{"title":"The Discounted Face of the Pornographic Other","authors":"A. Hoy","doi":"10.6017/LV.V7I1.9853","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"French phenomenologist, Emmanuel Levinas, responds in Ethics and Infinity that, “[T]he relation to the face is straightaway ethical. The face is what one cannot kill, or at least it is that whose meaning consists in saying: ‘thou shalt not kill.’” For Levinas, it is the face of the Other which issues a cry that “I” become responsible for her. The face is signification, pointing to the transcendent and saturating mystery of the Other, yet is beyond the reduction of visual perception. It is the objective of this paper to apply Levinasian thought, the ethical response to the face of the Other, to the injustice associated with the production and commodification of pornographic images and videos. As the abuse of pornographic materials is an injustice, a failed response to the cry of the Other, it begs the question, “Does the pornographic Other even possess a face?” Subliminal as it may seem, this question is nonetheless essential to address in the consideration of pornographic injustice. This paper argues that in the case of the abuse and exploitation of the Other within the pornographic industry, the pornographic Other possesses a face which issues a cry to recognize the inviolable mystery of the Other and to become responsible for him or her. Pornography, by its very nature, discounts the face of the Other, not rendering the face unknowable, but never giving the face a chance to be known. From the beginning of the abuse, the pornographic viewer reduces that which cannot be reduced, the face, to an object for use, a direct violation of the ethical cry of the Other. ","PeriodicalId":109688,"journal":{"name":"Lumen et Vita","volume":"5 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2017-04-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Lumen et Vita","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.6017/LV.V7I1.9853","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
French phenomenologist, Emmanuel Levinas, responds in Ethics and Infinity that, “[T]he relation to the face is straightaway ethical. The face is what one cannot kill, or at least it is that whose meaning consists in saying: ‘thou shalt not kill.’” For Levinas, it is the face of the Other which issues a cry that “I” become responsible for her. The face is signification, pointing to the transcendent and saturating mystery of the Other, yet is beyond the reduction of visual perception. It is the objective of this paper to apply Levinasian thought, the ethical response to the face of the Other, to the injustice associated with the production and commodification of pornographic images and videos. As the abuse of pornographic materials is an injustice, a failed response to the cry of the Other, it begs the question, “Does the pornographic Other even possess a face?” Subliminal as it may seem, this question is nonetheless essential to address in the consideration of pornographic injustice. This paper argues that in the case of the abuse and exploitation of the Other within the pornographic industry, the pornographic Other possesses a face which issues a cry to recognize the inviolable mystery of the Other and to become responsible for him or her. Pornography, by its very nature, discounts the face of the Other, not rendering the face unknowable, but never giving the face a chance to be known. From the beginning of the abuse, the pornographic viewer reduces that which cannot be reduced, the face, to an object for use, a direct violation of the ethical cry of the Other.
法国现象学家伊曼纽尔·列维纳斯(Emmanuel Levinas)在《伦理学与无限》(Ethics and Infinity)一书中回应道:“人与脸的关系是直接合乎伦理的。脸是一个人不能杀死的东西,或者至少它的意义在于说:“你不应该杀人。”’”对列维纳斯来说,是他者的脸发出了“我”对她负责的呐喊。脸是一种意义,指向他者的超越性和饱和的神秘,但又超越了视觉感知的还原。本文的目的是将列文西亚思想,即对他者面孔的伦理反应,应用于与色情图像和视频的生产和商品化相关的不公正。由于滥用色情材料是一种不公,是对他者呼声的一种失败回应,它回避了一个问题,“色情的他者甚至有一张脸吗?”尽管这个问题似乎是下意识的,但在考虑色情不公正时,它仍然是必不可少的。本文认为,在色情产业中对他者的虐待和剥削案件中,色情他者有一张脸,它发出了一种呼吁,要求承认他者不可侵犯的神秘,并对他或她负责。色情,就其本质而言,贬低了他者的面孔,并没有使这张脸变得不可知,但从未给这张脸一个被认识的机会。从虐待的一开始,色情观众就把那不能被简化的东西,脸,简化为一个可供使用的对象,直接违反了他者的道德呼声。