Abstract
AbstractThis article contributes to conversations on hospitality in educational settings, with a focus on higher education and the online context. We integrate Derrida’s ethics of hospitality framework with a focus on practices of hospitality, including its affective and material, embodied dimension (Zembylas: Stud Philos Educ 39:37–50, 2019). This article offers empirical examples of practices of what we termed ‘virtual academic hospitality’: during a series of online collaborative and cross borders workshops with teachers of English based in the Gaza Strip (Palestine), we performed academic hospitality through virtual convivial rituals and the sharing of virtual gifts, which are illustrated here. We propose a revision of the concept of academic hospitality arguing that: firstly, academic hospitality is not limited to intellectual conversations; secondly, that the relationship between hospitality and mobility needs to be revised, since hospitality mediated by the technological medium can be performed, and technology may even stretch hospitality towards the unreachable ‘unconditional hospitality’ theorised by Derrida (Of hospitality: Anne Dufourmantelle invited Jacques Derrida to respond. Stanford University Press, Stanford, 2000); and thirdly, that indigenous epistemics, with their focus on the affective, may offer alternative understandings of conviviality within the academy. These points may contribute to the collective development of a new paradigmatic understanding of hospitality, one which integrates Western and indigenous traditions of hospitality, and which includes the online environment.
Funder
Arts and Humanities Research Council
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference43 articles.
1. Ahmed, S. 2014. Atmospheric walls. Feministkilljoys, n.p. https://feministkilljoys.com/2014/09/15/atmospheric-walls/. Accessed July 2020.
2. Bennett, J.B. 2000. The academy and hospitality. Cross Currents 50(I-2): I–II. Available at http://www.crosscurrents.org/Bennett.htm. Accessed July 2020.
3. Bennett, J.B. 2003. Academic life: hospitality, ethics, and spirituality. Bolton, MA: Anker.
4. Boudou, B. 2012. Éléments pour une anthropologie politique de l’hospitalité. Revue Du MAUSS 2 (40): 267–284.
5. Bryzzheva, L. 2018. This is white space: on restorative possibilities of hospitality in a raced space. Studies in Philosophy and Education 37: 247–256.
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献