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PRINTED BOOKS
Author Oliver, Kelly, 1958-

Title Witnessing : beyond recognition / Kelly Oliver.

Published Minneapolis, Minn. : University of Minnesota Press, [2001]
©2001

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 UniM Bail  128 OLIV    AVAILABLE
Physical description ix, 251 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 231-236) and index.
Contents Introduction : Beyond recognition -- Domination, multiculturalism, and the pathology of recognition -- Identity politics, deconstruction, and recognition -- Identity as subordination, abjection, and exclusion -- The necessity and impossibility of witnessing -- False witnesses -- History, transformation, and vigilance -- Seeing race -- Vision and recognition -- Toward a new vision -- Conclusion : Witnessing the power of love.
Summary Challenging the fundamental tenet of the multicultural movement -- that social struggles turning upon race, gender, and sexuality are struggles for recognition -- this work offers a powerful critique of current conceptions of identity and subjectivity based on Hegelian notions of recognition. The author's critical engagement with major texts of contemporary philosophy prepares the way for a highly original conception of ethics based on witnessing.Central to this project is Oliver's contention that the demand for recognition is a symptom of the pathology of oppression that perpetuates subject-object and same-different hierarchies. While theorists across the disciplines of the humanities and social sciences focus their research on multiculturalism around the struggle for recognition, Oliver argues that the actual texts and survivors' accounts from the aftermath of the Holocaust and slavery are testimonials to a pathos that is "beyond recognition". Oliver traces many of the problems with the recognition model of subjective identity to a particular notion of vision presupposed in theories of recognition and misrecognition. Contesting the idea of an objectifying gaze, she reformulates vision as a loving look that facilitates connection rather than necessitates alienation. As an alternative, Oliver develops a theory of witnessing subjectivity. She suggests that the notion of witnessing, with its double meaning as either eyewitness or bearing witness to the unseen, is more promising than recognition for describing the onset and sustenance of subjectivity. Subjectivity is born out of and sustained by the process of witnessing -- the possibility of address and response -- which puts ethicalobligations at its heart.
Subject Recognition (Philosophy)
Perception (Philosophy)
Social perception.
ISBN 0816636273 (alkaline paper)
0816636281 (paperback: alkaline paper)