The Thought of Death and the Memory of War
War lays bare death and our relation to it. And in the warsor more precisely the memories of warof the twentieth century, images of the deaths of countless faceless or nameless others eclipse the singularity of each victims death as well as the end of the world as such that each death signifies.
Marc Crépons The Thought of Death and the Memory of War is a call to resist such images in which death is no longer actual death since it happens to anonymous others, and to seek instead a world in which mourning the other whose mortality we always already share points us toward a cosmopolitics. Crépon pursues this path toward a cosmopolitics of mourning through readings of works by Freud, Heidegger, Sartre, Patocka, Levinas, Derrida, and Ricur, and others. The movement among these writers, Crépon shows, marks a way throughand againsttwentieth-century interpretation to argue that no war, genocide, or neglect of people is possible without suspending how one relates to the death of another human being.
A history of a critical strain in contemporary thought, this book is, as Rodolphe Gasché says in the Foreword, a profound meditation on what constitutes evil and a rigorous and illuminating reflection on death, community, and world.
The translation of this work received financial support from the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
See more