Otherwise than Hospitality: A Disputation on the Relation of Ethics to Law and Politics |
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Authors: | Gilbert Leung Matthew Stone |
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Affiliation: | (1) The School of Law, Birkbeck, University of London, Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HX, UK;(2) London Metropolitan University, 16 Goulston Street, London, E1 7TP, UK |
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Abstract: | At a time of unprecedented migration and social displacement, following a century ravaged by war and hegemonic shift, the question of hospitality presents itself with unparalleled urgency. Taking his cue from Immanuel Kant’s cosmopolitics, Jacques Derrida addressed this question by deliberating on the nature of the political obligation to the other person. Invoking the work of Emmanuel Levinas, this demand is first of all ethical, and unconditional. But Derrida was also acutely aware of the residual violence of the hospitable gesture, which always takes place in a scene of power. The resultant aporias at the heart of hospitality provoked debate between the two authors at the 2007 Critical Legal Conference, and this paper seeks to elucidate and elaborate on this encounter. At stake are the matters of the potential political forms of hospitality, whether it should always been striven for and, ultimately, how one can conceptually reconcile its ethics with its violence. |
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Keywords: | Derrida Levinas Hospitality Politics Ethics |
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