Jean-Paul Sartre and that word,
'diaspora': movement in time and space
Very pleased to be able to contribute, on Thursday February 8 2024, to the
series of on-line seminars ‘Repositioning Ireland’s Place in the World: Old
Configurations, New Realities’, part of the G.I.S EIRE research network,
organised by Grainne O'Keeffe Vigneron, University of Rennes, and Anne Groutel,
University of Paris 1...
Below, some of my notes...
I see this presentation as an exploration
of interdisciplinary methods - of interdisciplinary problems and interdisciplinary
solutions...
I assume no knowledge of the texts
explored.
My very brief paper covers research
areas where we have vast amounts of original source material, and vast amounts
of further research and comment. I give
here only enough to track the train of thought...
My approach is personal and discursive. The obvious links to the general guides and
sources are easily available elsewhere.
But... If you think that there are places where
you would like to see more here, I am happy to revisit this blog entry and fatten it
up.
In my other working lives we have recurring
problems when people try to link on small devices to long web addresses, URLs. So, here I have also given the TinyURL, when
that seemed sensible.
1.
The main texts under consideration
are...
The original Gallimard edition of
Jean-Paul Sartre, L'être et le néant: essai d'ontologie phénoménologique, 1943,
translated as Being and Nothingness.
The Hazel Barnes translation...
Sartre, Jean-Paul, and Hazel E. Barnes.
Being and Nothingness: An Essay on Phenomenological Ontology. Edited by Hazel
E. Barnes. Philosophical Library, 1956.
and the new Sarah Richmond
translation...
Sartre, Jean-Paul. Being and
Nothingness: An Essay in Phenomenological Ontology. Edited by Sarah Richmond.
London: Routledge, 2018.
We also need to be aware of Sartre,
Jean-Paul, Réflexions sur la question juive,1945/1946 - translated as Portrait
of the Anti-Semite, London, 1948, and Anti-Semite and Jew, New York, 1948.
And the Hazel Barnes' autobiography...
Barnes, Hazel E. The Story I Tell
Myself: A Venture in Existentialist Autobiography. University of Chicago Press,
1998.
2.
The 2 background articles by Patrick
O'Sullivan are...
O’Sullivan, Patrick. “Developing Irish
Diaspora Studies: A Personal View.” New Hibernia Review 7, no. 1 (2003):
130–48.
https://www.mediafire.com/file/c760ub1xoac22cp/2003%252C_O%2527Sullivan%252C_Developing_Irish_Diaspora_Studies.pdf/file
Tiny URL
http://tinyurl.com/bdhkzj9s
O’Sullivan, Patrick. “On First Looking
into Mercier’s The Irish Comic Tradition.” New Hibernia Review 8, no. 4 (2004):
152–57.
https://www.mediafire.com/file/pdv44q6atlon2tw/2004%252C_O%2527Sullivan%252C_On_First_Looking_into_Mercier%2527s_The_Irish_Comic_Tradition.pdf/file
Tiny URL
http://tinyurl.com/yd2x5h4k
There are a number of notes on my blog,
here at Fiddler's Dog, which consider further my approach to Irish Diaspora
Studies - most recently this one...
https://fiddlersdog.blogspot.com/2024/01/visiting-professor-of-irish-diaspora.html
See also
Greenslade, Liam. “White Skins, White
Masks: Psychological Distress among the Irish in Britain.” In The Irish in the
New Communities, edited by Patrick O’Sullivan, 2:201–25. The Irish World Wide.
London & Washington: Leicester University Press, 1992.
Which can be found here on my archive
https://www.mediafire.com/file/u1fra5u07609k3z/IWW2-9%252C_Greenslade%252C_White_skin%252C_white_masks.pdf/file
TinyURL
http://tinyurl.com/bdfpr4um
3.
That word 'diaspora'...
The 3 editions of Robin Cohen's book
show the debate expanding over time...
Cohen, Robin. Global Diasporas. London:
UCL Press, 1997.
Cohen, Robin, Global Diasporas: An
Introduction edition 2, illustrated, revised Publisher Routledge, 2008
Cohen, Robin. Global Diasporas An
Introduction 25TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group,
2022.
see also...
Dufoix, Stéphane, and William Rodarmor.
Diasporas. 1st ed. University of California Press, 2008.
Dufoix, Stéphane. “Des Usages Antiques
de Diaspora Aux Enjeux Conceptuels Contemporains.” Pallas, no. 89 (November 7,
2012): 17–33.
Kenny, Kevin. Diaspora: A Very Short
Introduction. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 2013.
and see...
Fitzgerald, Patrick, and Brian Lambkin.
Migration in Irish History, 1607-2007. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008, pages 275-276,
We can start thinking about diaspora as
a 'type of consciousness' with Steven Vertovec - for example...
Vertovec, Steven. “Conceiving and
Researching Transnationalism.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 22, no. 2 (1999):
447–62.
What is often forgotten are the obvious links
between the word 'diaspora', now a word in so many languages, and the English
word 'broadcast'. One way to explore Diaspora Studies is through the parable of the sower and the seed (Matthew 13: 1–9, 18–23).
I have put that photograph of a farmer
in Perthshire at the top of this page, to remind me not to forget...
4.
This is the Perseus project at Tufts
University
https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/
This link takes you directly to the
paragraph in Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, cited by Kevin Kenny.
https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0200%3Abook%3D2%3Achapter%3D27
Tiny URL
http://tinyurl.com/5n8t5ufj
(Irish history specialists will notice that if, in that paragraph from Thucydides, we replace the word 'Athens' with the word 'England', and replace 'Aegina' with 'Ireland', the paragraph still makes sense - and becomes a summary of the history of these islands...)
Note that you can use the Perseus web
site to explore all the uses and variants of the word 'speiro', including
'(dia)speiro'...
This is Herodotus, Histories...
https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0126%3Abook%3D7%3Achapter%3D91
Tiny URL
http://tinyurl.com/4xkzemxn
There is, of course, a huge debate - and
a fascinating, but delicately poised, research literature. See, for example...
Thompson, Thomas L, and Philippe
Wajdenbaum. The Bible and Hellenism: Greek Influence on Jewish and Early
Christian Literature. Edited by Thomas L Thompson and Philippe Wajdenbaum.
Abingdon: Routledge, 2014.
5.
Black Swans...
The examples I should reference properly
include...
Spicer, Edward H. “The Yaqui Indians of
Arizona.” Kiva 5, no. 6 (1940): 21–24.
Which helps us find...
Calloway, C G. The Western Abenakis of
Vermont, 1600-1800: War, Migration, and the Survival of an Indian People. The
Civilization of the American Indian Series. University of Oklahoma Press, 1994
And see...
Lavelle, Michael. “Nationality and the
Irish Abroad.” In Irish Man - Irish Nation Lectures on Some Aspects of Irish
Nationality Delivered Before the Columban League, Maynooth, During 1946.
Dublin: Mercier Press, 1947.
6.
This is a source for that G. K.
Chesterton quote - but you will find it all over the place...
https://chesterton.wordpress.com/category/the-common-man/
'Philosophy is merely thought that has
been thought out. It is often a great bore.
But man has no alternative, except
between being influenced by thought that has been thought out and being
influenced by thought that has not been thought out.'
(Here in Bradford, Yorkshire, the
revived Bradford Irish Society is considering a project about the Right Reverend Monsignor John O'Connor, 1870–1952, Chesterton's friend, often considered the model for
Chesterton's detective, Father Brown.
The Reverend O’Connor’s final parish was St Cuthbert's, Bradford – St.
Cuthbert’s Church is a few yards from my home.)
On my blog is a brief note which also
engages with the habits of the philosophical method...
https://fiddlersdog.blogspot.com/2022/06/a-shipowner-was-about-to-send-to-sea.html
As an example of thinking about this academic area - I remember liking the work of David Concepción...
Concepción, David W. “Reading Philosophy
with Background Knowledge and Metacognition.” Teaching Philosophy 27, no. 4
(2004): 351–68.
7.
Reputation of Sartre... Well...
Where to begin...
The key text for me is the brief mention
in...
Magee, Bryan. The Great Philosophers: An
Introduction to Western Philosophy. Oxford Paperbacks. Oxford University Press,
2000, pages 275-6
Originally published 1987, and based on a television series...
I see that the original television interview is available
on YouTube...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H4_Tsjmqxak&t=2432s
...key moment, at 37 minutes onwards, when the
interviewee says that Heidegger described Being and Nothingness as 'muck',
'Dreck'... And Magee says '...It is difficult to believe that Sartre will
survive as a philosopher...'
See also
Manser, Anthony R. “Sartre and Le
Néant.” Philosophy 36, no. 137 (1961): 177–87.
I will look at Hazel Barnes' comments on
Sartre, and my own difficulties with Sartre...
8.
This is the web site of the Delancey
Street Foundation, San Francisco, USA...
https://www.delanceystreetfoundation.org/wwa.php
'We are a community where people with
nowhere to turn, turn their lives around.
Delancey Street is the country's leading
residential self-help organization for former substance abusers, ex-convicts,
homeless and others who have hit bottom...'
and this link takes you to the
restaurant...
https://www.delanceystreetfoundation.org/enterrestaurant.php
'Delancey Street Restaurant is a key
training school of the Delancey Street Foundation, the country's largest
self-help residential organization for people who have hit bottom to completely
rebuild their lives. Like the immigrants who came through Ellis Island to
Delancey Street on New York's Lower East Side at the turn of the century to
start new lives, newcomers to Delancey Street Foundation are
"immigrants" of all races, all ages, all backgrounds, who come
together in this community of last resort...'
9.
I look briefly at the renewed
interest in Réflexions sur la question juive, Anti-Semite and Jew...
Let me note the helpful work of Stuart Charmé...
Charmé, Stuart Z. Authentically Jewish:
Identity, Culture, and the Struggle for Recognition. Rutgers University Press, 2022.
10.
Songs
We have recorded, and have released, one
of my Sartre songs... This is Pierre, on
YouTube...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hb5zeD6G3Ko
But you will find it on every music
streaming platform. Worth listening to
on one of the better quality platforms, to hear the detail of the arrangement.
This is the link to the discussion on my
blog...
http://fiddlersdog.blogspot.com/2024/01/pierre-sung-by-shannon-marie-harney.html
The important point here is that we have
an explanation for the Duke of Wellington's appearance, or non-appearance, in
Sartre's Being and Nothingness...
Patrick O'Sullivan
Visiting Professor of Irish Diaspora
Studies
London Metropolitan University
February 8 2024
PS
Below my own outline, which became my road map through this research material...
Patrick O’Sullivan
Jean-Paul Sartre and that word, 'diaspora': movement in time and space
OUTLINE January
11 2024
‘In
the Ancient world, the term “diaspora” referred to the profound cohesion and
dispersion of the Jewish people. We can
make use of this word…’
Sartre,
J.-P. (2018) Being and Nothingness: An Essay in Phenomenological Ontology,
Translated by Sarah Richmond. London: Routledge, page 201.
On
page 172 of the original Gallimard edition of L'être et le néant: essai
d'ontologie phénoménologique, 1943, Being and Nothingness, Jean-Paul Sartre becomes
preoccupied with a new word, ‘diaspora’.
In my 1969 copy of the 1956 Hazel Barnes translation of Being and
Nothingness the word first appears on page 136.
In the new 2018 translation, by Sarah Richmond, it is page 201. The word ‘diaspora’ is there in Sartre’s
thought for a further 80 pages – then disappears.
These
uses of the word ‘diaspora’ by Sartre have not been much noticed. The word does not appear in the standard
works on Sartre. And the name ‘Sartre’
does not appear in the standard works on Diaspora. The word ‘diaspora’ does appear in Sarah
Richmond’s index to her translation.
In
this paper, I outline the place of Sartre in my own personal history, and in
the history of my generation - and in my thinking as I developed Irish Diaspora
Studies. Through an interdisciplinary
approach to the study of Sartre, I suggest a method behind a reading of Being
and Nothingness (philosophy as genre). I
look briefly at the light thrown by that reading on a later work, Réflexions
sur la question juive,1945/1946 - translated as Portrait of the Anti-Semite,
London, 1948, and Anti-Semite and Jew, New York, 1948. And I look at the few brief mentions of
Sartre’s interest in the word 'diaspora’ that I have been able to find.
I
end with a summary of Sartre’s notion of ‘diaspora’, drawn from the book, Being
and Nothingness. The form of words that
Sartre uses - ‘reflection is a diasporic phenomenon’ – seems to anticipate later
developments in diaspora theorising. The
interdisciplinary approach would question any simple overlap – this paper thus
becomes an exploration of interdisciplinary processes. At the very least, Sartre’s use of the word
’diaspora’ must have a place in the history of uses of that disputed word.
This
paper takes its place in the series of on-line seminars ‘Repositioning
Ireland’s Place in the World: Old Configurations, New Realities’, part of the
G.I.S EIRE research network, organised by Grainne O'Keeffe Vigneron, University
of Rennes, and Anne Groutel, University of Paris 1.
Patrick O’Sullivan January 11 2024
© Patrick O’Sullivan 2024
Visiting Professor of Irish Diaspora Studies, London
Metropolitan University
Jean-Paul Sartre, page 172 of the original Gallimard edition of L'être et le néant: essai d'ontologie phénoménologique, 1943, Being and Nothingness...