Agua-Biographies: Derrida on Water, Ontopology, and Refugees

Journal of Speculative Philosophy 34 (3):353-366 (2020)
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Abstract

Western metaphysics has long privileged solidity, presence, fixity, and substance, over the fluid, moving, intangible, and diffuse, that is, over water.1 Emmanuel Levinas noted that Western philosophy seems so incapable of thinking the liquid, moving, and dispersed, that even when we try, we only reduce the elemental to a multiplicity of solids.2 The problem, he concludes, is that water and other elements are "content without form," denying our metaphysical preferences for solidity and fixed shape, even as they are not mere absence or nothingness.3 And still the elemental is our home, our condition of being.Luce Irigaray further notes a "historical lag in...

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Rebekah Sinclair
University of Oregon

References found in this work

The Elemental Past.Ted Toadvine - 2014 - Research in Phenomenology 44 (2):262-279.
Levinas and the elemental.John Sallis - 1998 - Research in Phenomenology 28 (1):152-159.
An Ethical Sinngebung Respectful of the Non-Human.Clarence W. Joldersma - 2013 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 17 (2):224-245.

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