TY - JOUR TI - Identity, the Self and the Levinasian Other in Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim AU - Kowol, Agata TI - Identity, the Self and the Levinasian Other in Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim AB - The aim of the paper is to analyse the concepts of identity and the self in Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim in relation to the thought of Emanuel Levinas. In the novel, comprehension of the other appears elusive while the search for a fixed standard of conduct, the need of which seems so burning, is often frustrated. Moreover, the external world seems malevolent, while self-knowledge is virtually unattainable. It could be claimed that only thanks to a confrontation with the Other, be it another man, the universe, or one’s own self, can man establish a sense of identity. Especially the confrontation and relation with another man, the Other who, in Levinasian terms, is never fully knowable, but for whom one is primordially responsible, helps render existence meaningful and one’s own nature more acceptable. This relation is charged with important ethical resonance, since the marine ethos proves misleading when deprived of any relation to the Other.   VL - 2017 IS - Volume 12, Issue 2 PY - 2017 SN - 1897-3035 C1 - 2084-3933 SP - 141 EP - 152 DO - 10.4467/20843933ST.17.011.6963 UR - https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/studia-litteraria-uic/article/identity-the-self-and-the-levinasian-other-in-joseph-conrads-lord-jim KW - Lord Jim KW - identity KW - the Other KW - the self KW - Levinas