Book Chapter

From Enemy to Xenos: the evolution of a Schmittian category

Details

Citation

Martire J (2015) From Enemy to Xenos: the evolution of a Schmittian category. In: Matos A, Herrera C & Pinto R (eds.) Democracy, justice and exception: The Kelsen-Schmitt debate reloaded in the XXI Century. Belo Horizonte, Brazil: Initia Via Editora Ltda. http://www.initiavia.com/democracy-justice-and-exception/?rq=democracy%2C%20justice%20and%20exception

Abstract
The concept of the Enemy is certainly one of the most distinctive within Schmitt’s theory, but to what extent does it represent nowadays a practical political category? Given the dramatic differences that exist between Schmitt’s times and the present days, is the concept of the Enemy an effective tool to scrutinise the problem of the Other in contemporary societies or does it create the risk of obscuring the analysis rather than illuminating it? In order to investigate this question, I will briefly describe the concept of the Enemy itself and compare it with cognate ones offered by Girard and Bauman, against the background of the nature of today’s society. On that basis I will make two intimations, one descriptive and the other normative: 1) the Enemy (along with its cognate concepts) does not adequately frame the political problem of the Other as it currently stands and we must find an effective alternative; 2) the only way to overcome the political problem that the Other currently represents is a more open approach towards the outsider, the basis of which can be found in Judith Butler’s political ethics.

Keywords
Schmitt; Bauman; Girard; Butler; Enemy; Other; Stranger; political ethics

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/23885
PublisherInitia Via Editora Ltda
Publisher URLhttp://www.initiavia.com/…0and%20exception
Place of publicationBelo Horizonte, Brazil
ISBN978-85-64912-56-4