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Politics
and Friendship
A Discussion with Jacques Derrida
Centre for Modern French Thought, University of Sussex, 1 December
1997
Geoffrey
Bennington:
It's a great
pleasure and honour for me to welcome Jacques Derrida on behalf
of the University of Sussex, and more especially on behalf of the
Centre for Modern French Thought. This is the second time in the
last five years or so that Jacques Derrida has visited us, and I
know from the many reactions I've had how lucky people feel about
that. I'm not going to make a speech of any sort about who Jacques
Derrida is or what claims he might have on our interest; I take
your presence here in such numbers to be sufficient grounds for
thinking that you're clear enough about that anyway, so I'll just
make some brief remarks to leave us much time as possible for us
to listen to Jacques Derrida.
The format
that we've agreed for the session is as follows: I will speak for
five minutes or so and suggest three or four preliminary areas of
discussion to which Jacques Derrida will respond, under this general
topic of politics and friendship, which as many of you will know
gives its title to a book recently published in English (it was
published in French in 1994), and I expect many of you will have
read it. So, I'll initially suggest three or four lines of inquiry
to give an opportunity for Jacques Derrida to sketch out some of
the main lines of argument in the book and after his responses to
that invitation he will be happy to take questions from you. I would
like to suggest for the earlier part of the session, and we are
severely limited by time, that we try to remain at least broadly
within the ambit of these initial themes that come out of the book.
I've got
four lines of questioning which are simple, and simply openings
to discussion on the basis of the book Politics of Friendship. The
first one is the question: 'Why politics?'. You've obviously been
the object of a demand for politics or a demand for a politics for
years from many sides, and it might be thought that this book is
finally answering that demand. So, are you now elaborating, some
people would say finally elaborating, a political theory or a deconstructive
politics? Second question, or line of questioning, equally straightforward:
'Why friendship?' The book is called Politics of Friendship, and
it might seem strange to approach political arguments through the
apparently marginal concept of friendship rather than through more
obvious concepts such as sovereignty, power, legitimacy, representation,
and so on. In other words, what has friendship got to do with politics,
and what has politics got to do with friendship? Third question
or line of questioning is about a word or a concept that appears
insistently throughout the book, and that's the word or concept
democracy - and more specifically in the formulation, which is repeated
throughout the book, of a 'democracy to come'.
I wonder
if you could tell us something about that and what it might mean.
And the last line of questioning, which is really an opening onto
work that you have done since the publication of this book in French
in 1994, is based on the observation that that more recent work
has tended to move the, or seems to have moved the centre of gravity
of this type of political or quasi- political investigation towards
the concept of hospitality. You have published a lot of work in
recent years around the concept of hospitality: I wonder if you
might be able to give us some sense of what that involves, perhaps
around the situation here today where we're offering you something
like hopitality, we're welcoming you more or less hospitably into
our more or less domestic space which is itself enclosed in a national
or cultural space which hasn't always been, and still often isn't,
very hospitable to your work. So, four questions: 1) Why politics?;
2) Why friendship?; 3) What about democracy?; 4) What about hospitality?
Jacques
Derrida:
I have thirty
minutes today. Thank you, I'm very grateful and I'm pleased and
honoured to be back here, and especially to be associated with this
new Centre for Modern French Thought which I think, and I'm not
the only one to think that, is a very important and necessary initiative.
We all look forward to its success and we'll try to do our best
to participate in it.
Now, as
you can imagine these questions are all the more difficult because
I have to really improvise in English in a few minutes a straightforward
response, and not knowing if some of you have read or not the texts
that are more accurate and explicit than what I could say here.
So, I'll try to adjust a minimal and straightforward response to
Geoff's questions.
1. Why Politics?
It is true
that, from the beginning, so to speak, when I started writing and
teaching, many people, friendly and unfriendly, reproached me with
not directly addressing political questions. I think that it was
at the same time both an unfair and fair objection. Unfair because
I think everything I did was directly or indirectly connected with
political questions, and I could show this in a very precise manner.
But it is true and it is a fair objection to the extent that this
relation to politics was very indirect and very elliptical, and
waiting for a moment in the development of my work when the level
I wanted to reach in this re-elaboration of the political question
could be reached; and this accounts for the delay, for the implicit
fashion I addressed this question at the beginning.
Now, to
take literally Geoff's question which I have in front of me: I don't
think that even now I am answering the demand for politics, that
is to propose something which could fit into what one calls in our
tradition, politics. What I am trying to do now, especially in the
books Spectres of Marx or in the Politics of Friendship, is to try
to understand or to re- think, I'm not the only one doing that of
course, but to try with others to re-think what the political is,
what is involved precisely in the dissemination of the political
field. So, I'm not proposing a new political content within the
old frame but trying to re-define, or to think differently, what
is involved in the political as such, and for the very same reason
I don't propose a political theory because what I'm saying, specifically
on friendship and hospitality, on what friendship is and what hospitality
is, exceeds, precisely, knowledge. In its extreme and more essential
form it has to do with something which cannot become a theoreme,
it is something which simply has to be known, there is some type
of experience, of political experience in friendship and hospitality
which cannot be simply the object of a theory. Which is not an anti-theoretical
move; I think political theory is necessary, but I try to articulate
this necessity of a political theory with something in politics
or in friendship, in hospitality, which cannot, for structural reasons,
become the object of knowledge, of a theory, of a theoreme.
So, it's
not a political theory - part of what I'm trying to say in these
texts is not part of a theory that would be included in the field
known as politology or political theory, and it's not a deconstructive
politics either. I don't think that there is such a thing as a deconstructive
politics, if by the name 'politics' we mean a programme, an agenda,
or even the name of a regime. We will see even the word democracy,
which I try to locate, is not simply the name of a political regime
or nation-state organisation. So, I don't think that what I'm engaged
in, what I have been trying to do in a very complicated way for
a long time, can be called political theory or deconstructive politics,
but I think that given - or supposing that they are given - the
premises of what I have been doing before these last books, the
time has come for me to say something more about politics. Not simply
a political theory, a deconstructive politics, but to say something
about politics is again not simply a speculative gesture: it's a
concrete and personal commitment, and this performative commitment
is part of what I'm writing. Spectres of Marx, before being a text
about Marx's theory, Marx's heritage, is, let's say, a personal
commitment at a certain moment, in a certain form, in a singular
fashion.
2. Why friendship?
Why then
- the second question - this privilege granted, within this field
that I have just described, to friendship? Geoff says, rightly so,
that friendship has been an apparently marginal concept within the
field of politics and of political philosophy for centuries. It
is true and not so true - it is marginal in the usual taxonomies
of political concepts. You can't find the concept of friendship
there; usually it's left to ethics or psychology or morals, but
it's not considered a political concept as government, or sovereignty,
or citizenship may be considered political. But as soon as you read
the canonical texts in political theory starting with Plato or Aristotle
you discover that friendship plays an organising role in the definition
of justice, of democracy even. I quote in the Politics of Friendship
many texts of Plato and Aristotle in which friendship is defined
as the essential virtue, for instance.
Let me make
just a single scholarly reference to Aristotle, who says that there
are three types of friendship. Firstly, the higher friendship is
based on virtue and it has nothing to do with politics. It is a
friendship between two virtuous men. Secondly, the friendship grounded
on utility and usefulness, and this is political friendship. Third,
and on the lower level, friendship grounded on pleasure - looking
for pleasure among young people, Aristotle says. So you see that
we have a concept of friendship which is and is not political. The
political friendship is one kind of friendship. One of the questions
might be, to put it in a very everyday fashion, should we select
our friends from among our political allies, should we politically
agree with a friend to enter into friendship, is it necessary, are
politics and friendship homogeneous? Could we have a friend who
is politically an enemy and vice versa, and so forth? In Aristotle
again you have this idea that the quest for justice has nothing
to do with politics, you have to go beyond or sometimes betray friendship
in the name of justice. So, there are a number of problems in which
you see love - not love, but philia or friendship playing an organising
role in the definition of the political experience.
Then what
I try to do - I'm looking at my watch - is to follow the thread
of the paradoxes between friendship and politics, to look for a
prevailing canonical model of friendship which in our culture form
the Greeks to now, in Greek culture, in Roman culture, in Jewish,
Christian and Islamic culture, has been dominant, has been prevailing
and hegemonic. What are the features of this prevailing hegemonic
concept which could be politically meaningful and politically significant?
I don't want to homogenise of course - this concept is not a single
homogeneous concept, it is not exactly the same in Greece, in the
Middle Ages, and today, but there are some permanent features, and
it is this set of permanent features that I try to discover, to
analyse, to formalise from a political point of view.
So, what
are they? To be very, very, very rough: first of all the model of
this friendship is a friendship between two young men, mortals,
who have a contract according to which one will survive the other,
one will be the heir of the other, and they will agree politically
- I give a number of examples of this. Which excludes first of all
friendship between a man and a woman, or between women, so women
are totally excluded from this model of friendship: woman as the
friend of a man or women as friends between themselves. Then the
figure of the brother, of fraternity, is also at the centre of this
canonical model. I show this of course through a number of texts
and examples. Brotherhood, fraternity, is the figure of this canonical
friendship. Of course this concept of brotherhood has a number of
cultural and historical premises. It comes from Greece, but it also
comes from the Christian model in which brotherhood or fraternity
is essential. Men are all brothers because they are sons of God,
and you can find the ethics of this concept in even an apparently
secular concept of friendship and politics. In the French Revolution
this is the foundation of the Declaration of the Rights of Man.
Fraternity was the object of a terrible debate in France at the
time, and fraternity appears, between equality and liberty, as one
of the foundations of the republic. So, you have to deal here with
what I would call a phallocentric or phallogocentric concept of
friendship. Which doesn't of course mean to me that the hegemony
of this concept was so powerful that what it excluded was effectively
totally excluded. It doesn't mean that a woman couldn't have the
experience of friendship with a man or with another woman. It means
simply that within this culture, this society, by which this prevalent
canon was considered legitimate, accredited, then there was no voice,
no discourse, no possibility of acknowledging these excluded possibilities.
So, all
the concepts which are fundamental in politics - I just mentioned
those which Geoff selected: sovereignty, power, representation -
were directly or indirectly marked by this canonical concept. So,
even the idea of democracy, the way it was defined in the beginning,
had to agree with the presuppositions of this concept, with the
privilege granted to man, to brotherhood. What does brotherhood
mean? It means of course the family, the familial schema, filiation,
it means brother instead of sister and there are a number of texts
in which sister is simply a case of brother, no different, and it
makes no difference. So, you have here all the conditions for the
canonical definition of politics, of the state, the relation to
autochthony in Greece, to the territory, the nation-state, filiation,
representation, sovereignty, all these share this phallocentric
concept of the social bond as friendship. That's why I thought that
this leading thread, the problematic of friendship, could be useful
in order to go on with the deconstruction of (let's say too quickly)
the massive bulk of traditional political theory, and to provide
me with a strategic lever to continue the work I have done, while
entering the field of politics in a more efficient way.
3. What
about democracy?
Now, the
third question has to do with democracy: why the word 'democracy'
in 'democracy to come', which I repeat again and again - because
democracy is a strange name for a regime; from the beginning it
was difficult to locate democracy among the spectrum of regimes,
and everyone has always had difficulty with assigning a place to
democracy. Democracy means, minimally, equality - and here you see
why friendship is an important key, because in friendship, even
in classical friendship, what is involved is reciprocity, equality,
symmetry, and so on and so forth. There is no democracy except as
equality among everyone - I'll try to make this everyone more specific
in a moment - but an equality which can be calculated, countable:
you count the number of units, of voters, of voices, of citizens.
On the other hand, you have to reconcile this demand for equality
with the demand for singularity, with respect for the Other as singular,
and that is an aporia. How can we, at the same time, take into account
the equality of everyone, justice and equity, and nevertheless take
into account and respect the heterogeneous singularity of everyone?
From the
beginning, democracy has been associated with values, with axioms,
which belong to this canonical concept of friendship: that is brotherhood,
family, roots in a territory (autochthony), the nation-state depending
on a territory, soil and place, and so on. Now it is possible to
think of a democracy which could be, if not adjusted, then at least
articulated with another concept of friendship, another experience
of friendship which wouldn't simply be dependent on or subordinate
to what I call the prevalent canonical concept of friendship (phallogocentric,
male, and so on and so forth), and this is what I'm trying to elaborate
in the Politics of Friendship. A democracy which is so strange that
it is no longer simply reducible to citizenship, to the organisation
of a regime for a given society as nation-state. I've nothing simply
against the nation-state, I've tried to understand what today goes
beyond the borders of the nation-state, and I'm now slowly approaching
the last question of hospitality. What have been, what are and what
will be the limits of the problematic of the nation-state? Is it
possible that beyond the nation-state the concept of democracy keep
not only a meaning but a force of injunction? Can we think of a
democracy beyond the limits of the classical political model, of
the nation-state and its borders? Is it possible to think differently
this double injunction of equality for everyone and respect for
singularity beyond the limits of classical politics and classical
friendship?
It is in
the name of this that we could try to question the canonical concept
of friendship. Why would we do that in the first place, why are
we interested in questioning, deconstructing if you want, the canonical
concept of friendship? It is in the name of democracy. I think that
there is inequality and repression in the traditional concept of
friendship such as we inherit it. It is in the name of more democracy
that I think we have to unlock, to open, to displace this prevalent
concept, and this is not my initiative, not the initiative of someone
operating in a deconstructive manner; it is what is happening today.
Today this model of brotherhood, man, friendship is being deconstructed
in the world. What I say about the nation-state is what is happening
today in the world. This so-called deconstruction is simply what
is happening in a more or less visible way, in an unequal way with
what is called the 'inequality of development'; because today if
you're interested in this you can see how powerful the concept of
fraternity still is: in the rhetoric of politicians, fraternity
comes back again and again, and sometimes it is very respectable,
but if you look for the implications of this concept of fraternity
you may have questions.
So when
I speak of a 'democracy to come', I don't mean a future democracy,
a new regime, a new organisation of nation-states (although this
may be hoped for) but I mean this 'to come': the promise of an authentic
democracy which is never embodied in what we call democracy. This
is a way of going on criticising what is everywhere given today
under the name of democracy in our societies. This doesn't mean
that 'democracy to come' will be simply a future democracy correcting
or improving the actual conditions of the so-called democracies,
it means first of all that this democracy we dream of is linked
in its concept to a promise. The idea of a promise is inscribed
in the idea of a democracy: equality, freedom, freedom of speech,
freedom of the press - all these things are inscribed as promises
within democracy. Democracy is a promise. That is why it is a more
historical concept of the political - it's the only concept of a
regime or a political organisation in which history, that is the
endless process of improvement and perfectibility, is inscribed
in the concept. So, it's a historical concept through and through,
and that's why I call it 'to come': it is a promise and will remain
a promise, but 'to come' means also not a future but that it has
'to come' as a promise, as a duty, that is 'to come' immediately.
We don't have to wait for future democracy to happen, to appear,
we have to do right here and now what has to be done for it. That's
an injunction, an immediate injunction, no delay. Which doesn't
mean that it will take the form of a regime; but if we dissociate
democracy from the name of a regime we can then give this name 'democracy'
to any kind of experience in which there is equality, justice, equity,
respect for the singularity of the Other at work, so to speak -
then it's democracy here and now; but of course this implies that
we do not confine democracy to the political in the classical sense,
or to the nation- state, or to citizenship.
We have
today, for many reasons that we all know, to think of a democratic
relationship not only with other citizens but also with non-citizens.
That's a modern experience; you know that between the wars, after
the first World War, already there were in Europe - Hannah Arendt
paid special attention to this - huge crowds of people not even
in exile, not even deported but displaced persons who were not considered
citizens, and, according to Hannah Arendt, that is one of the origins
of what happened in the second World War. This non-citizenship of
people we have to care for, to welcome, urges us, compels us, to
think of a democratic relationship beyond the borders of the nation-state.
That is the invention of new practices, new international law, the
transformation of the sovereignty of the state. We all have examples
of this situation today with what are called non- governmental interventions,
everything which calls for interventions, for political initiatives,
which should not depend on the sovereignty of the state, that is,
finally, citizenship. In fact we know - that's why the task is so
enormous and endless - we know today that even within international
organisations and institutions, the sovereignty of the state is
a rule, and that in the name of international law some nation-states
more powerful than others make the law. Not only because this international
law is basically a European law in the tradition of Europe and law,
but because these more powerful nation- states make the law, that
is they in fact rule the international order. So, there are a number
of urgent problems which require precisely this transformation of
the concept of the political, of the concept of democracy, and of
the concept of friendship. Now, this accounts to some extent for
the reasons I choose the theme of hospitality as a privileged theme
in my recent seminars and publications.
4. What
about hospitality?
I have to
- and that's an unconditional injunction - I have to welcome the
Other whoever he or she is unconditionally, without asking for a
document, a name, a context, or a passport. That is the very first
opening of my relation to the Other: to open my space, my home -
my house, my language, my culture, my nation, my state, and myself.
I don't have to open it, because it is open, it is open before I
make a decision about it: then I have to keep it open or try to
keep it open unconditionally. But of course this unconditionality
is a frightening thing, it's scary. If we decide everyone will be
able to enter my space, my house, my home, my city, my state, my
language, and if we think what I think, namely that this is entering
my space unconditionally may well be able to displace everything
in my space, to upset, to undermine, to even destroy, then the worst
may happen and I am open to this, the best and the worst. But of
course since this unconditional hospitality may lead to a perversion
of this ethics of friendship, we have to condition this unconditionality,
to negotiate the relation between this unconditional injunction
and the necessary condition, to organise this hospitality, which
means laws, rights, conventions, borders of course, laws on immigration
and so on and so forth. We all have, especially in Europe, on both
sides of the channel, this problem of immigration, to what extent
we should welcome the Other. So, in order to think of a new politics
of hospitality, a new relationship to citizenship, to have to re-think
all these problems that I have mentioned in the last few minutes.
Let me say
just one more thing before I stop on this tradition of the concept
of hospitality, given what I have said about citizenship and non-citizenship.
We could simply dream of a democracy which would be cosmopolitical,
a cosmopolitan form. There is a tradition of cosmopolitanism, and
if we had time we could study this tradition, which comes to us
from, on the one hand, Greek thought with the Stoics, who have a
concept of the 'citizen of the world'. You also have St. Paul in
the Christian tradition, also a certain call for a citizen of the
world as, precisely, a brother. St. Paul says that we are all brothers,
that is sons of God, so we are not foreigners, we belong to the
world as citizens of the world; and it is this tradition that we
could follow up until Kant for instance, in whose concept of cosmopolitanism
we find the conditions for hospitality. But in the concept of the
cosmopolitical in Kant there are a number of conditions: first of
all you should of course welcome the stranger, the foreigner, to
the extent that he is a citizen of another country, that you grant
him the right to visit and not to stay, and there are a number of
other conditions that I can't summarise here quickly, but this concept
of the cosmopolitical which is very novel, very worthy of respect
(and I think cosmopolitanism is a very good thing), is a very limited
concept. Limited precisely by the reference to the political, to
the state, to the authority of the state, to citizenship, and to
strict control of residency and period of stay.
So, I think
that what I try to call a 'New International' in Spectres of Marx
should go beyond this concept of the cosmopolitical strictly speaking.
We have to do a lot of things, and to work of course within the
space of the cosmopolitical, and an international law that keeps
alive the sovereignty of the State. There is a lot to be done within
the State and in international organisations that respect the sovereignty
of the State, that's what we call politics today, but beyond this
task, which is enormous, we must think and be oriented by something
which is more than cosmopolitical, more than citizenship. So you
see, just a few sentences before I stop, how strange is this itinerary
calling for a new concept of democracy grounded - assuming this
is a ground, and I'm not sure it is - grounded on this groundless
experience of friendship, which shouldn't be limited in the way
it has been, and a concept of democracy which would re-define the
political not only beyond the nation-state but beyond the cosmopolitical
itself. That of course looks like a utopian or very distant perspective.
I don't think so. Of course there is an enormous distance if we
think that these things have to be reached and concretely embodied,
but we know today as soon as we open a newspaper that these problems
are urgent and prevalent in everyday life. In everyday life we see
that the classical concept of democracy, the way it inhabits all
the rhetoric of politicians and parliament, is shaken, that we need
something else. We see that the concept of citizenship, the concept
of the border, immigration, are today under a terrible seismic displacement.
We not only feel this: we can analyse this every day, so what seems
to be, and is, very far ahead of us, is also very close to us every
day, and it is an urgent task to re-elaborate, to re-think, to re-engage
and to be committed differently with these issues.
I see that
my time's up, so I'll stop there.
Questions
Q1: On the
notion of welcoming someone, of being hospitable to them: well,
firstly, welcoming to what? To a thing, whatever that might be?
But secondly, it seems to me that it implies a form of acceptance
and maybe inclusion, and I think that the notion of inclusion is
problematic because it tends to imply some form of assimilation,
and again assimilating someone to what? Which carries us on to the
notion of equality, which can be coercive, and I wondered what you
thought about the notion of coercion and equality: people aren't
necessarily equal, nations aren't equal, states aren't equal and
what is the form of agency that will make them equal and therefore
perhaps avoid assimilation?
J.D.: Thankyou.
No, when I speak of hospitality I have in mind the necessity not
to simply assimilate the Other, but that's an aporia. We have to
welcome the Other inside - without that there would be no hospitality,
that the Other should be sheltered or welcomed in my space, that
I should try to open my space, without trying to include the Other
in my space. That is to ask that he or she learn my language, or
adopt my religion or become English or become French, today for
instance that's the condition, that's the left-wing discourse, the
prevailing left-wing discourse, 'we are hospitable to the immigrants
to the extent that they become French citizens, respect secularism,
that they learn the French language', assimilation. We call this
integration, and of course this can be done in a novel fashion and
that is part of hospitality: if I want to open my house of course
my bed is your bed, you want to use my bed? - it's still a bed,
you have to get used it; this is what I eat, I can give you what
I eat; you have to get used to it. But that's a double bind, on
the one hand I should respect the singularity of the Other and not
to ask him or her that he respect or keep intact my own space or
my own culture.
That's what
I said at the beginning about the unconditionality. I have to accept
if I offer unconditional hospitality that the Other may ruin my
own space or impose his or her own culture or his or her own language.
That's the problem: hospitality should be neither assimilation,
acculturation, nor simply the occupation of my space by the Other.
That's why it has to be negotiated at every instant, and the decision
for hospitality, the best rule for this negotiation, has to be invented
at every second with all the risks involved, and it is very risky.
Hospitality, and hospitality is a very general name for all our
relations to the Other, has to be re-invented at every second, it
is something without a pre-given rule. That is what we have to invent
- a new language for instance. When two people who don't speak the
same language meet, what should they do? They have to translate,
but translation is an invention, to invent a new way of translating
in which translation doesn't simply go one way but both ways, and
how can we do that? That's the aporia, and this is political, the
new form - but it had always been a form - of politics, but today
it has, because of the development of communication, of crossing
borders, of telecommunications, it has new forms of urgency.
Q2: What
in a sense I found missing from your talk is an explanation of why
borders, sovereignty, the old structures of politics, are being
transformed. You don't seem to be able to name the process through
which this is happening, and it seems to me that one could understand
what you're talking about in terms of globalisation, the formation
of a common social space, a single world-meaning within which all
these old structures which try to absolutise and fix differences
are changed, but this, it also seems to me, is a ground on which
to found a new form of democracy, and that ground has to be found
in the concept of globality and in the concept of world unification.
I wonder what your response is to this?
J.D.: Everything
I have said up to now was referring to what you called 'globalisation',
what we call in French 'mondialisation'. That's the only thing I've
said; but why didn't I use the name 'globalisation'? Because today
it's a confused concept and it's the screen for a number of non-concepts
and sometimes of political tricks and political strategies. Of course
something like globalisation is happening - not only today of course,
it started a long time ago - but today there is an acceleration
of this mondialisation, but as you know, using this word, this key
word, allows a number of political appropriations - in the name
of the free market for instance. People try to have us swallow the
idea that globalisation means the free market, or that the concentration
of tele-technological communications beyond the States are what
makes globalisation possible, and what should be supported or simply
accepted. So I have, and I'm not the only one, many, many, reservations
about the use one makes of this word: but I agree with you, this
is, if not the ground (because I don't think it is a ground), but
this is the space in which these problems take their shape. I agree
with you, but I wouldn't simply rely upon the word 'globalisation'
in order to name this phenomenon.
Q3: This
is a question about the book, if I could begin with the second essay
and perhaps go on to the first. When you speak about the 'voice
of the friend' in Being and Time you say it could be subjected to
a certain kind of deconstructive critique that perhaps Husserl might
have called for, and then you ask: why does this phrase appear in
Heidegger? Why not construe it in an obvious way as a reference
to Aristotle's discussion of friendship in The Ethics, and indeed
to book one of The Nicomachean Ethics, to which Heidegger does refer
in earlier discussion in courses from which that section of Being
and Time is drawn? The point of that would be that it looks like
Heidegger thinks that there might be a more interesting account
or perception of friendship in Aristotle, and one which could go
beyond a certain kind of critique that we would perhaps find in
the first text of the book, and indeed if you read The Nicomachean
Ethics it does seem that Aristotle has this worry and this conflict
between universality and singularity in friendship, and this problem
of nearness and distance, and that to engage in virtue, true friendship,
one would have to like the friend for their sake and not for one's
own sake; and this seems to call for a certain separation - and
so when he gives examples of true friendship the examples will be
of women separated from their children and people separated by political
enmity, enemies in war who nevertheless remain within this true
friendship. The question is: isn't there in Aristotle, and indeed
throughout the history of the so called reflection on friendship,
a worry that somewhere anticipates what you have called the non-canonical
view of friendship? And doesn't the non-canonical, and perhaps Kantian
view - in that it seems that in the notion of respect Kant introduces,
he make explicit a worry that will have been there going back to
Aristotle - doesn't the non-canonical inhabit the canonical?
J.D.: Thankyou.
This is a very rich intervention and a difficult question, especially
all the more difficult because you have read this chapter in French
because it's not included in the English version! [Laughter]. Let
me tell everyone by the way that the English version is the book
Politics of Friendship without an essay which comes at the end,
to which you've just referred, in an appendix and which can be read
in French in Politiques de l'amitié or in English - it has
been published in the United States. So, it's a very difficult question.
It has to do with Heidegger's mention in Being and Timeof the voice
of the friend we have in us. It's a very strange occurrence, because
suddenly, in a context in which no one would expect the friend to
appear there is this reference which puzzles every reader of Heidegger.
So I tried in this chapter to account for this single reference
to the voice of the friend in us, but I can't re-constitute what
I do in this chapter, which is to try to reconstitute the politics
of friendship in Heidegger and the way in other text he thematises
friendship, loss, war, peace, the polemos, the political, and so
on and so forth. To answer very briefly your difficult question
I would say that in the context of Being and Time it is difficult
to speak of a politics of friendship on a political level in this
context. I think that the friend he is referring to cannot be identified
with anything Aristotle has to tell you, there is no reference to
virtue, even less to utility or to pleasure. So although Heidegger
of course knew these texts by Aristotle I don't think that there
is even an indirect reference to Aristotle, I don't think so but
I cannot demonstrate this here, you think so?
Q3: But
it's a quotation from book one of The Nichomachean Ethics.
J.D.: Perhaps,
in which case I missed a quotation and please give me the reference.
I'm ready to consider this, if it's a hidden quotation this could
account for the strangeness of this reference. As if Heidegger was
saying 'well everyone knows what Aristotle said and that's the friend
I am referring to.'
Q4: I admire
your injunction to teaching symbology and looking for new modes
of friendship and communication but I was struck, unless I've made
a mistake, by the quite positivistic character of friendship: you
say it cannot be completely described theoretically, it has to be
approached and accepted, and that reminded me ...
J.D.: 'Approached
and...'?
Q4: Accepted.
J.D.: I
didn't say accepted.
Q4: You
said you cannot theorise friendship, so it seems positivitic.
J.D.: No,
when I say you can't theorise it that is not positivistic. I mean
of course we can theorise, that is what I do! [Laughter]. I try
to do that, but I argue that there is something which has to be
theoretically determined as going beyond theory - but that's not
positivist.
Q4: I was
interested also in the metaphor of translation across culture which
you used, and I think there is also quite an interesting parallel
to be drawn about what we might call trans-historical communication,
whereas translation would be trans-cultural through language ...
J.D.: Let's
say trans-.
Q4: The
transhistorical or the history of ideas is an interesting element
of what you brought out, so I congratulate you [laughter].
J.D.: That's
the hospitality I love, that's hospitality the way I understand
it!
Q5: On the
cover of the book Politics of Friendship it says 'At issue is an
anti-genealogy upsetting the genealogical motif itself'. Does this
book mark a move away from Nietzsche?
J.D.: Yes,
in fact it's perhaps one of the first times - I try in this context
to disassociate gestures that I have already constantly associated
before now, that is deconstruction and genealogy. Deconstruction
as being at least partly a genealogical anamnesis or deconstitution
of a series of traditional layers, a deconstitutive genealogy in
a Nietzschean sense. To that extent deconstruction was tied to a
certain Nietzschean concept of genealogy, but in this context, for
the reasons I gave earlier (that is the fact that the classical
concept of democracy, the political, brotherhood, fraternity was
genealogical, that is grounded on filiation, family, autochthony,
the territory) I thought that I should suspect the authority of
genealogy at some point from that point of view. That is to disassociate
the deconstruction of the concept of fraternity from the genealogical
scheme or to think of another kind of genealogy. There is still
genealogy, but it's a genealogy that goes in the opposite direction,
it's a way of questioning the unquestioned authority of genealogy.
I'm not against genealogy or simply for it, but I want to be more
careful about its implications.
Q6: You
talk about geographical exclusion and how your idea of hospitality
can address that, but you haven't mentioned the way in which geographical
exclusion is completely tied up with economic exclusion. The countries
from which it's difficult to get into England are poor countries:
it's not really France or Germany, it's the Caribbean, it's Africa,
it's the Indian sub-continent, and I wondered how you think your
concept of friendship, your non- canonical concept of friendship,
can address economic exclusion, and especially economic exclusion
in its most extreme form which is the exclusion by those who own
capital of everyone else. You can't ask those who own capital to
be hospitable ...
J.D.: I
ask them nevertheless [laughter].
Q6: It's
naive to ask them, it's a naive request.
J.D.: Perhaps,
but I still do. The problem of the economy, although I didn't refer
to it explicitly in this short presentation, is at the centre of
this. It's a problem of economy, of appropriation, misappropriation,
hospitality is economy. This is the question we addressed a moment
ago about assimilation, which means appropriation, that is exploitation,
and so on and so forth. So, I think of course that the problem of
capitalism is at the centre of this question; if I didn't name it
before I apologise, but it is at the centre of this attempt, without
a doubt. When I try to question or to deconstruct the classical
concept of the political, it is in order to open it on to other
fields, spaces, strata and layers, such as the economical or economy
in the broad sense. In the narrow sense of use and exchange values,
capital, speculation, financial return and also in the broader sense
of propriety, the proper, what is proper to whom, appropriation,
and the concept of hospitality should not remain outside of this,
and of who owns what. It consists of opening your own space, your
own goods, your own house and nation, it's economical and it has
to do with economy; and of course however naive I may be, I'm not
totally unaware of the problems of the poor being more excluded
at the border than the rich. In my own country I can see this every
day, at the airport I see who enters easily and who does not with
the same legislation. Thankyou for your suggestion, but I'm not
totally blind to these questions.
Q6: I am
only saying: how can you use your concept of hospitality to address
the problem of capitalism?
J.D.: I
can't do it right here and now, but I think this is the problem,
the problem that has to be faced no doubt. What I call the transformation
of international law implies a transformation of the market, of
the global market, and you can't touch the global market without
touching capitalism. Everything I say here has to do with that,
it would have been easier for me to say 'Well, that's capitalism',
but capitalism is precisely tied to this organisation of the political,
the classical organisation of the political. At the same time I
think it's a little more complex than that, and I think that the
development of new forms of capitalism are responsible for, on the
one hand the consolidation of the old concepts of politics, democracy,
friendship, etc., but at the same time undermining this tradition.
It's because of new developments of capitalism that everything is
shaken. When you see that for instance the concentration of the
powers of the media and tele-technologies goes beyond state power,
becomes international, on the one hand it confirms the traditional
structures of politics, and on the other it deconstructs them. There
is a deconstructing effect of capitalism, that's why the approach
to capitalism is very complex, but I agree with you it's a central
problem.
Q7: I wanted
to link into this last question, and I just wanted to ask you if
you think it's possible to transform a concept like democracy without
linking that attempt to an attempt to transform material reality?
In other words, the example you used about immigration and democracy
- the fact that under bourgeois democracy in theory everyone is
free to go wherever they like and do whatever they like, except
if you're seen as the wrong colour you can't cross the border, or
if you don't fit with the politics of a certain nation - and doesn't
that mean that basically we have to go back to Marx and say that
to throw your weight behind the struggle of the exploited against
the exploiters is the only way you can go beyond the limits of bourgeois
democracy? Don't we have to go beyond discourse and look to a systematic
attempt to change the world?
J.D.: We
won't change the world before two o'clock [laughter], but what I'm
saying is that we have to, and through the transformation of the
organisation of capitalism, to a transformation of the Marxist heritage,
taking into account what's happening today especially in terms of
citizenship and colour of skin and so on and so forth; and when
I'm not giving a lecture at the University of Sussex I try to do
my best as a French citizen to fight for the transformation of the
laws on immigration in my country, which is a very burning issue
right now in the French parliament. I'll do what I can to intervene,
very modestly and minimally, in this field of concrete and urgent
questions. We have to do both, to speak and to act.
Q8: I actually
wanted to address one of your other books in relation to what you
have been saying today when you talk about a visitor coming into
your country, and sharing, and also the necessity to break down
capitalism, and I'm just wondering - since this is about relations
between different individuals, different citizens, different nation-states
- about going back to The Other Heading and re-thinking yourself
and re-thinking what happens. Do you think that in some ways because
there is this interplay of the Other and yourself in friendship
that you are in some ways the Other and that the Other is in you?
J.D.: Yes,
it complicates the issue, because the Other is not simply the Other
as coming from the outside so to speak. One is the one, I am the
one, one is more or less the one and everyone is more or less the
one and more or less one with him or herself. Which means that the
Other is already inside, and has to be sheltered and welcomed in
a certain way. We have to negotiate also, that's a complicated unconscious
operation, to negotiate the hospitality within ourselves. To this
one in ourselves, to this image that might exclude this other one
or be allergic to this other one. We know that someone who doesn't
negotiate this hospitality in him or herself in a certain way cannot
be hospitable to the Other, that's what the Greeks taught us. That
you have to solve the problem within yourself, and it's already
a society, a multiplicity of heterogeneous singularities, to be
really smiling to the Other. If you are at war with yourself you
may be allergic to the Other, that's what complicates the issue.
Transcribed by Benjamin Noys
Updated 11/04/2003 11:37:43 Hydra Design: Peter Krapp All rights
reserved © 1995-2003.
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