Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

The Language of Ethical Encounter: Levinas, Otherness, and Contemporary Poetry

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dc.contributor Political Science
dc.contributor Gardner, Thomas M.
dc.contributor Kalyan, Rohan
dc.contributor Precoda, Karl R.
dc.contributor Cook, Samuel R.
dc.creator Schwartz, Melissa Rachel
dc.date 2017-07-19T08:02:23Z
dc.date 2017-07-19T08:02:23Z
dc.date 2017-07-18
dc.date.accessioned 2023-03-01T08:10:19Z
dc.date.available 2023-03-01T08:10:19Z
dc.identifier vt_gsexam:12511
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10919/78359
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/276599
dc.description According to philosopher, Emmanuel Levinas, alterity can exist only in its infinite and fluid nature in which the aspects of it that exceed the human ability to fully understand it remain unthematized in language. Levinas sees the encounter between self and other as the moment that instigates ethical responsibility, a moment so vital to avoiding mastering what is external to oneself that it should replace Western philosophy’s traditional emphasis on being as philosophy’s basis, or “First Philosophy.” Levinas’s conceptualization of language as a fluid, non-mastering saying, which one must continually re-enliven against a congealing and mastering said, is at the heart of his ethical project of relating to the other of alterity with ethical responsibility, or proximity. The imaginative poetic language that some contemporary poetry enacts, resonates with Levinas’s ethical motivations and methods for responding to alterity. The following project investigates facets of this question in relation to Levinas: how do the contemporary poets Peter Blue Cloud, Jorie Graham, Joy Harjo, and Robert Hass use poetic language uniquely to engage with alterity in an ethical way, thus allowing it to retain its mystery and infinite nature? I argue that by keeping language alive in a way similar to a Levinasian saying, which avoids mastering otherness by attending to its uniqueness and imaginatively engaging with it, they enact an ethical response to alterity. As a way of unpacking these ideas, this inquiry will investigate the compelling, if unsettled, convergence in the work of Levinas and that of Blue Cloud, Graham, Harjo, and Hass by unfolding a number of Levinasian-informed close readings of major poems by these writers as foregrounding various forms of Levinasian saying.
dc.description Ph. D.
dc.format ETD
dc.format application/pdf
dc.publisher Virginia Tech
dc.rights In Copyright
dc.rights http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
dc.subject alterity
dc.subject contemporary poetry
dc.subject Emmanuel Levinas
dc.subject Peter Blue Cloud
dc.subject Jorie Graham
dc.subject Joy Harjo
dc.subject Robert Hass
dc.subject ethical encounter
dc.subject re-enlivening language
dc.subject saying
dc.subject said
dc.subject "First Philosophy"
dc.subject Indigeneity
dc.subject voice
dc.subject music
dc.title The Language of Ethical Encounter: Levinas, Otherness, and Contemporary Poetry
dc.type Dissertation


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