morgan - 2011 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book provides a clear and helpful overview of the philosophical core of the thought of Emmanuel Levinas, one of the most significant and interesting philosophers of the late twentieth century.
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  • Judaism and modernity: philosophical essays.Gillian Rose - 2017 - London: Verso.
    Judaism and Modernity: Philosophical Essays challenges the philosophical presentation of Judaism as the sublime 'other' of modernity. Here, Gillian Rose develops a philosophical alternative to deconstruction and post-modernism by critically re-engaging the social and political issues at stake in every reconstruction.
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  • Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale [XXXIVe Année, No. 1, Janvier-Mars, 1927].[author unknown] - 1927 - Humana Mente 2 (7):436-436.
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  • Emmanuel Levinas and the Limits to Ethics: A Critique and a Re-Appropriation.Aryeh Botwinick - 2013 - New York: Routledge.
  • Out of control: confrontations between Spinoza and Levinas.Richard A. Cohen - 2016 - Albany, New York: State University of New York Press.
    I. Levinas, Spinozism, Nietzsche and the body -- II. Prophetic speech in Levinas and Spinoza (and Maimonides) -- III. Levinas and Spinoza: to love God for nothing -- IV. Levinas and Spinoza: justice and the state -- V. Spinoza's Prince: for whom is the theological-political treatise written? VI. Levinas on Spinoza's misunderstanding of Judaism -- VII. Thinking least about death: mortality and morality in Spinoza, Heidegger and Levinas -- VIII. Spleen: Spinoza's babies, fools and madmen.
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  • Lévinas, Derrida: lire ensemble.Danielle Cohen-Levinas & Marc Crépon (eds.) - 2015 - Paris: Hermann.
    Lire ensemble: cela devrait s'entendre en plus d'un sens, au fil croise d'au moins quatre lectures. La premiere et la seconde sont la double attention, explicite ou plus secrete, que Derrida et Levinas ont accordee, chacun, a leurs oeuvres respectives et a l'effet de celles-ci sur leur cheminement. L'un et l'autre se sont ecoutes et cela fait deja deux lectures. A chaque moment de son histoire, la philosophie rassemble des penseurs autour d'une (ou plusieurs) oeuvre(s) singuliere(s) a laquelle ils se (...)
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  • Levinas and the Postcolonial: Race, Nation, Other.John E. Drabinski - 2011 - Edinburgh University Press.
    What can we learn from reading Levinas alongside postcolonial theories of difference? With that question in view, Drabinski undertakes readings of Gayatri Spivak, Homi Bhabha, Edouard Glissant, and Subcommandante Marcos in order to rethink ideas of difference, language, subjectivity, ethics, and politics. Through these philosophical readings, he gives a new perspective on the work of these important postcolonial theorists and helps make Levinas relevant to other disciplines concerned with postcolonialism and ethics.
  • The Ethics of Deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas.Simon Critchley - 2014 - Edinburgh: Blackwell.
    Simon Critchley's first book, The Ethics of Deconstruction, was originally published to great acclaim in 1992. This edition contains three new appendices and a new preface where Critchley reflects upon the origins, motivation and reception of The Ethics of Deconstruction.
  • Levinas and the trauma of responsibility: the ethical significance of time.Cynthia D. Coe - 2018 - Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.
    Levinas's account of responsibility challenges dominant notions of time, autonomy, and subjectivity according to Cynthia D. Coe. Employing the concept of trauma in Levinas's late writings, Coe draws together his understanding of time and his claim that responsibility is an obligation to the other that cannot be anticipated or warded off. Tracing the broad significance of these ideas, Coe shows how Levinas revises our notions of moral agency, knowledge, and embodiment. Her focus on time brings a new interpretive lens to (...)
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  • Corporeal Generosity: On Giving with Nietzsche, Merleau-Ponty, and Levinas.Rosalyn Diprose - 2002 - State University of New York Press.
    Challenges the accepted model, and builds a politically sensitive notion of generosity.
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  • Sensibility and Singularity: The Problem of Phenomenology in Levinas.John E. Drabinski - 2001 - State University of New York Press.
    Establishes the importance of Husserl's phenomenology for Levinas's ethics.
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  • Broken Tablets: Levinas, Derrida, and the Literary Afterlife of Religion.Sarah Hammerschlag - 2016 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Over a span of thirty years, twentieth-century French philosophers Emmanuel Levinas and Jacques Derrida held a conversation across texts. Sharing a Jewish heritage and a background in phenomenology, both came to situate their work at the margins of philosophy, articulating this placement through religion and literature. Chronicling the interactions between these thinkers, Sarah Hammerschlag argues that the stakes in their respective positions were more than philosophical. They were also political. Levinas's investments were born out in his writings on Judaism and (...)
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  • Der Andere: Studien zur Sozialontologie der Gegenwart.Michael Theunissen - 1977 - New York: De Gruyter.
    Keine ausführliche Beschreibung für "Der Andere" verfügbar.
  • Nietzsche, Buber, Levinas: Judaism as relational religion.Allan Lazaroff - 2002 - New York: Temple Israel of the City of New York.
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  • Moments of Disruption: Levinas, Sartre, and the Question of Transcendence.Kris Sealey - 2013 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    _Explores the ethical and political implications of Levinas’s and Sartre’s accounts of human existence._.
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  • Between Levinas and Heidegger.John E. Drabinski & Eric Sean Nelson (eds.) - 2014 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    _Investigates the philosophical relationship between Levinas and Heidegger in a nonpolemical context, engaging some of philosophy’s most pressing issues._.
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  • The Problem of Political Foundations in Carl Schmitt and Emmanuel Levinas.Gavin Rae - 2016 - New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
    In this book, Gavin Rae analyses the foundations of political life by undertaking a critical comparative analysis of the political theologies of Carl Schmitt and Emmanuel Levinas. In so doing, Rae contributes to key debates in contemporary political philosophy, specifically those relating to the nature of, and the relationship between, the theological, the political, and the ethical, as well as those questioning the existence of ahistoric metaphysical, ontological, and epistemological foundations. While the theological is often associated with belief in a (...)
  • Embodied Cognition.Lawrence A. Shapiro - 2010 - New York: Routledge.
    Embodied cognition is a recent development in psychology that practitioners often present as a superseding standard cognitive science. In this outstanding introduction, Lawrence Shapiro sets out the central themes and debates surrounding embodied cognition, explaining and assessing the work of many of the key figures in the field, including Lawrence Barsalou, Daniel Casasanto, Andy Clark, Alva Noë, and Michael Spivey. Beginning with an outline of the theoretical and methodological commitments of standard cognitive science, Shapiro then examines philosophical and empirical arguments (...)
  • Minimal theologies: critiques of secular reason in Adorno and Levinas.Hent de Vries - 2005 - Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
    What, at this historical moment "after Auschwitz," still remains of the questions traditionally asked by theology? What now is theology's minimal degree? This magisterial study, the first extended comparison of the writings of Theodor W. Adorno and Emmanuel Levinas, explores remnants and echoes of religious forms in these thinkers' critiques of secular reason, finding in the work of both a "theology in pianissimo" constituted by the trace of a transcendent other. The author analyzes, systematizes, and formalizes this idea of an (...)
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  • Duration and simultaneity.Henri Bergson - 1965 - Indianapolis,: Bobbs-Merrill. Edited by Leon Jacobson & Herbert Dingle.
    Bergson's central contention is that time is not measurable by any objective standard; in Duration and Simultaneity, that position is tried out against the major movement in physics of the day - Relativity. Bergson argues that Relativity fails to live up to the promise of a truly relative physics, and counter to its own spirit retains some of the objectivist assumptions of previous world views. Duration and Simultaneity was conceived in the desire to make good the new paradigm to which (...)
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  • Emmanuel Levinas and the Politics of Non-Violence.Victoria Tahmasebi-Birgani - 2014 - Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
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  • Levinas Concordance.Cristian Ciocan & Georges Hansel - 2005 - Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer.
    This work is the first Levinas Concordance. The particularity of this index is that it covers on all the 28 books published by Levinas in French. The Levinas Concordance comprises the complete list of meaningful words of Levinas’ oeuvre and their corresponding occurrences, indicated by book, page and line. The Levinas Concordance contains eight specific indexes: General Index of French Terms; General Index of Proper Names; Index of Hebrew, Biblical and Talmudic Proper Names; Index of Hebrew Terms; Index of Greek (...)
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  • The Universal Machine.Fred Moten - 2018 - Duke University Press.
    "Taken as a trilogy, _consent not to be a single being_ is a monumental accomplishment: a brilliant theoretical intervention that might be best described as a powerful case for blackness as a category of analysis."—Brent Hayes Edwards, author of _Epistrophies: Jazz and the Literary Imagination_ In _The Universal Machine_—the concluding volume to his landmark trilogy _consent not to be a single being_—Fred Moten presents a suite of three essays on Emmanuel Levinas, Hannah Arendt, and Frantz Fanon in which he explores (...)
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  • The philosophical works of Descartes.René Descartes, Elizabeth Sanderson Haldane & George Robert Thomson Ross - 1967 - London,: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Elizabeth Sanderson Haldane & G. R. T. Ross.
  • In Proximity: Emmanuel Levinas and the Eighteenth Century.Melvyn New, Robert Bernasconi & Richard A. Cohen - 2001 - Texas Tech University Press.
    In a world in which everything is reduced "to the play of signs detached from what is signified," Levinas asks a deceptively simple question: Whence, then, comes the urge to question injustice? By seeing the demand for justice for the other—the homeless, the destitute—as a return to morality, Levinas escapes the suspect finality of any ideology.Levinas’s question is one starting point for In Proximity, a collection of seventeen essays by scholars in eighteenth-century literature, philosophy, history, and religion, and their readings (...)
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  • Needs, values, truth: essays in the philosophy of value.David Wiggins - 1987 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Needs, Values, Truth brings together of some of the most important and influential writings by a leading contemporary philosopher, drawn from twenty-five years of his work in the broad area of the philosophy of value. The author ranges between problems of ethics, meta-ethics, philosophy of mind, and philosophy of logic and language, looking at questions relating to meaning, truth and objectivity in judgements of value. For this third edition he has added a new essay on incommensurability, in addition to making (...)
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  • Levinas.Hent de Vries - 2017 - In Simon Critchley & William R. Schroeder (eds.), A Companion to Continental Philosophy. Oxford, UK: Blackwell. pp. 245–255.
    In sharp contrast with Heidegger's insistence that the metaphysics of presence, in particular the objectivation of beings in terms of their being “ready at hand” culminating in the techno‐scientific world‐view, be destructed and overcome in light of a more fundamental thinking of “presencing” or “coming into presence” (Anwesen), the philosophy of the infinitely Other introduced (or should we say: rearticulated) by Emmanuel Levinas marks a radical rupture with all ontology. Indeed, it breaks away from every thought of Being, from the (...)
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  • Textures of light: vision and touch in Irigaray, Levinas, and Merleau-Ponty.Cathryn Vasseleu - 1998 - New York: Routledge.
    Light has often been privileged as a metaphor for objectivity and truth in Western thought, a status that has been challenged by recent feminist thought as giving entitlement to the masculine. This book presents a compelling new perspective on this metaphor, and explores the role the visual plays in Western philosophy by examining the thought of Irigaray, Levinas and Merleau- Ponty. Textures of Light is one of the first studies to challenge current interpretations by presenting Irigaray as a philosopher of (...)
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  • Jenseits von Sein und Zeit: Eine Einführung in Emmanuel Levinas' Philosophie.Stephan Strasser - 1980 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 41 (1):254-256.
  • Ethical Loneliness: The Injustice of Not Being Heard.Jill Stauffer - 2015 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Ethical loneliness is the experience of being abandoned by humanity, compounded by the cruelty of wrongs not being heard. It is the result of multiple lapses on the part of human beings and political institutions that, in failing to listen well to survivors, deny them redress by negating their testimony and thwarting their claims for justice. Jill Stauffer examines the root causes of ethical loneliness and how those in power revise history to serve their own ends rather than the needs (...)
  • Reconsidering Difference: Nancy, Derrida, Levinas, Deleuze.Todd May - 1997 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    Reconsidering Difference has a twofold task, the primary one critical and the secondary one reconstructive. The critical task is to show that these various privilegings are philosophical failures.
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  • Reflections on the Philosophy of Hitlerism.Emmanuel Levinas & Seán Hand - 1990 - Critical Inquiry 17 (1):63-71.
    The philosophy of Hitler is simplistic [primaire]. But the primitive powers that burn within it burst open its wretched phraseology under the pressure of an elementary force. They awaken the secret nostalgia within the German soul. Hitlerism is more than a contagion or a madness; it is an awakening of elementary feelings.But from this point on, this frighteningly dangerous phenomenon becomes philosophically interesting. For these elementary feelings harbor a philosophy. They express a soul's principal attitude towards the whole of reality (...)
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  • Levinas and the Philosophy of Religion.Jeffrey L. Kosky - 2001 - Indiana University Press.
    Levinas and the Philosophy of Religion Jeffrey L. Kosky Reveals the interplay of phenomenology and religion in Levinas’s thought. "Kosky examines Levinas’s thought from the perspective of the philosophy of religion and he does so in a way that is attentive to the philosophical nuances of Levinas’s argument.... an insightful, well written, and carefully documented study... that uniquely illuminates Levinas’s work." —John D. Caputo For readers who suspect there is no place for religion and morality in postmodern philosophy, Jeffrey L. (...)
  • ‘A splinter in the Flesh’: Levinas and the Resignification of Jewish Suffering, 1928–1947.Sarah Hammerschlag - 2012 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 20 (3):389-419.
    This essay traces the development of Levinas’s conception of Judaism from 1928 to1947 with an aim to reveal how Levinas’s postwar conceptions of Jewish election and anti-historicism derive from his early treatments of the Heideggerian themes of Geworfenheit (thrownness) and historicality. In the process, I show how the similarities that Levinas perceived between Heidegger and Rosenzweig allowed him to recast Heideggerian categories in Jewish terms. Finally the essay considers the potential political implications and tensions that follow from Levinas’s concern after (...)
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  • Rosenzweig and Heidegger: Between Judaism and German Philosophy.Peter Eli Gordon - 2003 - University of California Press.
    Franz Rosenzweig is widely regarded today as one of the most original and intellectually challenging figures within the so-called renaissance of German-Jewish thought in the Weimar period. The architect of a unique kind of existential theology, and an important influence upon such philosophers as Walter Benjamin, Martin Buber, Leo Strauss, and Emmanuel Levinas, Rosenzweig is remembered chiefly as a "Jewish thinker," often to the neglect of his broader philosophical concerns. Cutting across the artificial divide that the traumatic memory of National (...)
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  • Why Ethics?: Signs of Responsibilities.Robert Gibbs - 2000 - Princeton University Press.
    Ranging over philosophy, literary theory, social theory, and historiography, this is an ambitious and provocative work that holds profound lessons for how we think about ethics and how we seek to live responsibly.
  • Correlations in Rosenzweig and Levinas.Robert Gibbs - 1994 - Princeton University Press.
    Robert Gibbs radically revises standard interpretations of the two key figures of modern Jewish philosophy--Franz Rosenzweig, author of the monumental Star of Redemption, and Emmanuel Levinas, a major voice in contemporary intellectual life, who has inspired such thinkers as Derrida, Lyotard, Irigaray, and Blanchot. Rosenzweig and Levinas thought in relation to different philosophical schools and wrote in disparate styles. Their personal relations to Judaism and Christianity were markedly dissimilar. To Gibbs, however, the two thinkers possess basic affinities with each other. (...)
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  • Emmanuel Levinas: Critical Assessments of Leading Philosophers.Claire Elise Katz (ed.) - 2004 - New York: Routledge.
    Emmanuel Levinas was one of the foremost thinkers of the twentieth century. His work has influenced a wide range of intellectuals, from French thinkers such as Maurice Blanchot, Jacques Derrida, Luce Irigaray and Jean-Luc Marion, to American philosophers Stanley Cavell and Hillary Putnam. This set will be a useful resource for scholars working in the fields of literary theory, philosophy, Jewish studies, religion, political science and rhetoric. Titles also available in this series include, _Karl Popper_, and the forthcoming titles _Edmund (...)
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  • Avant-propos.Etienne Feron - 1990 - Études Phénoménologiques 6 (12):3-9.
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  • ‘The Passion of Israel’: the True Israel According to Levinas, or Judaism ‘as a Category of Being’.Michael Fagenblat - 2015 - Sophia 54 (3):297-320.
    Across four decades of writing, Levinas repeatedly referred to the Holocaust as ‘the Passion of Israel at Auschwitz’. This deliberately Christological interpretation of the Holocaust raises questions about the respective roles of Judaism and Christianity in Levinas’ thought and seems at odds with his well-known view that suffering is ‘useless’. Basing my interpretation on the journals Levinas wrote as a prisoner of war and a radio talk he delivered in September 1945, I argue that his philosophical project is best understood (...)
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  • Ethical Criticism: Reading After Levinas.Robert Eaglestone - 2019 - Edinburgh University Press.
    What is the relationship between literary criticism and ethics? Does criticism have an ethical task? How can criticism be ethical after literary theory? Ethical Criticism seeks to answer these questions by examining the historical development of the ethics of criticism and the vigorous contemporary backlash against what is known as 'theory'. The book appraises current arguments about the ethics of criticism and, finding them wanting, turns to the philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas. Described as 'the greatest moral philosopher of the twentieth (...)
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  • German-Jewish Thought and its Afterlife: A Tenuous Legacy.Vivian Liska - 2016 - Indiana University Press.
    Drawing on Jewish dimensions in the works of Franz Kafka, Walter Benjamin, Gershom Scholem, Hannah Arendt, and Paul Celan, Vivian Liska reflects on the dialogues between these contemporaries and traces the changing role that Jewish tradition has played in the development of modern thought. She notes how these intellectuals and philosophers transmitted their particular visions of modernity but also viewed them in the light of the Jewish tradition’s legacies and challenges. Liska argues that these visions derive from a paradoxical dynamic, (...)
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