Themes of visibility in Rancière, Butler and Cavarero

  • Timothy Huzar

    Student thesis: Doctoral Thesis

    Abstract

    This thesis explores themes of visibility in the work of Jacques Rancière, Judith Butler
    and Adriana Cavarero. It argues that visibility is important for each author: for Rancière
    the making visible of particular existents; for Butler the making visible of violences; and
    for Cavarero the making visible of another’s uniqueness. However, these commitments
    to visibility reach a limit when confronted with those who exist in indifference to
    visibility, for example, the fugitive politics of the enslaved as detailed by Saidiya
    Hartman. In these instances there is a danger that a fugitive politics is overlooked if
    visibility is one’s primary frame of analysis. This thesis is interdisciplinary, bringing each
    author into conversation with the others but not attempting to synthesise their thought
    into a whole, nor to resolve the tensions in their work by privileging one author over the
    others. Instead, and following Rancière, it reads each author for their aesthetic
    contribution to making sense of the world with the aim of identifying the forms of
    existence that are opened up in their work, but also those that are closed down.
    The first chapter identifies themes of visibility in Rancière’s account of politics,
    arguing that there is an ambivalence in Rancière’s politics but that in either case
    politics is linked to the making visible of forms of existence that are otherwise rendered
    insensitive. The second and third chapters identify themes of visibility in Butler’s
    account of violence, arguing that Butler’s reflections on violence’s visibility are
    overlooked in her consideration of nonviolence. The fourth and fifth chapters identify
    themes of visibility in Cavarero’s work, arguing that her insistence on making another’s
    uniqueness visible is made urgent because of scenes of violence. The sixth chapter
    argues that Butler and Cavarero’s work should be understood as an insurrectionary
    humanism centred on the paraontology of vulnerability. The seventh chapter reads
    Rancière, Butler and Cavarero in relation to Hannah Arendt, arguing that it is Arendt’s
    proximity to each author that enables a politics of fugitivity to become tangible in their
    work. The eighth chapter reads Rancière, Butler and Cavarero against Saidiya
    Hartman’s account of the Middle Passage, plantation slavery and its legacies to
    demonstrate the limits of their commitment to visibility and to further manifest a sense
    of a fugitive politics indifferent to visibility.
    Date of AwardMay 2018
    Original languageEnglish
    Awarding Institution
    • University of Brighton
    SupervisorMark Devenney (Supervisor), Clare Woodford (Supervisor) & Anthony Leaker (Supervisor)

    Keywords

    • Rancière
    • Butler
    • Cavarero
    • visibility
    • fugitivity
    • politics
    • violence

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