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From
The Conquest of America: The Question of the Other
by Tzvetan Todarov:
My subject—the discovery self makes of the other—is
so enormous that any general formulation soon ramifies into countless
categories and directions. We can discover the other in ourselves,
realize we are not a homogenous substance, radically alien to whatever
is not is: as Rimbaud said, Je est un autre. But others
are also "I"s: subjects just as I am, whom only my point of
view—according to which all of them are out there and I alone
am in here—separates and authentically distinguishes from
myself. I can conceive of these others as an abstraction, as an
instance of any individual's psychic configuration, as the
Other—other in relation to myself, to me; or else as a
specific social group to which we do not belong. This group in
turn can be interior to society: women for men, the rich for the poor,
the mad for the "normal"; or it can be exterior to society, i.e.,
another society which will be near or far away, depending on the
cases: beings whom everything links to me on the cultural, moral,
historical plane; or else unknown qualities, outsiders whose languages
and customs I do not understand, so foreign that in extreme instances
I am reluctant to admit they belong to the same species as my own. It
is this problematics of the exterior and remote other that I have
chosen—somewhat arbitrarily and because one cannot speak of
everything all at once—in order to open an investigation that can
never be closed.
†