LENE AUESTAD

Gyldenløves gt 2c, 0260 Oslo

auestad (at) chello.no

RESEARCH FELLOW IN PHILOSOPHY

THE UNIVERSITY OF OSLO

 

PROJECT: RESPECT, PLURALITY AND PREJUDICE

Hannah Arendt and Richard Sennett are both concerned with the conditions of possibility for the realization of plurality and appreciation of differences respectively. Richard Sennett’s question, in his book Respect in a World of Inequality, of why people in modern society generally fail to convey mutual regard across boundaries of inequality provides a starting point for my discussion. I shall argue that, pace Sennett, respecting people who differ significantly from oneself is not necessarily without costs, as evaluations of issues and ideals and of oneself and others are interwoven in a more complex way than his theory suggests. I shall suggest that disrespect may take the shape of indifference, active contempt or of a recognition which is limited by compliance to rigid boundaries set by social stereotypes. Furthermore, given the assumption that other social groups and persons serve as containers for unwanted, as well as idealized, qualities of a more or less abstract kind as part of the process of others’ self-definitions, I suggest that we look into the dynamics of this process. Rather than starting from the theoretical premise that a wide range of perceived qualities are irrelevant   when the ascription of dignity to their bearer is concerned, my suggestion is to investigate into the symbolic and emotional meaning which is ascribed to some of these and the role they play in situations in which respect and disrespect, inclusion and exclusion is at stake. I shall use the concept of projective identification as developed by the British school of object-relations theory to develop a theory of the psychological aspects of moral relations of respect and its opposites. Furthermore, I shall argue that social prejudice and a lack of respect can be fought by promoting integration of the self-conceptions of individuals as simultaneously actors and sufferers, subjects and objects, as beings who are creative interpreters and initiators of action as well as vulnerable to its consequences.