Men(women) in dark times: Butler’s turn to Arendt

Main Article Content

Mária Joó

Abstract

Before I turn to Butler and Arendt, I propose a working definition for the contested concept of solidarity. It is an attitude of active commitment to increasing social justice based on our co-dependency. To demonstrate the proximity of Butler and Arendt’s thoughts, I analyze short essays by both authors: Precarious Life, Vulnerability, and the Ethics of Cohabitation by Butler and Men in Dark Times by Arendt. The questions I explore are the following: What kind of foundation do we have for the necessity of the demand for moral and political solidarity? I shall argue that, based on these grounds, the consequences are to take up moral and political reponsibility for action in traditional and new forms — both individually and collectively through demonstations and NGO activities. I emphasize the liberty of autonomous thinking that is made possible through sharing a dispossessed group’s identity as Jews or women, collective identity positions shared by the two philosophers themselves personally.

Article Details

How to Cite
Joó, Mária. 2019. “Men(women) in Dark Times: Butler’s Turn to Arendt”. Interdisciplinary EJournal of Gender Studies 9 (1):1-13. https://iskolakultura.hu/index.php/tntef/article/view/33867.
Section
Articles
Author Biography

Mária Joó, Eötvös Loránd Tudományegyetem

JOÓ, MÁRIA was educated in classical studies (Greek and Latin) and literature at Eötvös Lorand University (ELTE) in Budapest and in philosophy at the University of Tübingen, Germany. She spent a couple of years as a postdoctoral scholar in phenomenology, hermeneutics, and feminist philosophy in Wuppertal-Bochum, Germany. She earned her PhD and habilitation at ELTE and is currently a retired Associate Professor at the Department of Philosophy, ELTE and an affiliated member of TNT, the Gender Studies Research Group, University of Szeged. Her recent publications include “The Second Sex in Hungary: Simone de Beauvoir and the (Post)-Socialist Condition” in Hungarian Cultural Studies (4) 2011; “Nach der Befreiung der Frau? Simone de Beauvoir in der post-sozialistischer Situation” in Stephanie Bung & Romana Weiershausen (szerk.) Simone de Beauvoir: Schreieben zwischen Theorie und Erzahlung, Querelles (Berlin: Wallstein, 2010); “Feminista liberalizmus–liberális feminizmus ma: Martha Nussbaum” TNTeF (4.2) 2017. E-mail: joo.maria49@gmail.com.