Download - Life and Career of Emmanuel Levinas
Life and
Career of Emmanuel Levinas
❖1906➢Born January 12 in Kaunas (or Kovno, in
Russian), Lithuania. Lithuania is a part of pre-Revolutionary Russia in which the then surrounding culture ‘tolerates’ Jews. He is the eldest child in a middle class family and has two brothers, Boris and Aminadab.
❖1914➢In the wake of the War, Levinas's
family emigrates to Karkhov, in the Ukraine. The family returns to Lithuania in 1920, two years after the country obtains independence from the Revolutionary government.
❖1923➢Goes to study philosophy in Strasbourg
(France). Levinas studies philosophy with Maurice Pradines, psychology with Charles Blondel, and sociology with Maurice Halbwachs. He meets Maurice Blanchot who will become a close friend.
❖1928–29➢Levinas travels to Freiburg to study
with Edmund Husserl; he attends Heidegger's seminar.
❖1930➢Publishes his thesis in
French, The Theory of Intuition in Husserl's Phenomenoloagy.
❖1931➢French translation, by
Levinas, of Husserl's Sorbonne lectures, Cartesian Meditations, in collaboration with Gabrielle Peiffer.
❖1932➢He marries Raïssa Levi,
whom he had known since childhood.
❖1934➢Levinas publishes a philosophical
analysis of “Hitlerism,” Reflections on the Philosophy of Hitlerism.
❖1935➢Levinas publishes an original essay in
hermeneutic ontology, On Escape, in the Émile Bréhier's journal Recherches philosophiques (reprinted in 1982).
❖1939➢Naturalized French; enlists in the
French officer corps.
❖1940➢Captured by the Nazis; imprisoned
in Fallingsbotel, a labor camp for officers. His Lithuanian family is murdered. His wife Raïssa, and daughter, Simone, are hidden by religious in Orléans.
❖1947➢Following the publication of Existence and
Existents (which Levinas began writing in captivity), and Time and the Other that regrouped four lectures given at the Collège Philosophique (founded by Jean Wahl), Levinas becomes Director of the École Normale Israélite Orientale, Paris.
❖1949➢After the death of their second
daughter, Andrée Éliane, Levinas and his wife have a son, Michael, who becomes a pianist and a composer. Levinas publishes En découvrant l'existence avec Husserl et Heidegger (selections of which appear in 1998 as Discovering Existence with Husserl).
❖1957➢He delivers his first Talmudic
readings at the Colloque des Intellectuels juifs de Langue française. A colloquium attended by Vladimir Jankélévitch, André Neher, and Jean Halpérin, among others.
❖ 1961➢ Publishes his doctorate (ès
Lettres), Totality and Infinity: An Essay on Exteriority. Position at the Université de Poitiers.
❖1963➢Publishes Difficult Freedom: Essays on Judaism.
❖1967➢Professor at the Université de Paris, Nanterre, with
Paul Ricœur.
❖1968➢Publishes Quatres lectures talmudiques (English
translation in Nine Talmudic Readings).
❖1972➢Humanism of the Other.
❖1973➢Lecture at the Université de Paris IV-
Sorbonne.
❖1974➢Otherwise than Being, or Beyond Essence, the
second magnum opus.
❖1975➢Sur Maurice Blanchot (no English
translation).
❖1976➢Proper Names.
❖1977➢Du sacré au saint (English translation in Nine
Talmudic Readings).
❖1982➢Of God Who Comes to Mind, Beyond the
Verse and the radio conversations with Philippe Nemo, Ethics and Infinity.
❖1984➢Transcendance et Intelligibilité (English
translation in Emmanuel Levinas: Basic Philosophical Writings)
❖1987➢Outside the Subject, a collection of texts, old
and new on philosophers, language, and politics.
❖1988➢In the Time of the Nations.
❖1990➢De l'oblitération: Entretien avec Françoise
Armengaud (no English translation); a discussion about the sculpture of fellow Lithuanian, Sasha Sosno.
❖1991➢Entre Nous: On Thinking-of-the-Other. An issue of
the prestigious Les Cahiers de L'Herne is dedicated to Levinas's work.
❖1993➢Sorbonne lectures of 1973–74, published as God,
Death, and Time. The annual colloquium at Cerisy-la-Salle publishes a volume devoted to him.
❖1994➢Raïssa Levinas dies in September. Levinas
publishes a collection of essays, Liberté et commandement (no English translation) and Unforeseen History, edited by Pierre Hayat.
❖1995➢Alterity and Transcendence.
Emmanuel Levinas dies in Paris, December 25.
❖1996➢New Talmudic Readings (published
posthumously).
❖1998➢Éthique comme philosophie première (no English
translation, published posthumously).
THE ENDThank you for listening!!!
prepared by: Jesus Berdin