Item – Thèses Canada

Numéro d'OCLC
1032912493
Lien(s) vers le texte intégral
Exemplaire de BAC
Exemplaire de BAC
Auteur
Pinchevski, Amit.
Titre
Interruption and alterity : dislocating communication.
Diplôme
Doctor of Philosophy -- McGill University, 2003
Éditeur
Montréal : McGill University, 2003.
Description
1 online resource
Notes
Includes bibliographical references.
© Amit Pinchevski, 2003.
Résumé
This project attempts to question the way the relation between communication and ethics has traditionally been conceptualized, and to offer an alternative perspective on that relation. An implicit premise in many communication theories is that successful communication is ethically favorable, particularly in facilitating ideals such as greater understanding, participation and like-mindedness. Contrary to that view, this project proposes that ethical communication may lie in the interruption of communication, in instances wherein communication falls short, goes astray or even fails. Such interruptions, however, do not mark the end of ethical communication but rather its very beginning, for it is in such moments that communication faces the challenge of otherness. Mobilizing relevant ideas from the work of French philosopher Emmanuel Levinas to the field of communication studies, this project proposes the concept of interruption as the main correlative between ethics and communication. The investigation then sets out to explore three limit-cases in which the stakes of ethical communication are most crucial: understanding and misunderstanding, communicability and incommunicability, and silence and speech. The discussion employs a distinctive approach to study the place of alterity in communication: dislocation-a double gesture which implies both tampering with the proper activity of communicational procedures and pointing to the ethical possibilities opened up by interruptions. The issues above are addressed through critical analyses of themes such as: universal language or the undoing of Babel; the ethical significance of misunderstanding and the challenge introduced by translation; autism as a paradigmatic case of incommunicability in medical, scientific and social discourses; the epistemological status and the ethical stakes of incommunicability; and, finally, the ethical dimension of free speech, the significance of silence and the responsibility to the silent Other.
Autre lien(s)
digitool.library.mcgill.ca:8881
escholarship.mcgill.ca
escholarship.mcgill.ca
Sujet
Communication -- Moral and ethical aspects.
Communication -- Philosophy.