The Event of the Good: Reading Levinas in a Levinasian Way

Centers on the ethics of Emmanuel Levinas, aiming to understand this important thinker on his own terms.

To read Levinas in a Levinasian way means to understand this important thinker on his own terms, thinking "ethics as first philosophy," without reducing his role to that of a contributor to some other discourse, such as phenomenology, deconstruction, or religious traditions other than his own. This volume offers a variety of interventions into how the priority of the ethical-as formulated by Emmanuel Levinas and seconded by Richard A. Cohen, one of his preeminent interpreters-reorients philosophy to its own questioning-indeed, to its very sense of itself as meaningful. In the decades since Levinas first emerged as a profound and critical voice, many have used his thought to illuminate a broad range of philosophical questions. Often this has occurred in ways that have deemphasized or altered what is arguably Levinas's most radical gesture: reframing philosophy, indeed reframing the meaning of meaning, via an ethical turn. To this end, the essays in this volume, drawing especially on Cohen's reading of Levinas, offer insights into how appropriations and assessments of his philosophy might become more in line with the urgency and full meaning of his notion of the ethical. Whether discussing ethics, aesthetics, politics, or Jewish thought, when taken together, they enhance our comprehension of ethics and Levinas's philosophy of responsibility.

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The Event of the Good: Reading Levinas in a Levinasian Way

Centers on the ethics of Emmanuel Levinas, aiming to understand this important thinker on his own terms.

To read Levinas in a Levinasian way means to understand this important thinker on his own terms, thinking "ethics as first philosophy," without reducing his role to that of a contributor to some other discourse, such as phenomenology, deconstruction, or religious traditions other than his own. This volume offers a variety of interventions into how the priority of the ethical-as formulated by Emmanuel Levinas and seconded by Richard A. Cohen, one of his preeminent interpreters-reorients philosophy to its own questioning-indeed, to its very sense of itself as meaningful. In the decades since Levinas first emerged as a profound and critical voice, many have used his thought to illuminate a broad range of philosophical questions. Often this has occurred in ways that have deemphasized or altered what is arguably Levinas's most radical gesture: reframing philosophy, indeed reframing the meaning of meaning, via an ethical turn. To this end, the essays in this volume, drawing especially on Cohen's reading of Levinas, offer insights into how appropriations and assessments of his philosophy might become more in line with the urgency and full meaning of his notion of the ethical. Whether discussing ethics, aesthetics, politics, or Jewish thought, when taken together, they enhance our comprehension of ethics and Levinas's philosophy of responsibility.

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The Event of the Good: Reading Levinas in a Levinasian Way

The Event of the Good: Reading Levinas in a Levinasian Way

The Event of the Good: Reading Levinas in a Levinasian Way

The Event of the Good: Reading Levinas in a Levinasian Way

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Overview

Centers on the ethics of Emmanuel Levinas, aiming to understand this important thinker on his own terms.

To read Levinas in a Levinasian way means to understand this important thinker on his own terms, thinking "ethics as first philosophy," without reducing his role to that of a contributor to some other discourse, such as phenomenology, deconstruction, or religious traditions other than his own. This volume offers a variety of interventions into how the priority of the ethical-as formulated by Emmanuel Levinas and seconded by Richard A. Cohen, one of his preeminent interpreters-reorients philosophy to its own questioning-indeed, to its very sense of itself as meaningful. In the decades since Levinas first emerged as a profound and critical voice, many have used his thought to illuminate a broad range of philosophical questions. Often this has occurred in ways that have deemphasized or altered what is arguably Levinas's most radical gesture: reframing philosophy, indeed reframing the meaning of meaning, via an ethical turn. To this end, the essays in this volume, drawing especially on Cohen's reading of Levinas, offer insights into how appropriations and assessments of his philosophy might become more in line with the urgency and full meaning of his notion of the ethical. Whether discussing ethics, aesthetics, politics, or Jewish thought, when taken together, they enhance our comprehension of ethics and Levinas's philosophy of responsibility.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798855802696
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 07/01/2025
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 413
File size: 914 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Christopher Buckman is Lecturer in Philosophy at Indiana University Kokomo. Melissa Bradley teaches history at the secondary school level in Charlotte, North Carolina. Jack Marsh teaches Bible Studies at the Inter-American School, Quetzaltenango, Guatemala. James McLachlan is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy and Religion at Western Carolina University.


Jack Marsh received his PhD in philosophy from Binghamton University, State University of New York, and is a PhD candidate in theology at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. He is the coeditor (with Matthew Burch and Irene McMullin) of Normativity, Meaning, and the Promise of Phenomenology.

Table of Contents

Introduction. The Event of the Good
James M. McLachlan

Path I. Reading Levinas

1. Reading Levinas in a Levinasian Way
Jean-Michel Salanskis

2. Levinas in North America Today: Richard A. Cohen's Contributions
Jack Marsh and Christopher L. Southland

3. Book Review: Ethics, Exegesis and Philosophy: Interpretation after Levinas
Robert Gibbs

4. Cohenfest: Did Rich Cohen Eat Al Lingis's Octopus?
Don Ihde

5. Cohen as Philosopher
Marie-Anne Lescourret

6. Book Review: Elevations
Edith Wyschogrod

Path II. Ethical Exegesis

7. Post-Levinasian Sketch of Ambivalent Relations: Between Art, Criticism, and Ethics
Rossitsa Varadinova Borkowski

8. Rhythm and Sense in the Philosophy of Levinas
Masato Goda

9. After the End of Philosophy: Ethical Exegesis and Ethical Body
Irina Poleshchuk

10. Senseless Kindness, the Church, and the Betrayal of Mercy in Don Quixote
Steven Shankman

11. Art of the Uncanny: Seeing with Cohen and Levinas
Jolanta Saldukaitytė

Path III. Ontological Contests

12. Review: Levinas's Reading of Spinoza
Jacques J. Rozenberg

13. Imagine Freedom
Brunella Antomarini

14. Sovereignty in Levinas and Hobbes
Christopher Buckman

15. On Ethics: Levinas and Badiou in the Post-Postmodern Condition
Chung-Hsiung Lai

16. On the Importance of Importance: Emmanuel Levinas on the First Challenge to Jewish Thought Today
Richard Sugarman

17. Levinas and the Ethics of Sacrifice: Reading "Dying For..." Adverbially
Sandor Goodhart

Path IV. Ethical Religion

18. The Small Goodness Never Wins, But Is Never Defeated: On How Emmanuel Levinas Finds Inspirtation in Vasily Grossman for His Vision of a Humane Society
Roger Burggraeve

19. Sympathy for the Devil: On Richard Cohen's Levinasian Medications on Sartre and Theology
James M. McLachlan

20. Incarnate Religion
Mark K. Spencer

21. The Ethical Event: A Phenomenology of Chesed for Asylum-seeking Refugees
Devorah Wainer

Conclusion: Cohen Responds Response to Contributors
Richard A. Cohen

List of Contributors
Index

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