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Wikipedia

Emmanuel Levinas

Emmanuel Levinas[3][4] (/ˈlɛvɪnæs/; French: [ɛmanɥɛl levinas];[5] 12 January 1906 – 25 December 1995) was a French philosopher of Lithuanian Jewish ancestry who is known for his work within Jewish philosophy, existentialism, and phenomenology, focusing on the relationship of ethics to metaphysics and ontology.

Emmanuel Levinas
Born
Emmanuelis Levinas

12 January 1906, O.S. 30 December 1905
Died25 December 1995(1995-12-25) (aged 89)[2]
Clichy, France
EducationUniversity of Freiburg (no degree)
University of Strasbourg (Dr, 1929)
University of Paris (DrE, 1961)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy
Existential phenomenology[1]
Jewish philosophy
InstitutionsUniversity of Poitiers
University of Paris
University of Fribourg
Main interests
Ethics · metaphysics · ontology · Talmud · theology
Notable ideas
"The Other" · "The Face"

Life and career edit

Emanuelis Levinas (later adapted to French orthography as Emmanuel Levinas) was born in 1906 into a middle-class Litvak family in Kaunas, in present-day Lithuania, then Kovno district, at the Western edge of the Russian Empire. Because of the disruptions of World War I, the family moved to Charkow in Ukraine in 1916, where they stayed during the Russian revolutions of February and October 1917. In 1920 his family returned to the Republic of Lithuania. Levinas's early education was in secular, Russian-language schools in Kaunas and Charkow.[6] Upon his family's return to the Republic of Lithuania, Levinas spent two years at a Jewish gymnasium before departing for France, where he commenced his university education.

Levinas began his philosophical studies at the University of Strasbourg in 1923,[7] and his lifelong friendship with the French philosopher Maurice Blanchot. In 1928, he went to the University of Freiburg for two semesters to study phenomenology under Edmund Husserl. At Freiburg he also met Martin Heidegger, whose philosophy greatly impressed him. Levinas would in the early 1930s be one of the first French intellectuals to draw attention to Heidegger and Husserl by translating, in 1931, Husserl's Cartesian Meditations (with the help of Gabrielle Peiffer and with advice from Alexandre Koyré) and by drawing on their ideas in his own philosophy, in works such as La théorie de l'intuition dans la phénoménologie de Husserl (The Theory of Intuition in Husserl's Phenomenology; his 1929/30 doctoral thesis), De l'Existence à l'Existant (From Existence to Existents; 1947), and En Découvrant l’Existence avec Husserl et Heidegger (Discovering Existence with Husserl and Heidegger; first edition, 1949, with additions, 1967). In 1929 he was awarded his doctorate (Doctorat d'université degree) by the University of Strasbourg for his thesis on the meaning of intuition in the philosophy of Husserl, published in 1930.

Levinas became a naturalized French citizen in 1939.[8] When France declared war on Germany, he reported for military duty as a translator of Russian and French.[7] During the German invasion of France in 1940, his military unit was surrounded and forced to surrender. Levinas spent the rest of World War II as a prisoner of war in a camp near Hanover in Germany. Levinas was assigned to a special barrack for Jewish prisoners, who were forbidden any form of religious worship. Life in the Fallingbostel camp was difficult, but his status as a prisoner of war protected him from the Holocaust's concentration camps.[9] Other prisoners saw him frequently jotting in a notebook. These jottings were later developed into his book De l'Existence à l'Existant (1947) and a series of lectures published under the title Le Temps et l'Autre (1948). His wartime notebooks have now been published in their original form as Œuvres: Tome 1, Carnets de captivité: suivi de Écrits sur la captivité; et, Notes philosophiques diverses (2009).

Meanwhile, Maurice Blanchot helped Levinas's wife and daughter spend the war in a monastery, thus sparing them from the Holocaust. Blanchot, at considerable personal risk, also saw to it that Levinas was able to keep in contact with his immediate family through letters and other messages. Other members of Levinas's family were not so fortunate; his mother-in-law was deported and never heard from again, while his father and brothers were killed by the SS in Lithuania.[10] After the Second World War, he studied the Talmud under the enigmatic Monsieur Chouchani, whose influence he acknowledged only late in his life.

Levinas's first book-length essay, Totality and Infinity (1961), was written as his Doctorat d'État primary thesis (roughly equivalent to a Habilitation thesis). His secondary thesis was titled Études sur la phénoménologie (Studies on Phenomenology).[11] After earning his habilitation, Levinas taught at a private Jewish High School in Paris, the École normale Israélite orientale (Paris) [fr], eventually becoming its director.[12] He began teaching at the University of Poitiers in 1961, at the Nanterre campus of the University of Paris in 1967, and at the Sorbonne in 1973, from which he retired in 1979. He published his second major philosophical work, Autrement qu'être ou au-delà de l'essence, in 1974. He was also a professor at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland. In 1989 he was awarded the Balzan Prize for Philosophy.

According to his obituary in The New York Times,[13] Levinas came to regret his early enthusiasm for Heidegger, after the latter joined the Nazis. Levinas explicitly framed several of his mature philosophical works as attempts to respond to Heidegger's philosophy in light of its ethical failings.

His son is the composer Michaël Levinas, and his son-in-law is the French mathematician Georges Hansel. Among his most famous students is Rabbi Baruch Garzon from Tetouan (Morocco), who learned Philosophy with Levinas at the Sorbonne, and later went on to become one of the most important Rabbis of the Spanish-speaking world.

Philosophy edit

In the 1950s, Levinas emerged from the circle of intellectuals surrounding the philosopher Jean Wahl as a leading French thinker. His work is based on the ethics of the Other or, in Levinas's terms, on "ethics as first philosophy". For Levinas, the Other is not knowable and cannot be made into an object of the self, as is done by traditional metaphysics (which Levinas called "ontology"). Levinas prefers to think of philosophy as the "wisdom of love" rather than the "love of wisdom" (the usual translation of the Greek "φιλοσοφία"). In his view, responsibility towards the Other precedes any "objective searching after truth".

Levinas derives the primacy of his ethics from the experience of the encounter with the Other. For Levinas, the irreducible relation, the epiphany, of the face-to-face, the encounter with another, is a privileged phenomenon in which the other person's proximity and distance are both strongly felt. "The Other precisely reveals himself in his alterity not in a shock negating the I, but as the primordial phenomenon of gentleness."[14] At the same time, the revelation of the face makes a demand, and this demand is before one can express or know one's freedom to affirm or deny.[15] One instantly recognizes the transcendence and heteronomy of the Other. Even murder fails as an attempt to take hold of this otherness.

While critical of traditional theology, Levinas does require that a "trace" of the Divine be acknowledged within an ethics of Otherness. This is especially evident in his thematization of debt and guilt. "A face is a trace of itself, given over to my responsibility, but to which I am wanting and faulty. It is as though I were responsible for his mortality, and guilty for surviving."[16] The moral "authority" of the face of the Other is felt in my "infinite responsibility" for the Other.[17] The face of the Other comes towards me with its infinite moral demands while emerging out of the trace.

Apart from this morally imposing emergence, the Other’s face might well be adequately addressed as "Thou" (along the lines proposed by Martin Buber) in whose welcoming countenance I might find great comfort, love and communion of souls—but not a moral demand bearing down upon me from a height. "Through a trace the irreversible past takes on the profile of a ‘He.’ The beyond from which a face comes is in the third person."[18] It is because the Other also emerges from the illeity of a He (il in French) that I instead fall into infinite debt vis-à-vis the Other in a situation of utterly asymmetrical obligations: I owe the Other everything, the Other owes me nothing. The trace of the Other is the heavy shadow of God, the God who commands, "Thou shalt not kill!"[19] Levinas takes great pains to avoid straightforward theological language.[20] The very metaphysics of signification subtending theological language is suspected and suspended by evocations of how traces work differently than signs. Nevertheless, the divinity of the trace is also undeniable: "the trace is not just one more word: it is the proximity of God in the countenance of my fellowman."[21] In a sense, it is divine commandment without divine authority.

Following Totality and Infinity, Levinas later argued that responsibility for the other is rooted within our subjective constitution. The first line of the preface of this book is "everyone will readily agree that it is of the highest importance to know whether we are not duped by morality."[22] This idea appears in his thoughts on recurrence (chapter 4 in Otherwise than Being), in which Levinas maintains that subjectivity is formed in and through our subjection to the other. Subjectivity, Levinas argued, is primordially ethical, not theoretical: that is to say, our responsibility for the other is not a derivative feature of our subjectivity, but instead, founds our subjective being-in-the-world by giving it a meaningful direction and orientation. Levinas's thesis "ethics as first philosophy", then, means that the traditional philosophical pursuit of knowledge is secondary to a basic ethical duty to the other. To meet the Other is to have the idea of Infinity.[23]

The elderly Levinas was a distinguished French public intellectual, whose books reportedly sold well. He had a major influence on the younger, but more well-known Jacques Derrida, whose seminal Writing and Difference contains an essay, "Violence and Metaphysics", that was instrumental in expanding interest in Levinas in France and abroad. Derrida also delivered a eulogy at Levinas's funeral, later published as Adieu à Emmanuel Levinas, an appreciation and exploration of Levinas's moral philosophy. In a memorial essay for Levinas, Jean-Luc Marion claimed that "If one defines a great philosopher as someone without whom philosophy would not have been what it is, then in France there are two great philosophers of the 20th Century: Bergson and Lévinas."[24]

His work has been a source of controversy since the 1950s, when Simone de Beauvoir criticized his account of the subject as being necessarily masculine, as defined against a feminine other.[25] While other feminist philosophers like Tina Chanter and the artist-thinker Bracha L. Ettinger[26][27] have defended him against this charge, increasing interest in his work in the 2000s brought a reevaluation of the possible misogyny of his account of the feminine, as well as a critical engagement with his French nationalism in the context of colonialism. Among the most prominent of these are critiques by Simon Critchley and Stella Sandford.[28] However, there have also been responses which argue that these critiques of Levinas are misplaced.[29]

Cultural influence edit

For three decades, Levinas gave short talks on Rashi, a medieval French rabbi, every Shabbat morning at the Jewish high school in Paris where he was the principal. This tradition strongly influenced many generations of students.[30]

Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne,[31] renowned Belgian filmmakers, have referred to Levinas as an important underpinning for their filmmaking ethics.

In his book Levinas and the Cinema of Redemption: Time, Ethics, and the Feminine, author Sam B. Girgus argues that Levinas has dramatically affected films involving redemption.[32]

Magician, Derren Brown, A Book of Secrets[33] references Levinas.

Published works edit

A full bibliography of all Levinas's publications up until 1981 is found in Roger Burggraeve Emmanuel Levinas (1982).

A list of works, translated into English but not appearing in any collections, may be found in Critchley, S. and Bernasconi, R. (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Levinas (Cambridge UP, 2002), pp. 269–270.

Books
  • 1929. Sur les « Ideen » de M. E. Husserl
  • 1930. La théorie de l'intuition dans la phénoménologie de Husserl (The Theory of Intuition in Husserl's Phenomenology)
  • 1931. Der Begriff des Irrationalen als philosophisches Problem (with Heinz Erich Eisenhuth)
  • 1931. Fribourg, Husserl et la phénoménologie
  • 1931. Les recherches sur la philosophie des mathématiques en Allemagne, aperçu général (with W. Dubislav)
  • 1931. Méditations cartésiennes. Introduction à la phénoménologie (with Edmund Husserl and Gabrielle Peiffer)
  • 1932. Martin Heidegger et l'ontologie
  • 1934. La présence totale (with Louis Lavelle)
  • 1934. Phénoménologie
  • 1934. Quelques réflexions sur la philosophie de l'hitlérisme
  • 1935. De l'évasion
  • 1935. La notion du temps (with N. Khersonsky)
  • 1935. L'actualité de Maimonide
  • 1935. L'inspiration religieuse de l'Alliance
  • 1936. Allure du transcendental (with Georges Bénézé)
  • 1936. Esquisses d'une énergétique mentale (with J. Duflo)
  • 1936. Fraterniser sans se convertir
  • 1936. Les aspects de l'image visuelle (with R. Duret)
  • 1936. L'esthétique française contemporaine (with Valentin Feldman)
  • 1936. L'individu dans le déséquilibre moderne (with R. Munsch)
  • 1936. Valeur (with Georges Bénézé)
  • 1947. De l'existence à l'existant (Existence and Existents)
  • 1948. Le Temps et l'Autre (Time and the Other)
  • 1949. En Découvrant l’Existence avec Husserl et Heidegger (Discovering Existence with Husserl and Heidegger)
  • 1961. Totalité et Infini: essai sur l'extériorité (Totality and Infinity: An Essay on Exteriority)
  • 1962. De l'Évasion (On Escape)
  • 1963 & 1976. Difficult Freedom: Essays on Judaism
  • 1968. Quatre lectures talmudiques
  • 1972. Humanisme de l'autre homme (Humanism of the Other)
  • 1974. Autrement qu'être ou au-delà de l'essence (Otherwise than Being or Beyond Essence)
  • 1976. Sur Maurice Blanchot
  • 1976. Noms propres (Proper Names) - includes the essay "Sans nom" ("Nameless")
  • 1977. Du Sacré au saint – cinq nouvelles lectures talmudiques
  • 1980. Le Temps et l'Autre
  • 1982. L'Au-delà du verset: lectures et discours talmudiques (Beyond the Verse: Talmudic Readings and Lectures)
  • 1982. Of God Who Comes to Mind
  • 1982. Ethique et infini (Ethics and Infinity: Dialogues of Emmanuel Levinas and Philippe Nemo)
  • 1984. Transcendence et intelligibilité (Transcendence and Intelligibility)
  • 1988. A l'Heure des nations (In the Time of the Nations)
  • 1991. Entre Nous
  • 1995. Altérité et transcendence (Alterity and Transcendence)
  • 1998. De l’obliteration. Entretien avec Françoise Armengaud à propos de l’œuvre de SosnoOn Obliteration: Discussing Sacha Sosno, trans. Richard A. Cohen, in: Art and Text (winter 1989), 30-41.)
  • 2006. Œuvres: Tome 1, Carnets de captivité: suivi de Écrits sur la captivité ; et, Notes philosophiques diverses, Posthumously published by Grasset & Fasquelle
Articles in English
  • "A Language Familiar to Us". Telos 44 (Summer 1980). New York: Telos Press.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Andris Breitling, Chris Bremmers, Arthur Cools (eds.), Debating Levinas’ Legacy, Brill, 2015, p. 128.
  2. ^ Bergo, Bettina, "Emmanuel Levinas", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2015 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), URL = <https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2015/entries/levinas/>.
  3. ^ L'anachronisme constitutif de l'existence juive – Nonfiction.fr: "Première remarque, sans doute à l'humour décalé : l'auteur de ces lignes a toujours entendu Emmanuel Levinas réclamer que l'on écrive son nom correctement, c'est-à-dire sans accent." Larousse.fr also employs the non-accented form.
  4. ^ Another form of the surname is Lévinas according to Levinas.fr, Universalis.fr and Britannica.com.
  5. ^ The pronunciation is the same whether the name is written Levinas or Lévinas.
  6. ^ Moyn, S. (2005). Origins of the Other: Emmanuel Levinas between Revelation and Ethics. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. pp. 23–24. ISBN 9780801473661.
  7. ^ a b Shapiro, Susan E. "Emmanuel Levinas (1906-1995)". Holocaust Literature: An Encyclopedia of Writers and Their Work. Routledge. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
  8. ^ Bergo, Bettina. "Emmanuel Levinas". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosopher. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
  9. ^ Ivry, Benjamin (11 February 2010). "A Loving Levinas on War". Forward. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
  10. ^ Bergo, Bettina (2019), "Emmanuel Levinas", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2019 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 2022-07-17.
  11. ^ Alan D. Schrift (2006), Twentieth-Century French Philosophy: Key Themes And Thinkers, Blackwell Publishing, p. 159.
  12. ^ Matanky, Eugene D. (January 2018). "The Temptation of Pedagogy: Levinas's Educational Thought from His Philosophical and Confessional Writings". Journal of Philosophy of Education. doi:10.1111/1467-9752.12302. S2CID 149995642.
  13. ^ Steinfels, Peter (1995-12-27). "Emmanuel Levinas, 90, French Ethical Philosopher". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-07-17.
  14. ^ E. Levinas, Totality and Infinity: An Essay on Exteriority (Alphonso Lingis, transl. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 1969), p. 150.
  15. ^ For recent reflections on the ethical-political imports of Levinas's tradition (and biography), along with the examination of the notion of the face-to-face in relation to le visage, while taking into account the Levantine/Palestinian standpoint on conflict, see: Nader El-Bizri, "Uneasy Meditations Following Levinas," Studia Phaenomelnologica, Vol. 6 (2006), pp. 293–315.
  16. ^ Emmanuel Levinas, Otherwise than Being, trans. A. Lingis (Dordrecht: Nijhoff, 1974), p. 91.
  17. ^ Levinas, Entre Nous, trans. M. B. Smith & B. Harshav (New York: Columbia, 1998), p. 74.
  18. ^ Levinas, "The Trace of the Other," in Deconstruction in Context, ed. M. Taylor (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986), p. 356.
  19. ^ Levinas, Difficult Freedom, trans. S. Hand (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1990), p. 8f.
  20. ^ "A face does not function in proximity as a sign of a hidden God who would impose the neighbor on me." Otherwise than Being, p. 94.
  21. ^ Levinas, Entre Nous, p. 57.
  22. ^ E. Levinas, Totality and Infinity: An Essay on Exteriority (Alphonso Lingis, transl. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 1969), p. 21.
  23. ^ French: "Aborder Autrui [...] c'est donc recevoir d'Autrui au-delà de la capacité du Moi: ce qui signifie exactement: avoir l'idée de l'infini." in Totalité et Infini, Martinus Nijhoff, La Haye, 1991, p. 22.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-01-05. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
  25. ^ de Beauvoir, S. (2009). The Second Sex. New York: Vintage. p. 6. ISBN 9780307277787.
  26. ^ Bracha L. Ettinger in conversation with Emmanuel Lévinas, (1991–1993). Time is the Breath of the Spirit. Translated by C. Ducker and J. Simas (with portrait-photos of E. L. taken by Bracha L.E.). Oxford: MOMA, 1993. Reprinted (Hebrew) in: Iyyun, Oct. 1994. Reprinted (Russian) in: Kabinet, Prilozehnie nº 3, 1994. Reprinted as "Un monde sans moi" (French) in: Athanor nº 5: 29–33, 1994. Reprinted in: Kaninet – An Anthology. Amsterdam: Stedelijk Museum, 1997.
  27. ^ Emmanuel Lévinas in conversation with Bracha L. Ettinger, (1991–1993). "Le féminin est cette différence inouïe". Four one-off Artist's Books, 1994. Reprinted as "Que dirait Eurydice?" Braka! nº 8, 1997. Reprinted as "Que dirait Eurydice?"/"What Would Eurydice Say?" (English/French) to coincide with Kabinet exhibition, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam. Paris: BLE Atelier, 1997. Reprinted in Athena: Philosophical Studies. Vol. 2, 2006.
  28. ^ Critchley, S. 2004. "Five Problems in Levinas’ View of Politics and the Sketch of a Solution to Them". Political Theory 32, 2;172-185. V. also Sandford, S. 2001. The Metaphysics of Love: Gender and Transcendence in Levinas, New York: Bloomsbury Publishing, New York.
  29. ^ Galetti, Dino (2016). "Of Levinas' 'structure' in address to his four 'others'". Continental Philosophy Review. 49 (4): 509–532. doi:10.1007/s11007-015-9346-0. S2CID 254797828.
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-08-18. Retrieved 2013-10-30.
  31. ^ Joseph Mai (2010). Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne - Contemporary Film Directors. University of Illinois Press. pp. ix–xvii. ISBN 978-0-252-07711-1.
  32. ^ Girgus, Sam. "Conversations with Scholars of American Popular Culture". Americana. Americana: The Journal of American Popular Culture. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  33. ^ Brown, Derren (2021). A Book of Secrets: Finding Solace in a Stubborn World. [S.l.]: Bantam Press. ISBN 978-1-78763-305-6. OCLC 1245343989.

Further reading edit

  • Adriaan Theodoor Peperzak, Robert Bernasconi & Simon Critchley, Emmanuel Levinas (1996).
  • Astell, Ann W. and Jackson, J. A., Levinas and Medieval Literature: The "Difficult Reading" of English and Rabbinic Texts (Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne University press, 2009).
  • Simon Critchley and Robert Bernasconi (ed.) The Cambridge Companion to Levinas (2002).
  • Theodore De Boer, The Rationality of Transcendence: Studies in the Philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas, Amsterdam: J. C. Gieben, 1997.
  • Roger Burggraeve, The Wisdom of Love in the Service of Love: Emmanuel Levinas on Justice, Peace, and Human Rights, trans. Jeffrey Bloechl. Milwaukee: Marquette University Press, 2002.
  • Roger Burggraeve (ed.) The awakening to the other: a provocative dialogue with Emmanuel Levinas, Leuven: Peeters, 2008
  • Cristian Ciocan, Georges Hansel, Levinas Concordance. Dordrecht: Springer, 2005.
  • Hanoch Ben-Pazi, Emmanuel Levinas: Hermeneutics, Ethics, and Art, Journal of Literature and Art Studies 5 (2015), 588 - 600
  • Richard A. Cohen, Out of Control: Confrontations Between Spinoza and Levinas, Albany: State University of New York Press, 2016.
  • Richard A. Cohen, Levinasian Meditations: Ethics, Philosophy, and Religion, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 2010.
  • Richard A. Cohen, Ethics, Exegesis and Philosophy: Interpretation After Levinas, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001.
  • Richard A. Cohen, Elevations: The Height of the Good in Rosenzweig and Levinas, Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1994.
  • Joseph Cohen, Alternances de la métaphysique. Essais sur Emmanuel Levinas, Paris: Galilée, 2009. [in French]
  • Simon Critchley, "Emmanuel Levinas: A Disparate Inventory," in The Cambridge Companion to Levinas, eds. S. Critchley & R. Bernasconi. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press, 2002.
  • Jutta Czapski, Verwundbarkeit in der Ethik von Emmanuel Levinas, Königshausen u. Neumann, Würzburg 2017
  • Derrida, Jacques, Adieu to Emmanuel Levinas, trans. Pascale-Anne Brault and Michael Naas. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999.
  • Derrida, Jacques, "At This Very Moment in This Work Here I Am," trans. Ruben Berezdivin and Peggy Kamuf, in Psyche: Inventions of the Other, Vol. 1, ed. Peggy Kamuf and Elizabeth G. Rottenberg. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2007. 143-90.
  • Bracha L. Ettinger, conversation with Emmanuel Levinas, (1991–1993). Time is the Breath of the Spirit. Oxford: MOMA, 1993.
  • Bracha L. Ettinger, Que dirait Eurydice?/What Would Eurydice Say?, conversation with Emmanuel Levinas, (1991–1993). Paris: BLE Atelier, 1997. Reprinted in Athena: Philosophical Studies Vol. 2, 2006.
  • Bernard-Donals, Michael, "Difficult Freedom: Levinas, Memory and Politics", in Forgetful Memory, Albany: State University of New York Press, 2009. 145-160.
  • Derrida, Jacques, "Violence and Metaphysics: An Essay on the Thought of Emmanuel Levinas," in Writing and Difference, trans. Alan Bass. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1978. 79-153.
  • Michael Eldred, 'Worldsharing and Encounter: Heidegger's ontology and Lévinas' ethics' 2010.
  • Michael Eskin, Ethics and Dialogue in the Works of Levinas, Bakhtin, Mandel'shtam, and Celan, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.
  • Alexandre Guilherme and W. John Morgan, 'Emmanuel Levinas (1906-1995)-dialogue as an ethical demand of the other', Chapter 5 in Philosophy, Dialogue, and Education: Nine modern European philosophers, Routledge, London and New York, pp. 72–88, ISBN 978-1-138-83149-0.
  • Herzog, Annabel (2020). Levinas's Politics: Justice, Mercy, Universality. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-5197-5.
  • Mario Kopić, The Beats of the Other, Otkucaji drugog, Belgrade: Službeni glasnik, 2013.
  • Nicole Note, "The impossible possibility of environmental ethics, Emmanuel Levinas and the discrete Other" in: Philosophia: E-Journal of Philosophy and Culture – 7/2014.
  • Marie-Anne Lescourt, Emmanuel Levinas, 2nd edition. Flammarion, 2006. [in French]
  • Emmanuel Levinas, Ethics and Infinity: Conversations with Philippe Nemo, trans. R.A. Cohen. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 1985.
  • Emmanuel Levinas, "Signature," in Difficult Freedom: Essays on Judaism, trans. Sean Hand. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1990 & 1997.
  • John Llewelyn, Emmanuel Levinas: The Genealogy of Ethics, London: Routledge, 1995
  • John Llewelyn, The HypoCritical Imagination: Between Kant and Levinas, London: Routledge, 2000.
  • John Llewelyn, Appositions – of Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2002.
  • Paul Marcus, Being for the Other: Emmanuel Levinas, Ethical Living, and Psychoanalysis, Milwaukee, WI: Marquette University Press, 2008.
  • Paul Marcus, In Search of the Good Life: Emmanuel Levinas, Psychoanalysis and the Art of Living, London: Karnac Books, 2010.
  • Seán Hand, Emmanuel Levinas, London: Routledge, 2009
  • Benda Hofmeyr (ed.), Radical passivity – rethinking ethical agency in Levinas, Dordrecht: Springer, 2009
  • Diane Perpich The ethics of Emmanuel Levinas, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2008
  • Fred Poché, Penser avec Arendt et Lévinas. Du mal politique au respect de l'autre, Chronique Sociale, Lyon, en co-édition avec EVO, Bruxelles et Tricorne, Genève, 1998 (3e édition, 2009).
  • Jadranka Skorin-Kapov, The Aesthetics of Desire and Surprise: Phenomenology and Speculation, Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2015.
  • Tanja Staehler, Plato and Levinas – the ambiguous out-side of ethics, London: Routledge 2010 [i.e. 2009]
  • Toploski, Anya. 2015. Arendt, Levinas, and politics of relationality. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
  • Wehrs, Donald R.: Levinas and Twentieth-Century Literature: Ethics and the Reconstruction of Subjectivity. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2013. ISBN 3826061578

Herzog, Annabel (2020) Levinas's politics: justice, mercy, universality: Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania


External links edit

  • Institute for Levinassian Studies. , a search engine for Levinas's texts, and more
  • The Levinas Online Bibliography (Prof. dr. Joachim Duyndam, editor-in-chief), levinas.nl Hosted by the University of Humanistics, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
  • Annual Levinas Philosophy Summer Seminar, Director: Richard A. Cohen
  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: "Emmanuel Levinas".
  • Levinas and Anarchism. Mitchell Cowen Verter: https://waste.org/~roadrunner/writing/Levinas

emmanuel, levinas, french, ɛmanɥɛl, levinas, january, 1906, december, 1995, french, philosopher, lithuanian, jewish, ancestry, known, work, within, jewish, philosophy, existentialism, phenomenology, focusing, relationship, ethics, metaphysics, ontology, bornem. Emmanuel Levinas 3 4 ˈ l ɛ v ɪ n ae s French ɛmanɥɛl levinas 5 12 January 1906 25 December 1995 was a French philosopher of Lithuanian Jewish ancestry who is known for his work within Jewish philosophy existentialism and phenomenology focusing on the relationship of ethics to metaphysics and ontology Emmanuel LevinasBornEmmanuelis Levinas12 January 1906 O S 30 December 1905Kovno Kovno Governorate Russian Empire present day Kaunas Lithuania Died25 December 1995 1995 12 25 aged 89 2 Clichy FranceEducationUniversity of Freiburg no degree University of Strasbourg Dr 1929 University of Paris DrE 1961 Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolContinental philosophyExistential phenomenology 1 Jewish philosophyInstitutionsUniversity of PoitiersUniversity of ParisUniversity of FribourgMain interestsEthics metaphysics ontology Talmud theologyNotable ideas The Other The Face Contents 1 Life and career 2 Philosophy 3 Cultural influence 4 Published works 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife and career editEmanuelis Levinas later adapted to French orthography as Emmanuel Levinas was born in 1906 into a middle class Litvak family in Kaunas in present day Lithuania then Kovno district at the Western edge of the Russian Empire Because of the disruptions of World War I the family moved to Charkow in Ukraine in 1916 where they stayed during the Russian revolutions of February and October 1917 In 1920 his family returned to the Republic of Lithuania Levinas s early education was in secular Russian language schools in Kaunas and Charkow 6 Upon his family s return to the Republic of Lithuania Levinas spent two years at a Jewish gymnasium before departing for France where he commenced his university education Levinas began his philosophical studies at the University of Strasbourg in 1923 7 and his lifelong friendship with the French philosopher Maurice Blanchot In 1928 he went to the University of Freiburg for two semesters to study phenomenology under Edmund Husserl At Freiburg he also met Martin Heidegger whose philosophy greatly impressed him Levinas would in the early 1930s be one of the first French intellectuals to draw attention to Heidegger and Husserl by translating in 1931 Husserl s Cartesian Meditations with the help of Gabrielle Peiffer and with advice from Alexandre Koyre and by drawing on their ideas in his own philosophy in works such as La theorie de l intuition dans la phenomenologie de Husserl The Theory of Intuition in Husserl s Phenomenology his 1929 30 doctoral thesis De l Existence a l Existant From Existence to Existents 1947 and En Decouvrant l Existence avec Husserl et Heidegger Discovering Existence with Husserl and Heidegger first edition 1949 with additions 1967 In 1929 he was awarded his doctorate Doctorat d universite degree by the University of Strasbourg for his thesis on the meaning of intuition in the philosophy of Husserl published in 1930 Levinas became a naturalized French citizen in 1939 8 When France declared war on Germany he reported for military duty as a translator of Russian and French 7 During the German invasion of France in 1940 his military unit was surrounded and forced to surrender Levinas spent the rest of World War II as a prisoner of war in a camp near Hanover in Germany Levinas was assigned to a special barrack for Jewish prisoners who were forbidden any form of religious worship Life in the Fallingbostel camp was difficult but his status as a prisoner of war protected him from the Holocaust s concentration camps 9 Other prisoners saw him frequently jotting in a notebook These jottings were later developed into his book De l Existence a l Existant 1947 and a series of lectures published under the title Le Temps et l Autre 1948 His wartime notebooks have now been published in their original form as Œuvres Tome 1 Carnets de captivite suivi de Ecrits sur la captivite et Notes philosophiques diverses 2009 Meanwhile Maurice Blanchot helped Levinas s wife and daughter spend the war in a monastery thus sparing them from the Holocaust Blanchot at considerable personal risk also saw to it that Levinas was able to keep in contact with his immediate family through letters and other messages Other members of Levinas s family were not so fortunate his mother in law was deported and never heard from again while his father and brothers were killed by the SS in Lithuania 10 After the Second World War he studied the Talmud under the enigmatic Monsieur Chouchani whose influence he acknowledged only late in his life Levinas s first book length essay Totality and Infinity 1961 was written as his Doctorat d Etat primary thesis roughly equivalent to a Habilitation thesis His secondary thesis was titled Etudes sur la phenomenologie Studies on Phenomenology 11 After earning his habilitation Levinas taught at a private Jewish High School in Paris the Ecole normale Israelite orientale Paris fr eventually becoming its director 12 He began teaching at the University of Poitiers in 1961 at the Nanterre campus of the University of Paris in 1967 and at the Sorbonne in 1973 from which he retired in 1979 He published his second major philosophical work Autrement qu etre ou au dela de l essence in 1974 He was also a professor at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland In 1989 he was awarded the Balzan Prize for Philosophy According to his obituary in The New York Times 13 Levinas came to regret his early enthusiasm for Heidegger after the latter joined the Nazis Levinas explicitly framed several of his mature philosophical works as attempts to respond to Heidegger s philosophy in light of its ethical failings His son is the composer Michael Levinas and his son in law is the French mathematician Georges Hansel Among his most famous students is Rabbi Baruch Garzon from Tetouan Morocco who learned Philosophy with Levinas at the Sorbonne and later went on to become one of the most important Rabbis of the Spanish speaking world Philosophy editIn the 1950s Levinas emerged from the circle of intellectuals surrounding the philosopher Jean Wahl as a leading French thinker His work is based on the ethics of the Other or in Levinas s terms on ethics as first philosophy For Levinas the Other is not knowable and cannot be made into an object of the self as is done by traditional metaphysics which Levinas called ontology Levinas prefers to think of philosophy as the wisdom of love rather than the love of wisdom the usual translation of the Greek filosofia In his view responsibility towards the Other precedes any objective searching after truth Levinas derives the primacy of his ethics from the experience of the encounter with the Other For Levinas the irreducible relation the epiphany of the face to face the encounter with another is a privileged phenomenon in which the other person s proximity and distance are both strongly felt The Other precisely reveals himself in his alterity not in a shock negating the I but as the primordial phenomenon of gentleness 14 At the same time the revelation of the face makes a demand and this demand is before one can express or know one s freedom to affirm or deny 15 One instantly recognizes the transcendence and heteronomy of the Other Even murder fails as an attempt to take hold of this otherness While critical of traditional theology Levinas does require that a trace of the Divine be acknowledged within an ethics of Otherness This is especially evident in his thematization of debt and guilt A face is a trace of itself given over to my responsibility but to which I am wanting and faulty It is as though I were responsible for his mortality and guilty for surviving 16 The moral authority of the face of the Other is felt in my infinite responsibility for the Other 17 The face of the Other comes towards me with its infinite moral demands while emerging out of the trace Apart from this morally imposing emergence the Other s face might well be adequately addressed as Thou along the lines proposed by Martin Buber in whose welcoming countenance I might find great comfort love and communion of souls but not a moral demand bearing down upon me from a height Through a trace the irreversible past takes on the profile of a He The beyond from which a face comes is in the third person 18 It is because the Other also emerges from the illeity of a He il in French that I instead fall into infinite debt vis a vis the Other in a situation of utterly asymmetrical obligations I owe the Other everything the Other owes me nothing The trace of the Other is the heavy shadow of God the God who commands Thou shalt not kill 19 Levinas takes great pains to avoid straightforward theological language 20 The very metaphysics of signification subtending theological language is suspected and suspended by evocations of how traces work differently than signs Nevertheless the divinity of the trace is also undeniable the trace is not just one more word it is the proximity of God in the countenance of my fellowman 21 In a sense it is divine commandment without divine authority Following Totality and Infinity Levinas later argued that responsibility for the other is rooted within our subjective constitution The first line of the preface of this book is everyone will readily agree that it is of the highest importance to know whether we are not duped by morality 22 This idea appears in his thoughts on recurrence chapter 4 in Otherwise than Being in which Levinas maintains that subjectivity is formed in and through our subjection to the other Subjectivity Levinas argued is primordially ethical not theoretical that is to say our responsibility for the other is not a derivative feature of our subjectivity but instead founds our subjective being in the world by giving it a meaningful direction and orientation Levinas s thesis ethics as first philosophy then means that the traditional philosophical pursuit of knowledge is secondary to a basic ethical duty to the other To meet the Other is to have the idea of Infinity 23 The elderly Levinas was a distinguished French public intellectual whose books reportedly sold well He had a major influence on the younger but more well known Jacques Derrida whose seminal Writing and Difference contains an essay Violence and Metaphysics that was instrumental in expanding interest in Levinas in France and abroad Derrida also delivered a eulogy at Levinas s funeral later published as Adieu a Emmanuel Levinas an appreciation and exploration of Levinas s moral philosophy In a memorial essay for Levinas Jean Luc Marion claimed that If one defines a great philosopher as someone without whom philosophy would not have been what it is then in France there are two great philosophers of the 20th Century Bergson and Levinas 24 His work has been a source of controversy since the 1950s when Simone de Beauvoir criticized his account of the subject as being necessarily masculine as defined against a feminine other 25 While other feminist philosophers like Tina Chanter and the artist thinker Bracha L Ettinger 26 27 have defended him against this charge increasing interest in his work in the 2000s brought a reevaluation of the possible misogyny of his account of the feminine as well as a critical engagement with his French nationalism in the context of colonialism Among the most prominent of these are critiques by Simon Critchley and Stella Sandford 28 However there have also been responses which argue that these critiques of Levinas are misplaced 29 Cultural influence editFor three decades Levinas gave short talks on Rashi a medieval French rabbi every Shabbat morning at the Jewish high school in Paris where he was the principal This tradition strongly influenced many generations of students 30 Jean Pierre and Luc Dardenne 31 renowned Belgian filmmakers have referred to Levinas as an important underpinning for their filmmaking ethics In his book Levinas and the Cinema of Redemption Time Ethics and the Feminine author Sam B Girgus argues that Levinas has dramatically affected films involving redemption 32 Magician Derren Brown A Book of Secrets 33 references Levinas Published works editA full bibliography of all Levinas s publications up until 1981 is found in Roger Burggraeve Emmanuel Levinas 1982 A list of works translated into English but not appearing in any collections may be found in Critchley S and Bernasconi R eds The Cambridge Companion to Levinas Cambridge UP 2002 pp 269 270 Books1929 Sur les Ideen de M E Husserl 1930 La theorie de l intuition dans la phenomenologie de Husserl The Theory of Intuition in Husserl s Phenomenology 1931 Der Begriff des Irrationalen als philosophisches Problem with Heinz Erich Eisenhuth 1931 Fribourg Husserl et la phenomenologie 1931 Les recherches sur la philosophie des mathematiques en Allemagne apercu general with W Dubislav 1931 Meditations cartesiennes Introduction a la phenomenologie with Edmund Husserl and Gabrielle Peiffer 1932 Martin Heidegger et l ontologie 1934 La presence totale with Louis Lavelle 1934 Phenomenologie 1934 Quelques reflexions sur la philosophie de l hitlerisme 1935 De l evasion 1935 La notion du temps with N Khersonsky 1935 L actualite de Maimonide 1935 L inspiration religieuse de l Alliance 1936 Allure du transcendental with Georges Beneze 1936 Esquisses d une energetique mentale with J Duflo 1936 Fraterniser sans se convertir 1936 Les aspects de l image visuelle with R Duret 1936 L esthetique francaise contemporaine with Valentin Feldman 1936 L individu dans le desequilibre moderne with R Munsch 1936 Valeur with Georges Beneze 1947 De l existence a l existant Existence and Existents 1948 Le Temps et l Autre Time and the Other 1949 En Decouvrant l Existence avec Husserl et Heidegger Discovering Existence with Husserl and Heidegger 1961 Totalite et Infini essai sur l exteriorite Totality and Infinity An Essay on Exteriority 1962 De l Evasion On Escape 1963 amp 1976 Difficult Freedom Essays on Judaism 1968 Quatre lectures talmudiques 1972 Humanisme de l autre homme Humanism of the Other 1974 Autrement qu etre ou au dela de l essence Otherwise than Being or Beyond Essence 1976 Sur Maurice Blanchot 1976 Noms propres Proper Names includes the essay Sans nom Nameless 1977 Du Sacre au saint cinq nouvelles lectures talmudiques 1980 Le Temps et l Autre 1982 L Au dela du verset lectures et discours talmudiques Beyond the Verse Talmudic Readings and Lectures 1982 Of God Who Comes to Mind 1982 Ethique et infini Ethics and Infinity Dialogues of Emmanuel Levinas and Philippe Nemo 1984 Transcendence et intelligibilite Transcendence and Intelligibility 1988 A l Heure des nations In the Time of the Nations 1991 Entre Nous 1995 Alterite et transcendence Alterity and Transcendence 1998 De l obliteration Entretien avec Francoise Armengaud a propos de l œuvre de Sosno On Obliteration Discussing Sacha Sosno trans Richard A Cohen in Art and Text winter 1989 30 41 2006 Œuvres Tome 1 Carnets de captivite suivi de Ecrits sur la captivite et Notes philosophiques diverses Posthumously published by Grasset amp FasquelleArticles in English A Language Familiar to Us Telos 44 Summer 1980 New York Telos Press See also editAlterity Authenticity Face to face Ethic of reciprocity Ecstasy in philosophy The Other Jewish philosophy Martin Buber Knud Ejler LogstrupReferences edit Andris Breitling Chris Bremmers Arthur Cools eds Debating Levinas Legacy Brill 2015 p 128 Bergo Bettina Emmanuel Levinas The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2015 Edition Edward N Zalta ed URL lt https plato stanford edu archives sum2015 entries levinas gt L anachronisme constitutif de l existence juive Nonfiction fr Premiere remarque sans doute a l humour decale l auteur de ces lignes a toujours entendu Emmanuel Levinas reclamer que l on ecrive son nom correctement c est a dire sans accent Larousse fr also employs the non accented form Another form of the surname is Levinas according to Levinas fr Universalis fr and Britannica com The pronunciation is the same whether the name is written Levinas or Levinas Moyn S 2005 Origins of the Other Emmanuel Levinas between Revelation and Ethics Ithaca New York Cornell University Press pp 23 24 ISBN 9780801473661 a b Shapiro Susan E Emmanuel Levinas 1906 1995 Holocaust Literature An Encyclopedia of Writers and Their Work Routledge Retrieved 14 October 2018 Bergo Bettina Emmanuel Levinas Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosopher Retrieved 14 October 2018 Ivry Benjamin 11 February 2010 A Loving Levinas on War Forward Retrieved 14 October 2018 Bergo Bettina 2019 Emmanuel Levinas in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2019 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2022 07 17 Alan D Schrift 2006 Twentieth Century French Philosophy Key Themes And Thinkers Blackwell Publishing p 159 Matanky Eugene D January 2018 The Temptation of Pedagogy Levinas s Educational Thought from His Philosophical and Confessional Writings Journal of Philosophy of Education doi 10 1111 1467 9752 12302 S2CID 149995642 Steinfels Peter 1995 12 27 Emmanuel Levinas 90 French Ethical Philosopher The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 07 17 E Levinas Totality and Infinity An Essay on Exteriority Alphonso Lingis transl Pittsburgh Duquesne University Press 1969 p 150 For recent reflections on the ethical political imports of Levinas s tradition and biography along with the examination of the notion of the face to face in relation to le visage while taking into account the Levantine Palestinian standpoint on conflict see Nader El Bizri Uneasy Meditations Following Levinas Studia Phaenomelnologica Vol 6 2006 pp 293 315 Emmanuel Levinas Otherwise than Being trans A Lingis Dordrecht Nijhoff 1974 p 91 Levinas Entre Nous trans M B Smith amp B Harshav New York Columbia 1998 p 74 Levinas The Trace of the Other in Deconstruction in Context ed M Taylor Chicago University of Chicago Press 1986 p 356 Levinas Difficult Freedom trans S Hand Baltimore Johns Hopkins 1990 p 8f A face does not function in proximity as a sign of a hidden God who would impose the neighbor on me Otherwise than Being p 94 Levinas Entre Nous p 57 E Levinas Totality and Infinity An Essay on Exteriority Alphonso Lingis transl Pittsburgh Duquesne University Press 1969 p 21 French Aborder Autrui c est donc recevoir d Autrui au dela de la capacite du Moi ce qui signifie exactement avoir l idee de l infini in Totalite et Infini Martinus Nijhoff La Haye 1991 p 22 Radical Philosophy print friendly Archived from the original on 2011 01 05 Retrieved 2011 06 19 de Beauvoir S 2009 The Second Sex New York Vintage p 6 ISBN 9780307277787 Bracha L Ettinger in conversation with Emmanuel Levinas 1991 1993 Time is the Breath of the Spirit Translated by C Ducker and J Simas with portrait photos of E L taken by Bracha L E Oxford MOMA 1993 Reprinted Hebrew in Iyyun Oct 1994 Reprinted Russian in Kabinet Prilozehnie nº 3 1994 Reprinted as Un monde sans moi French in Athanor nº 5 29 33 1994 Reprinted in Kaninet An Anthology Amsterdam Stedelijk Museum 1997 Emmanuel Levinas in conversation with Bracha L Ettinger 1991 1993 Le feminin est cette difference inouie Four one off Artist s Books 1994 Reprinted as Que dirait Eurydice Braka nº 8 1997 Reprinted as Que dirait Eurydice What Would Eurydice Say English French to coincide with Kabinet exhibition Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam Paris BLE Atelier 1997 Reprinted in Athena Philosophical Studies Vol 2 2006 Critchley S 2004 Five Problems in Levinas View of Politics and the Sketch of a Solution to Them Political Theory 32 2 172 185 V also Sandford S 2001 The Metaphysics of Love Gender and Transcendence in Levinas New York Bloomsbury Publishing New York Galetti Dino 2016 Of Levinas structure in address to his four others Continental Philosophy Review 49 4 509 532 doi 10 1007 s11007 015 9346 0 S2CID 254797828 Weekly Shabbat talks by Emmanuel Levinas Archived from the original on 2016 08 18 Retrieved 2013 10 30 Joseph Mai 2010 Jean Pierre and Luc Dardenne Contemporary Film Directors University of Illinois Press pp ix xvii ISBN 978 0 252 07711 1 Girgus Sam Conversations with Scholars of American Popular Culture Americana Americana The Journal of American Popular Culture Retrieved 2 July 2016 Brown Derren 2021 A Book of Secrets Finding Solace in a Stubborn World S l Bantam Press ISBN 978 1 78763 305 6 OCLC 1245343989 Further reading editAdriaan Theodoor Peperzak Robert Bernasconi amp Simon Critchley Emmanuel Levinas 1996 Astell Ann W and Jackson J A Levinas and Medieval Literature The Difficult Reading of English and Rabbinic Texts Pittsburgh PA Duquesne University press 2009 Simon Critchley and Robert Bernasconi ed The Cambridge Companion to Levinas 2002 Theodore De Boer The Rationality of Transcendence Studies in the Philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas Amsterdam J C Gieben 1997 Roger Burggraeve The Wisdom of Love in the Service of Love Emmanuel Levinas on Justice Peace and Human Rights trans Jeffrey Bloechl Milwaukee Marquette University Press 2002 Roger Burggraeve ed The awakening to the other a provocative dialogue with Emmanuel Levinas Leuven Peeters 2008 Cristian Ciocan Georges Hansel Levinas Concordance Dordrecht Springer 2005 Hanoch Ben Pazi Emmanuel Levinas Hermeneutics Ethics and Art Journal of Literature and Art Studies 5 2015 588 600 Richard A Cohen Out of Control Confrontations Between Spinoza and Levinas Albany State University of New York Press 2016 Richard A Cohen Levinasian Meditations Ethics Philosophy and Religion Pittsburgh Duquesne University Press 2010 Richard A Cohen Ethics Exegesis and Philosophy Interpretation After Levinas Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2001 Richard A Cohen Elevations The Height of the Good in Rosenzweig and Levinas Chicago Chicago University Press 1994 Joseph Cohen Alternances de la metaphysique Essais sur Emmanuel Levinas Paris Galilee 2009 in French Simon Critchley Emmanuel Levinas A Disparate Inventory in The Cambridge Companion to Levinas eds S Critchley amp R Bernasconi Cambridge amp New York Cambridge University Press 2002 Jutta Czapski Verwundbarkeit in der Ethik von Emmanuel Levinas Konigshausen u Neumann Wurzburg 2017 Derrida Jacques Adieu to Emmanuel Levinas trans Pascale Anne Brault and Michael Naas Stanford Stanford University Press 1999 Derrida Jacques At This Very Moment in This Work Here I Am trans Ruben Berezdivin and Peggy Kamuf in Psyche Inventions of the Other Vol 1 ed Peggy Kamuf and Elizabeth G Rottenberg Stanford Stanford University Press 2007 143 90 Bracha L Ettinger conversation with Emmanuel Levinas 1991 1993 Time is the Breath of the Spirit Oxford MOMA 1993 Bracha L Ettinger Que dirait Eurydice What Would Eurydice Say conversation with Emmanuel Levinas 1991 1993 Paris BLE Atelier 1997 Reprinted in Athena Philosophical Studies Vol 2 2006 Bernard Donals Michael Difficult Freedom Levinas Memory and Politics in Forgetful Memory Albany State University of New York Press 2009 145 160 Derrida Jacques Violence and Metaphysics An Essay on the Thought of Emmanuel Levinas in Writing and Difference trans Alan Bass Chicago and London University of Chicago Press 1978 79 153 Michael Eldred Worldsharing and Encounter Heidegger s ontology and Levinas ethics 2010 Michael Eskin Ethics and Dialogue in the Works of Levinas Bakhtin Mandel shtam and Celan Oxford Oxford University Press 2000 Alexandre Guilherme and W John Morgan Emmanuel Levinas 1906 1995 dialogue as an ethical demand of the other Chapter 5 in Philosophy Dialogue and Education Nine modern European philosophers Routledge London and New York pp 72 88 ISBN 978 1 138 83149 0 Herzog Annabel 2020 Levinas s Politics Justice Mercy Universality University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 5197 5 Mario Kopic The Beats of the Other Otkucaji drugog Belgrade Sluzbeni glasnik 2013 Nicole Note The impossible possibility of environmental ethics Emmanuel Levinas and the discrete Other in Philosophia E Journal of Philosophy and Culture 7 2014 Marie Anne Lescourt Emmanuel Levinas 2nd edition Flammarion 2006 in French Emmanuel Levinas Ethics and Infinity Conversations with Philippe Nemo trans R A Cohen Pittsburgh Duquesne University Press 1985 Emmanuel Levinas Signature in Difficult Freedom Essays on Judaism trans Sean Hand Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 1990 amp 1997 John Llewelyn Emmanuel Levinas The Genealogy of Ethics London Routledge 1995 John Llewelyn The HypoCritical Imagination Between Kant and Levinas London Routledge 2000 John Llewelyn Appositions of Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas Bloomington Indiana University Press 2002 Paul Marcus Being for the Other Emmanuel Levinas Ethical Living and Psychoanalysis Milwaukee WI Marquette University Press 2008 Paul Marcus In Search of the Good Life Emmanuel Levinas Psychoanalysis and the Art of Living London Karnac Books 2010 Sean Hand Emmanuel Levinas London Routledge 2009 Benda Hofmeyr ed Radical passivity rethinking ethical agency in Levinas Dordrecht Springer 2009 Diane Perpich The ethics of Emmanuel Levinas Stanford CA Stanford University Press 2008 Fred Poche Penser avec Arendt et Levinas Du mal politique au respect de l autre Chronique Sociale Lyon en co edition avec EVO Bruxelles et Tricorne Geneve 1998 3e edition 2009 Jadranka Skorin Kapov The Aesthetics of Desire and Surprise Phenomenology and Speculation Lanham Maryland Lexington Books 2015 Tanja Staehler Plato and Levinas the ambiguous out side of ethics London Routledge 2010 i e 2009 Toploski Anya 2015 Arendt Levinas and politics of relationality Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield Wehrs Donald R Levinas and Twentieth Century Literature Ethics and the Reconstruction of Subjectivity Newark University of Delaware Press 2013 ISBN 3826061578 Herzog Annabel 2020 Levinas s politics justice mercy universality Philadelphia University of PennsylvaniaExternal links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Emmanuel Levinas Institute for Levinassian Studies Complete primary and secondary bibliography a search engine for Levinas s texts and more The Levinas Online Bibliography Prof dr Joachim Duyndam editor in chief levinas nl Hosted by the University of Humanistics Utrecht the Netherlands Annual Levinas Philosophy Summer Seminar Director Richard A Cohen 1 Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Emmanuel Levinas Levinas and Anarchism Mitchell Cowen Verter https waste org roadrunner writing Levinas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emmanuel Levinas amp oldid 1182954920, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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