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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.15291/SIC/1.5.LC.8

Sleep and Insomnia in Levinas and Shakespeare’s Henry IV

Zachary Tavlin


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Abstract

In his seminal Existence and Existents, Emmanuel Levinas linked the impersonal event of the il y a, the “there is” of inert, factical existence, to a condition of insomnia. His analysis of insomnia holds a unique place in his oeuvre where a thorough ambivalence toward 'being' manifests itself: to be-for-the-Other (before the self, or before all neglected Others) is the highest moment of existential and ethical transcendence, though to be 'awake' in order to encounter the Other is also to be pulled in a diametrically opposed direction, toward the factical and purely immanent experience of the world and of my own existence. In this essay I will read Shakespeare's Henry IV (Parts I and II) with an eye toward reading the relationship(s) between sleep, insomnia, and ethics anew. I will develop a Levinasian reading of Shakespeare: sleep as a transcendence of the factical, everyday situation is at the same time a passage toward the ethical situation.

Keywords

Levinas; Shakespeare; ethics; insomnia

Hrčak ID:

132939

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/132939

Publication date:

11.12.2014.

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