Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Ethics, hospitality and aesthetics in Fresa y chocolate/Strawberry and Chocolate (Gutiérrez Alea and Tabío 1993) and Santa y Andrés/Santa and Andrés (Lechuga 2016)
View through CrossRef
This article draws on Levinas’ ‘first ethics’ and Derrida’s account of hospitality in order to examine how Fresa y chocolate/
Strawberry and Chocolate () and Santa y Andrés/Santa and Andrés ()make perceptible (drawing on the etymology of aesthetics as ‘aistheta’, perceptible things) the problem of the encounter with the Other. As films, they inevitably thematize and reduce both the Other’s infinite alterity and our own infinite responsibility. However, whereas Santa y Andrés makes the viewer experience the uncertainty produced by the subject’s encounter with difference, developing an aesthetics that bears a trace of this ‘first ethics’, Fresa y chocolate reduces alterity in favour of resolution. Examining the characters’ interactions in light of Derrida’s ‘hostipitality’, it becomes clear that, whereas Alea’s work encourages us to forget the power imbalances that neuter Diego’s authority as host, Lechuga’s film gestures towards a pervasive sovereignty that determines the exercise of hospitality as ethical response. Thus, by acknowledging the uncomfortable proximity of hospitality, hostility and discipline, and by allowing the viewer to access a trace of the unsettling encounter with infinite otherness, Santa y Andrés encourages a more ethical engagement with difference than its predecessor.
Title: Ethics, hospitality and aesthetics in Fresa y chocolate/Strawberry and Chocolate (Gutiérrez Alea and Tabío 1993) and Santa y Andrés/Santa and Andrés (Lechuga 2016)
Description:
This article draws on Levinas’ ‘first ethics’ and Derrida’s account of hospitality in order to examine how Fresa y chocolate/
Strawberry and Chocolate () and Santa y Andrés/Santa and Andrés ()make perceptible (drawing on the etymology of aesthetics as ‘aistheta’, perceptible things) the problem of the encounter with the Other.
As films, they inevitably thematize and reduce both the Other’s infinite alterity and our own infinite responsibility.
However, whereas Santa y Andrés makes the viewer experience the uncertainty produced by the subject’s encounter with difference, developing an aesthetics that bears a trace of this ‘first ethics’, Fresa y chocolate reduces alterity in favour of resolution.
Examining the characters’ interactions in light of Derrida’s ‘hostipitality’, it becomes clear that, whereas Alea’s work encourages us to forget the power imbalances that neuter Diego’s authority as host, Lechuga’s film gestures towards a pervasive sovereignty that determines the exercise of hospitality as ethical response.
Thus, by acknowledging the uncomfortable proximity of hospitality, hostility and discipline, and by allowing the viewer to access a trace of the unsettling encounter with infinite otherness, Santa y Andrés encourages a more ethical engagement with difference than its predecessor.
Related Results
Concept of artisan chocolate from the perspective of chocolatiers
Concept of artisan chocolate from the perspective of chocolatiers
Artisan chocolate is the name given to chocolate products made with reference to the traditional production process, which is followed and consumed with interest by many consumers ...
An AI ethics ‘David and Goliath’: value conflicts between large tech companies and their employees
An AI ethics ‘David and Goliath’: value conflicts between large tech companies and their employees
AbstractArtificial intelligence ethics requires a united approach from policymakers, AI companies, and individuals, in the development, deployment, and use of these technologies. H...
Los personajes femeninos en Fresa y chocolate: Senel Paz interpretado por Gutiérrez Alea
Los personajes femeninos en Fresa y chocolate: Senel Paz interpretado por Gutiérrez Alea
La crítica sobre el relato “El lobo, el bosque y el hombre nuevo” y la película Fresa y chocolate ha hecho énfasis en la confrontación entre el “hombre nuevo” y el homosexual margi...
Dwelling and Hospitality: Heidegger and Hölderlin
Dwelling and Hospitality: Heidegger and Hölderlin
Abstract
In this article, I focus on Heidegger’s conception of hospitality in his first and final lectures on Hölderlin’s Germania (1934/5), Remembrance (1941/2), and The Ister (19...
The Conditions of Our Freedom: Foucault, Organization, and Ethics
The Conditions of Our Freedom: Foucault, Organization, and Ethics
The paper examines the contribution of the French philosopher Michel Foucault to the subject of ethics in organizations. The paper combines an analysis of Foucault’s work on discip...
Whose agenda is it? Regulating health research ethics in Labrador
Whose agenda is it? Regulating health research ethics in Labrador
In Labrador, the NunatuKavut (formerly Labrador Inuit Métis) have begun to introduce a rigorous community-based research review process. We conducted a study with leaders and healt...
Revising Basic Christian Ethics: Rethinking Paul Ramsey’s Early Contributions to Moral Theology
Revising Basic Christian Ethics: Rethinking Paul Ramsey’s Early Contributions to Moral Theology
Despite petitions from friends and critics through much of his career, Paul Ramsey adamantly refused to revise his first book, Basic Christian Ethics. Yet, several pieces of Ramsey...
Perfect and imperfect states
Perfect and imperfect states
Early Greek ethics embodied in Cretan and Spartan mores, served as a model
for Plato`s political theory. Plato theorized the contents of early Greek
ethics, aspiring to justi...