Thursday, August 9, 2012

Session 21: Antigone, Arendt, Freedom

"What is freedom?" Asks Hannah Arendt in relation to a series of meditations on vita activia, the life of action. She extracts a theory of action in her rereading of Aristotle's original distinction between action and deliberation, only to find freedom in the performative act of deliberation. Politics as performed in polis is the theatre, the bounded space of appearance, for freedom. Freedom is politics, inasmuch as politics is an act of appearance, a presence, a birth. Against this background we can read the act of Antigone. Antigone acts , freely although she finds it aligned with the divine, but it is neither within the boundary of the city nor in constitution of it. In fact, the tragedy in its bounded relationship to death is indeed the ending act, even as the last of a trilogy. In contrast to Arendt's freedom which is always already imbedded in the condition of natality, "the human condition," the death of Antigone ends all, but the political. It becomes of the constituting texts of political philosophy, of the theatre of politics. The birth in death is the possibility that Arendt never considered. Let us hope to inquire it.

 To be presented by: Setareh Shohadai

 Note: please do read Antigone if you haven't already.

Reading list:
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1. Antigone, Sophocles
http://www.royaltyfreeplays.com/greek-drama/Antigone.pdf

2. هانا آرنت: آزادی چیست؟
http://zamaaneh.com/library/cat_11/

3. ادعای آنتیگونه، جودیت باتلر
http://www.mindmotor.info/Mind/?p=2343


Time: Thursday, August 16 · 6:30pm - 8:30pm
Location: SITE 5084, University of Ottawa
Language: Persian · Admission: Free

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