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How to Live with Others: A History of Interpersonal Distance

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Tuesday, February 10, 2015
5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Corina Stan (Visiting Scholar)

How can we live with others? What is the right distance between oneself and other people? How can we achieve sociability without alienation and solitude without exile? When Roland Barthes raised these questions in his last lectures at the Collège de France, he concluded that "we need a science, or perhaps an art, of distances." As it turns out, the question of the right distance--in friendship, in community, in everyday life--has preoccupied philosophers, sociologists, political theorists, psychoanalysts, and writers from Aristotle to the present day. In this talk, Stan will sketch out a brief history of interpersonal distance, showing how this question, and the vocabulary it gives rise to, came to be instrumental in framing reflections on the ethical life, crowd behavior, the relationship between ethics and politics, and certain forms of cultural critique.

Type: LECTURE/TALK
Contact: David Berka