ABSTRACT

Emmanuel Levinas is one of the key philosophers in the post-Heideggerian field and an increasingly central presence in contemporary debates about identity and responsibility. His work spans and encapsulates the major philosophical and ethical concerns of the twentieth century, combining the insights of a basic phenomenological training with the demands of a Jewish culture and its basis in the endless exegesis of Talmudic reading. His concerns and subjects are wide: they include the Other, the body, infinity, women, Jewish-Christian relations, Zionism and the impulses and limits of philosophical language itself.

This collection explicates Levinas's major contribution to these debates, namely the idea of the primacy of ethics over ontology or epistemology. It investigates how, in the wake of a post-structuralist orthodoxy, scholars and practitioners in such fields as literary theory, cultural studies, feminism and psychoanalysis are turning to Levinas's work to articulate a rediscovered concern with the ethical dimension of their discipline. Stressing the largely assumed but unexplored Jewish dimension of Levinas's work, this book is an important contribution to the field of Jewish studies and philosophy.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter |14 pages

The Feminine, Otherness, Dwelling

Feminist Perspectives on Levinas

chapter |23 pages

On Substitution

chapter |17 pages

Levinas and Freud

Taltnudic Inflections in Ethics and Psychoanalysis

chapter |27 pages

Shadowing Ethics

Levinas's View of Art and Aesthetics

chapter |16 pages

‘Let's Leave God Out of This’

Maurice Blanchot's Reading of Totality and Infinity

chapter |14 pages

Infinition and Apophansis

Reverberations of Spinoza in Levinas

chapter |19 pages

A Supreme Heteronomy?

Arche and Topology in Difficult Freedom

chapter |20 pages

On Time and Salvation

The Eschatology of Emmanuel Levinas