Divided Voices and Imperial identity in Propertius 4.1 and Derrida, Monolingualism of the Other and Politics of Friendship

Propertius and Derrida use a similar formal technique to explore the structure of identity under imperial conditions. This is the divided voice, where significant elements of authorial self-expression occur in the voice of an oppositional other. These texts enact a dialectic without synthesis betwee...

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Main Author: Michèle Lowrie
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Université Lille-3 2011-10-01
Series:Dictynna
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/dictynna/711
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author Michèle Lowrie
author_facet Michèle Lowrie
author_sort Michèle Lowrie
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description Propertius and Derrida use a similar formal technique to explore the structure of identity under imperial conditions. This is the divided voice, where significant elements of authorial self-expression occur in the voice of an oppositional other. These texts enact a dialectic without synthesis between a more normative self and one that undergoes dispossession, loss of citizenship, various restrictions on speech, or other forms of limitation or exclusion. They raise the question of the extent to which singular individuals, whose identities do not and cannot fit the ideological norm, can be paradigmatic for identity within their own times and political circumstances. While Propertius emerges as singular, that is, an individual within a series, Derrida claims a unique status that marks a difference between ancient and modern conceptions of the self.
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spelling doaj.art-e23c7f7eff7b444d8ad40a0c16df98db2022-12-21T22:08:19ZdeuUniversité Lille-3Dictynna1969-42022011-10-018Divided Voices and Imperial identity in Propertius 4.1 and Derrida, Monolingualism of the Other and Politics of FriendshipMichèle LowriePropertius and Derrida use a similar formal technique to explore the structure of identity under imperial conditions. This is the divided voice, where significant elements of authorial self-expression occur in the voice of an oppositional other. These texts enact a dialectic without synthesis between a more normative self and one that undergoes dispossession, loss of citizenship, various restrictions on speech, or other forms of limitation or exclusion. They raise the question of the extent to which singular individuals, whose identities do not and cannot fit the ideological norm, can be paradigmatic for identity within their own times and political circumstances. While Propertius emerges as singular, that is, an individual within a series, Derrida claims a unique status that marks a difference between ancient and modern conceptions of the self.http://journals.openedition.org/dictynna/711DerridaempireexemplumidentityPropertius
spellingShingle Michèle Lowrie
Divided Voices and Imperial identity in Propertius 4.1 and Derrida, Monolingualism of the Other and Politics of Friendship
Dictynna
Derrida
empire
exemplum
identity
Propertius
title Divided Voices and Imperial identity in Propertius 4.1 and Derrida, Monolingualism of the Other and Politics of Friendship
title_full Divided Voices and Imperial identity in Propertius 4.1 and Derrida, Monolingualism of the Other and Politics of Friendship
title_fullStr Divided Voices and Imperial identity in Propertius 4.1 and Derrida, Monolingualism of the Other and Politics of Friendship
title_full_unstemmed Divided Voices and Imperial identity in Propertius 4.1 and Derrida, Monolingualism of the Other and Politics of Friendship
title_short Divided Voices and Imperial identity in Propertius 4.1 and Derrida, Monolingualism of the Other and Politics of Friendship
title_sort divided voices and imperial identity in propertius 4 1 and derrida monolingualism of the other and politics of friendship
topic Derrida
empire
exemplum
identity
Propertius
url http://journals.openedition.org/dictynna/711
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