Colin Davis is Professor of French at Royal Holloway, University of London.
Description
"This is an excellent introduction to Levinas' writings. It will appeal as much to students of literary theory and rhetoric as to those whose initial interest is in the philosophical, ethical, and religious aspects of Levinas' thought." -John Llewelyn, University of Edinburgh "Davis has managed to write an introduction to Levinas's thought that retains a respect for its complexity while concomitantly presenting it in a way that clearly illuminates its signature features and Levinas's most compelling concerns. Davis's introduction to Levinas welcomes even the most unfamiliar student of his work into an open discussion, which seems to take as its main objective the demythologizing of the complexity of Levinas's work. This introduction thus achieves its name by not taking too much for granted, by providing probing critique with compassionate admissions, by giving Levinas's work a space in which to live and defend itself, while concomitantly engaging his most ardent critics." -The Review of Metaphysics

