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The Words of Selves - Identification, Solidarity, Irony (Paperback)
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The Words of Selves - Identification, Solidarity, Irony (Paperback)
Series: Atopia: Philosophy, Political Theory, Aesthetics
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Marlene Dietrich had the last line in Orson Welles's "A Touch of
Evil" "What does it matter what you say about other people?" The
author ponders the question: What does it matter what you say about
yourself? She wonders why the requirement "to be" a
something-or-other should be so hard to satisfy in a manner that
rings true in the ears of its own subject. She decides that some
hesitations and awkwardness in inhabiting many categories of the
person--including those celebrated by what is sometimes termed
identity politics--need not evidence either psychological weakness
or political lack of nerve.
Neither an "identity" nor a "nonidentity" can quite convince. But
if this discomfort inhering in self-characterization needs to be
fully admitted and registered--as something that is simultaneously
linguistic and affective--it can also be cheerfully tolerated. Here
language is not treated as a guileful thing that leads its speakers
astray. Though the business of being called something, and of being
positioned by that calling, is often an unhappy affair, irony can
offer effective therapy. Even if uncertain and volatile
categorizations do trouble the politics that they also shape, they
hardly weaken the empathetic solidarity that is distinct from
identification. The verbal irony of self-presentation can be
politically helpful. Questioning the received diction of the self
cannot be dismissed merely as a luxury of those in secure
positions, but instead can move toward a conception of a
constructive nonidentity.
This extended meditation on the language of the self within
contemporary social politics also considers the lyrical "I" and
linguistic emotionality, the historical status of irony, and the
possibilities of a nonidentitarian solidarity that is
unapologetically alert to the affect of language.
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