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Philosophy & Social Criticism, Vol. 33, No. 7, 860-879 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0191453707081683
© 2007 SAGE Publications

Tragedy and politics

Neal Curtis

Nottingham University, UK

This article considers the war against terror in relation to classical tragedy. It uses Heidegger's analysis of Sophocles's play Antigone to argue that human beings are essentially `homeless' and yet our destiny lies in the continual attempt to overcome this homelessness by establishing foundational principles that might bring our journeying to an end. The tragedy of this situation is that the search for foundations and a search for a home invariably bring differing worlds in conflict with each other as their paths to truth collide. Lucien Goldmann's analysis of the tragedy of refusal is also considered in relation to a non-foundational politics that may permit us not only to endure, but actually to affirm our homelessness as an attempt to resist the terror and anabolic militarism that marks the current age.

Key Words: fundamentalism • Lucien Goldmann • Martin Heidegger • homelessness • Sophocles • tragedy • war


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