Temporary Blended: Why Ethics of Stasis Still Matters

The etymon στάσις goes back to the Greek word ἵστημι, which means “to stay”: this ancient Greek verb denotes presence, spatiality, permanence. In these pages, stasis is the perfect word to describe the unusual dimension built all around us by the advent of the Covid pandemic during the lockdown mont...

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Main Author: Fabrizia Abbate
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2021-07-01
Series:Aisthesis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/aisthesis/article/view/12540
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author Fabrizia Abbate
author_facet Fabrizia Abbate
author_sort Fabrizia Abbate
collection DOAJ
description The etymon στάσις goes back to the Greek word ἵστημι, which means “to stay”: this ancient Greek verb denotes presence, spatiality, permanence. In these pages, stasis is the perfect word to describe the unusual dimension built all around us by the advent of the Covid pandemic during the lockdown months in our nation. Our daily movements and activities were stopped, we were forced to stay at home as a form of social distancing, or there were those who had the obligation to remain enclosed in healthcare facilities. This paper will describe three hermeneutic figures for the stasis, using suggestions that literature, visual arts and philosophy have been offering for centuries: the night, the threshold and distance. They all converge to define the outlines of an ethics that should be reaffirmed in the present, as little pieces of a mosaic brought to light.
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spelling doaj.art-82113745346d48a59e8b13c1f5a55a102022-12-21T19:30:20ZengFirenze University PressAisthesis2035-84662021-07-01141Temporary Blended: Why Ethics of Stasis Still MattersFabrizia Abbate0Università degli Studi del MoliseThe etymon στάσις goes back to the Greek word ἵστημι, which means “to stay”: this ancient Greek verb denotes presence, spatiality, permanence. In these pages, stasis is the perfect word to describe the unusual dimension built all around us by the advent of the Covid pandemic during the lockdown months in our nation. Our daily movements and activities were stopped, we were forced to stay at home as a form of social distancing, or there were those who had the obligation to remain enclosed in healthcare facilities. This paper will describe three hermeneutic figures for the stasis, using suggestions that literature, visual arts and philosophy have been offering for centuries: the night, the threshold and distance. They all converge to define the outlines of an ethics that should be reaffirmed in the present, as little pieces of a mosaic brought to light.https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/aisthesis/article/view/12540PandemicEthicsIdentityHermeneuticsTemporality
spellingShingle Fabrizia Abbate
Temporary Blended: Why Ethics of Stasis Still Matters
Aisthesis
Pandemic
Ethics
Identity
Hermeneutics
Temporality
title Temporary Blended: Why Ethics of Stasis Still Matters
title_full Temporary Blended: Why Ethics of Stasis Still Matters
title_fullStr Temporary Blended: Why Ethics of Stasis Still Matters
title_full_unstemmed Temporary Blended: Why Ethics of Stasis Still Matters
title_short Temporary Blended: Why Ethics of Stasis Still Matters
title_sort temporary blended why ethics of stasis still matters
topic Pandemic
Ethics
Identity
Hermeneutics
Temporality
url https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/aisthesis/article/view/12540
work_keys_str_mv AT fabriziaabbate temporaryblendedwhyethicsofstasisstillmatters