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(2018) Exploring animal encounters, Dordrecht, Springer.

Hanging together in a touch

friendship and mourning in the melancholic limits of man

James R. Goebel

pp. 63-91

Reading Chris Clarke's Walking with Zeke with and against Martin Heidegger's philosophical project, especially key moments of anxiety and uncertainty around the human-animal distinction, this essay explores and seeks to rework the thematics of friendship, mourning, and melancholia. Taking seriously the claim that philosophical thought should let go of the human-animal distinction, this essay explores those instances in which things touch, of the even most minimal degree of distance within indistinction which provides the conditions of possibility for touch. In the course of this analysis, I forestall and complicate the potential of touch to be a reparative gesture, concluding that the work of mourning can, in the end, be the problem for an ethics of letting go.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-92504-2_3

Full citation:

Goebel, J. R. (2018)., Hanging together in a touch: friendship and mourning in the melancholic limits of man, in D. Ohrem & M. Calarco (eds.), Exploring animal encounters, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 63-91.

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