Levinas and Narrative
Guest Editors: Sandor Goodhart and Monica Osborne
Deadline for Submissions: 30 March, 2007
To date, there have been two major ways of understanding the work of Emmanuel Levinas. In the philosophical tradition, Levinas first attracted the attention of Jean-Paul Sartre as a reader of Husserl and the phenomenological tradition; later, thanks to the work of Jacques Derrida and other poststucturalists, Levinas acquired caché for his work on ethics and his critique of Heidegger.
In the 1980s, a second way of understanding emerged out of Jewish Studies. In this context, Levinas’s reading of Buber and Rosenzwieg came to the foreground. At this same time, an interest in the theoretical uses of midrash developed in Jewish Studies. Geoffrey Hartman, Gerald Bruns, Sanford Budick, Susan Handelman and others in English departments, and David Stern, Michael Fishbane, Daniel Boyarin and others in Jewish Studies programs, expanded our conception of this ancient scriptural exegetical mode.
Now a third way of understanding Levinas presents itself, one in which both his work in philosophy and his work in Jewish studies is above all and primarily literary. In the first decade of the new millennium, the coming together of the midrashic mode and the recognition that Levinas’s project is a “translation” from the “Greek to Hebrew” has enabled an understanding of Levinas as an exegete of the scriptural tradition who understands that tradition as itself already a version of literary reading, one perhaps shared by the greatest writers of our tradition-from Sophocles and Shakespeare to Faulkner and Morrison.
It is in this new, third context that we invite papers on Levinas and modern narrative (fiction, drama, and film). Essays may focus on particular works read in conjunction with Levinas, on Levinas’s interpretative approach in contemporary philosophy or Jewish Studies as a way of reading narrative, or on any other way that Levinas might inform an engagement with modern narrative.
Essays should range in length from 6,000 to 9,000 words (excluding notes and works cited) and should follow the current edition of the MLA Style Manual. Please submit two copies of the essay along with a cover sheet that lists the author’s name, essay title, mailing address, telephone number, and email address. Mfs does not accept electronic submissions. Please mail essays and cover letters to:
Editors, Modern Fiction Studies
Purdue University
Department of English
500 Oval Drive
West Lafayette, IN 47907-2038