Dialogical ethics in a global society : cultural difference and answerability
Contribuinte(s) |
[Unknown] |
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Data(s) |
01/01/2006
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Resumo |
Debates about multiculturalism are common to many late-modern societies today. Globalization has triggered a massive flow of people across state borders, challenging and changing assumptions about national identities and cultural politics. How to deal with difference without reducing it to sameness is becoming one of the main issues discussed by policy-makers, researchers and educators. This paper argues for the importance of turning to dialogical ethics before developing and implementing largescale political strategies in managing differences. It draws on the ideas of Bakhtin and Levinas to transcend the notion of ‘caring at a distance’ that is embedded in the neo-liberal construction of moral selfhood. As an alternative, the emphasis is made on spatial proximity – on ‘face-to-face’ relations with alterity – to conceptualize the dialogical self who is both responsive to and responsible for the Other. Bakhtin’s philosophy of the act and Levinas’ ethics of responsibility are mutually enriching in thinking about the role of the dialogical self in building a pluralistic society. The paper concludes with the implications of dialogical ethics for multicultural education.<br /> |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
ICDS |
Relação |
http://web.lemoyne.edu/~hevern/ISDS/page6/conferences/conferences.html |
Tipo |
Conference Paper |