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(2011) Phenomenologies of the stranger, New York, Fordham University Press.

The stranger in the polis

Hospitality in Greek myth

John Panteleimon Manoussakis

pp. 274-284

By the gates of Thebes the stranger has no name. For to be given a name, or to give oneself a name, is to identify oneself as someone, and therefore as not a stranger anymore. Naming the stranger amounts to depriving him of his strangeness and appropriating him to the familiar, to ourselves. A stranger who can be named by this or that name is no longer strange. He is already within. Even before he enters my city or my home, he has entered my language: as Levinas says, “languageishospitality.”

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Full citation:

Manoussakis, J.P. (2011)., The stranger in the polis: Hospitality in Greek myth, in R. Kearney & K. Semonovitch (eds.), Phenomenologies of the stranger, New York, Fordham University Press, pp. 274-284.

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