Immunity and Community in Esposito, Derrida and Agamben1

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Roberto Esposito (1998; 2002; 2008) examines how current immunological apparatuses originally designed to protect communities end up undermining the very body they sought to protect. By “immunological apparatuses” he refers to a wide range of phenomena, ranging from technical devices such as security cameras, discourses promoting the suspicion of the other, or laws seeking a supposedly safe distance in regards to those deemed dangerous. This paper compares Esposito’s view on the interplay between community and immunity with Giorgio Agamben’s and Jacques Derrida’s. For them, these two notions are not so central, but Agamben’s inquiry into the state of exception, and Derrida’s reflections on certain binomia, such as hospitality-hostility and justice-law, shed light on the same interplay. After pointing out their similarities, I argue s that the raison d’être of their ultimate and irreconcilable difference is that Agamben’s approach is antinomic, while Derrida’s is aporetic and Esposito’s is rather dialectical.

Títol traduït de la contribucióInmunidad y comunidad en Esposito, Derrida y Agamben
Idioma originalAnglès
Pàgines (de-a)93-112
Nombre de pàgines20
RevistaRevista Electronica Complutense de Investigacion en Educacion Musical
Volum48
Número1
DOIs
Estat de la publicacióPublicada - 2023

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