121.
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Richard I. Sugarman
Through the Lens of Levinas:
Preliminary Reflections on Holiness (Leviticus 19)
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122.
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Abi Doukhan
Beyond Haverut:
Toward an Interfaith Hermeneutics
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123.
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Steven Shankman
From Solitude to Maternity:
Levinas and Shakespeare
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124.
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Seán Hand
Salvation through Literature:
Levinas’s Carnets de captivité
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125.
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Guy-Félix Duportail, Sharon Lynn Joyce
Levinas and Lacan:
Faced with the Eclipse of Christianity
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126.
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Olga Kuminova
“Oral Discourse Is the Plenitude of Discourse”:
Emmanuel Levinas’s Philosophy of Language Applied to Reading
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127.
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Alan Udoff
Levinas and the Question of Cardiology
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128.
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Jeffrey Bloechl
Introduction
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129.
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Andrew Kelley
Jankélévitch and Levinas on the “Wholly Other”
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130.
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Martin Gak
Heidegger’s Ethics and Levinas’s Ontology: Phenomenology of Prereflective Normativity
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131.
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Drew M. Dalton
Phenomenology and the Infinite: Levinas, Husserl, and the Fragility of the Finite
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132.
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Eric R. Severson
The Missing Sequel: Levinas and Heidegger’s Unfinished Project
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133.
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Nicole Note
The Self as Inseparable Separation: Deepening the Starting Position for Our Relation with the Environment
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134.
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James Mensch
Eros and Justice: The Erotic Origin of Society
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135.
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Seán Hand
Speech and Silence: Levinas and the Postwar Refounding of Ethics
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136.
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Jeffrey Hanson
Woman as First among Equals: A Subversive Reading of Domesticity in Totality and Infinity
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137.
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Marc A. Cohen
Transcendence and Salvation in Levinas’s Time and the Other and Totality and Infinity
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138.
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Rudi Visker
The Inhuman Core of Human Dignity: Levinas and Beyond
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139.
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Emmanuel Levinas, Mendel Kranz, Denis Poizat
We Lack a Culture: Reflections on Hebrew Education
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rights & permissions
he following is an essay by Emmanuel Levinas, newly translated by Mendel Kranz, concerning Jewish culture and education, Hebrew studies, and Zionism. The essay was first published in 1954 in the United States by The Alliance Review, a small journal affiliated with the Alliance israélite universelle, and has since been almost entirely forgotten. In 2011–2012, it was republished in French by Denis Poizat based on the original draft found in the Alliance archives. Preceding Levinas’s essay is a preface by Kranz that situates it at the intersection of Levinas’s postwar project for Judaism, his relation to Zionism, and the colonial backdrop of the ENIO—three issues that are rarely considered together in Levinas scholarship. Poizat also provides some commentary on the question of education and the similarities between this and other essays by Levinas.
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Nicolas de Warren
Expiation without Blood: An Essay on Substitution and the Trauma of Goodness in Levinas
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The aim of this article is to develop a novel interpretation of the significance of trauma and substitution in Levinas’s ethical thinking in light of the problem of temporality, language, and the question of what it means to be a created being. With an emphasis on Levinas’s style of writing, the intersections of Derrida, Husserl, and Freud in his thinking, and the “two-times” of traumatic temporality, the argument of this article seeks to understand how responsibility for the other is crystallized through the trauma of the Goodness and expiation for the impossibility of enduring its unforgiving demand.
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