[DOWNLOAD] "Cross-Cultural Understandings in the Language and Politics of Friendship/Comprehension Transculturelle Dans Le Langage Et la Politique D'amitie (Report)" by Canadian Social Science " Book PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Cross-Cultural Understandings in the Language and Politics of Friendship/Comprehension Transculturelle Dans Le Langage Et la Politique D'amitie (Report)
- Author : Canadian Social Science
- Release Date : January 01, 2007
- Genre: Social Science,Books,Nonfiction,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 276 KB
Description
The axiom 'O my friend, there is no friend' attributed to Montaigne via Aristotle, has been used as a motif by the French philosopher, Jacques Derrida in his lectures and writings on friendship collected in his book The Politics of Friendship (1997). This citation of the citation of a quotation serves to indicate something of the complexities and contradictions inherent in the everyday term of friendship. The apparent ordinariness of the word friendship conceals ideas about, not only a multiplicity of personal relationships, but also pacts between states, cultural exchanges, business contacts, political alliances and legal communications. Friendship in its various configurations links people and communities together in some sort of reciprocally beneficial association that forms societies. Thus friendship is a concept that deserves attention and that has the capacity to improve relationships in an increasingly conflict-ridden world. The vast literature which seeks to illuminate and define the concept of friendship is located predominantly in the western philosophical tradition. This article, while acknowledging the difficulty of accessing the values, beliefs and ways of thinking of different cultures, examines some of the similarities and differences about understandings of friendship which both support and challenge traditional western perspectives. Drawing on a variety of disciplines the paper uses literature and research from the humanities and the social sciences and findings from cross-cultural conversations on friendship in an attempt to make a link between the theoretical and the empirical. The article argues that an exploration of the experiences and interpretations of friendship outside the western philosophical tradition demonstrates a shared understanding about many aspects, but also some subtle differences which, while challenging some of the western concepts, can also be incorporated into developments of the idea of friendship.