Image for Proper Names

Proper Names

Part of the Meridian: Crossing Aesthetics series
See all formats and editions

Combining elements from Heidegger’s philosophy of “being-in-the-world” and the tradition of Jewish theology, Levinas has evolved a new type of ethics based on a concept of “the Other” in two different but complementary aspects.

He describes his encounters with those philosophers and literary authors (most of them his contemporaries) whose writings have most significantly contributed to the construction of his own philosophy of “Otherness”: Agnon, Buber, Celan, Delhomme, Derrida, Jabès, Kierkegaard, Lacroix, Laporte, Picard, Proust, Van Breda, Wahl, and, most notably, Blanchot. At the same time, Levinas’s own texts are inscriptions and documents of those encounters with “Others” around which his philosophy is turning.

Thus the texts simultaneously convey an immediate experience of how his intellectual position emerged and how it is put into practice.

A third potential function of the book is that it unfolds the network of references and persons in philosophical debates since Kierkegaard.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£32.00 Save 20.00%
RRP £40.00
Product Details
Stanford University Press
0804723516 / 9780804723510
Hardback
194
01/02/1997
United States
208 pages