Publication: ¿Espacio de aparición sin dimensión corporal? Identidad y violencia en H. Arendt
Authors
Varela-Manograsso, Agustina
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Publisher
Universidad de Murcia. Servicio de Publicaciones
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.6018/daimon/270251
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
Este artículo analiza la temática del
cuerpo humano en la obra de Hannah Arendt,
desde la vinculación a su comprensión de la violencia y la identidad individual. Si, por un lado,
la filósofa construye una teoría de “lo político”
en términos de espacio de aparición y revelación
de la identidad personal, el cuerpo, en principio, parece quedar relegado al ámbito privado
que ella considera como un espacio de ocultamiento, ligado a la compulsión de la necesidad
y la(s) violencia(s) prepolítica(s). Tomando en
consideración las tensiones que esta distinción
dicotómica plantea, exploraré posibles vías que
su misma obra ofrece para trascenderlas y que
permiten repensar sus aportaciones a los estudios
contemporáneos sobre el cuerpo, así como sus
conexiones con la identidad y la violencia.
This paper analyzes the theme of the human body in Hannah Arendt ́s work in its relation to her understanding of violence and individual identity. If, on the one hand, the philosopher builds her theory of “the political” as a space of appearance and disclosure of personal identity, on the other hand, the body seems to be relegated to the private sphere, which is considered as a space of concealment and linked to the compulsion of necessity and prepolitical violence(s). Taking into account the tensions that emerge in this dichotomic distinction, I will explore possible ways that her work gives us to go beyond them and that allows us to rethink Arendtean contributions to contemporary studies of the body, as well as its connections with identity and violence.
This paper analyzes the theme of the human body in Hannah Arendt ́s work in its relation to her understanding of violence and individual identity. If, on the one hand, the philosopher builds her theory of “the political” as a space of appearance and disclosure of personal identity, on the other hand, the body seems to be relegated to the private sphere, which is considered as a space of concealment and linked to the compulsion of necessity and prepolitical violence(s). Taking into account the tensions that emerge in this dichotomic distinction, I will explore possible ways that her work gives us to go beyond them and that allows us to rethink Arendtean contributions to contemporary studies of the body, as well as its connections with identity and violence.
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Citation
Daimon. Revista Internacional de Filosofía, 2016, Suplemento 5, pp. 785-794
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