ANTIGONE'S CLAIM BY JUDITH BUTLER

27/ 12/ 2021

Antigone’s Claim, whose subtitle is Kinship Between Life and Death, is a combination of the lectures of an American female philosopher Judith Butler at many prestigious universities such as California, Cornell and Princeton University. It is about Antigone by Sophocles, a deeply influential play in the history of Western philosophy. The birth of Antigone’s Claim has been such a significant event in American academic world for the past 20 years.

Judith Butler's Antigone's Claim is an attempt to re-perceive the relationship between the family and the state through the figure of Antigone in ancient Greek tragedy, and from that to present a new way of reading this figure in the context of contemporary politics.

In this work, Judith Butler reexamines the historical dominance of ideas raised by Hegel, Lacan and Irigaray on the issue of representativeness of Antigone. To Hegel, Antigone represents the kinship system in the field of family while Creon represents the political system in the field of society. The conflict between these two characters is an expression of the conflict between the family and the state, and according to Hegel's dialectic logic, this conflict will be reconciled in a way that the family will be ... dissipated in the state. Inheriting Hegel’s idea, Lacan put her into the Symbolic, the idealized realm of kinship which is separated from the social realm. Irigaray considered her as a representative of the transition from maternity to paternity through the symbol of “blood”. As a result of this reading, Antigone, in other words…..?, has no place in social life as a citizen. Butler argued that this was a misreading of Antigone, because as a political figure, she “points somewhere else, not to politics as a question of representation but to that political possibility that emerges when the limits to representation and representability are exposed.” (p.2)

In protest of this reading, she reinterpreted the position “caught in a web of relations that produce no coherent position within kinship” (p.57), a web where “the terms of kinship become irreversibly equivocal” (p.57). Family is simultaneously Antigone's destiny and a collection of practices she performs. In that position, her actions led her to "repeat the deviation of a normal." In a social arrangement, everything is justified by norm, will deviations’ existence be justified or will they be extinguished in some way to ensure smooth operation of the normative system? Antigone's claim is the claim for the right to exist of those who are pushed to the course of fate as many other blessed people that hold standard positions. Her claim was nothing but the right to cry, but it was still something far away.

The Vietnamese translation of this work is available at Ex Libris Hermes. Please drop by to pick it up.

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