Levinas's Rhetorical Demand: The Unending Obligation of Communication Ethics

Levinas's Rhetorical Demand: The Unending Obligation of Communication Ethics

Levinas's Rhetorical Demand: The Unending Obligation of Communication Ethics

Levinas's Rhetorical Demand: The Unending Obligation of Communication Ethics

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Overview

Distinguished Book Award, Philosophy of Communication Division, National Communication Association, 2017

Top Book Award, Communication Ethics Division, National Communication Association, 2017

Philosopher Emmanuel Levinas’s ethics as first philosophy explicates a human obligation and responsibility to and for the Other that is an unending and imperfect commitment. In Levinas’s Rhetorical Demand: The Unending Obligation of Communication Ethics, Ronald C. Arnett underscores the profundity of Levinas’s insights for communication ethics.

Arnett outlines communication ethics as a primordial call of responsibility central to Levinas’s writing and mission, analyzing it through a Levinasian lens with examination of social artifacts ranging from the Heidegger-Cassirer debate to Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World story concerning illicit possession of information.

Levinas’s Rhetorical Demand offers an account of Levinas’s project and the pragmatic implications of attending to a call of responsibility to and for the Other. This book yields a rich and nuanced understanding of Levinas’s work, revealing the practical importance of his insights, and including a discussion of related theorists and thinkers.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780809335701
Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press
Publication date: 03/15/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 308
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Ronald C. Arnett is the chair of and a professor in the Department of Communication & Rhetorical Studies at Duquesne University and the Patricia Doherty Yoder and Ronald Wolfe Endowed Chair in Communication Ethics. He is the author or coauthor of ten books, including Communication Ethics in Dark Times: Hannah Arendt’s Rhetoric of Warning and Hope, which received the 2013 Top Book Award from the Communication Ethics Division of the National Communication Association, and Dialogic Confession: Bonhoeffer’s Rhetoric of Responsibility, which received the 2006 Everett Lee Hunt Award from the Eastern Communication Association.
 

Table of Contents

Foreword
Algis Mickunas
 
Acknowledgments
 
Introduction: Emmanuel Levinas and
Communication Ethics—Origins and Traces
1. Primordial Gesture: The Difficult Freedom of
Communication Ethics
2. Footprints and Echoes: Emmanuel Levinas
3. The Commencement of Responsibility: The
Enigma of the Face
4. Proper Names: Saying, Said, and the Trace
5. The Impersonal and the Sacred: Igniting Personal
Responsibility
6. Imperfection: Ethics Disrupted by Justice—
The Name of the Rose
7. Possession and Burden: Otherwise Than
Murdoch’s Information Acquisition
8. The Ethical Parvenu: Unremitting
Accountability
9. Heidegger’s Rectorate Address: Being as Mistaken
Direction
10. Adieu to Levinas: The Unending Rhetoric of the
Face
 
Notes
Bibliography
Index
 
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