Georges-Elia Sarfati

Georges-Elia Sarfati
Born (1957-10-20) 20 October 1957
Tunis (Tunisia)
Residence France Israel
Awards Louise Labé Prize (2002)
Website georgeseliasarfati.com
Academic background
School or tradition Jewish philosophy, phenomenology of life, social philosophy.
Influences Judah Halevi, Yisroel Salanter, Elyahu Eliezer Dessler, Martin Buber, Edmund Husserl, Gunther Anders, Emmanuel Lévinas, Joseph Gabel, Viktor Frankl, Pierre Hadot, Shlomo Pines, Antonio Gramsci, Gaston Bouthoul, Léon Poliakov, Gustave Guillaume, John-Langshaw Austin, Jean-Pierre Faye, Oswald Ducrot.
Academic work
Main interests Ethics, hermeneutics, historical criticism, discourse analysis, poetics.
Notable works Discours ordinaire et identités juives, La tradition éthique du judaïsme, Tessiture.
Notable ideas Negative judeocentrism, doxopathy, semiotherapy

Georges-Elia Sarfati is a philosopher, linguist, poet, and an existentialist psychoanalyst, author of written works in the domains of ethics, jewish thought, social criticism, and discourse analysis. He has translated Viktor E. Frankl. He is the grand-nephew of the sociologist Gaston Bouthoul.

Biography

G.-E. Sarfati (born in Tunis, 20 October 1957) is a University professor (French linguistic), member of the teaching staff of the Elie Wiesel Center for Jewish Studies, and educational director of the University Center Sigmund Freud in Paris. In 1989, he presented a doctorate thesis under the supervision of Oswald Ducrot at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (Paris). In 1996, he was appointed as a research supervisor at the University Sorbonne-Paris IV. He is also a graduate of the Salomon Schechter Institute (Jerusalem, Israel), he has a doctorate in Hebrew and Jewish Studies at the University of Strasbourg.

Main ideas

Aware of the persistence of the "jewish question" in Europe, following Leon Poliakov, and Jean-Pierre Faye, he is — as well as P.-A. Taguieff and S. Trigano — one of the first intellectual to diagnose the emergence of new anti-Semitism through its cultural, ideological, and political variations. The contemporary expression of judeophobia doesn't solely stem from the recycling of the conspiracy theory, it builds upon its establishment in the history of mentalities and speeches. Its platitudes are defining a "negative judeocentrism", related to the spread of the post-modern ideology, characterized by the obviousness of the conformists. The anti-zionist rhetoric, genuinely a part of popular culture, especially in France, is one of the main characteristics of contemporary pseudo-progressivism.[1]

The denunciation of that state of affairs doubles up as a critic of post-genocidal ideology, whereby memory of the Shoah serves as an identity to the survivors of the big slaughter, isolating their dignity as victims, under the express condition that they demonstrate no sympathy towards Israel. Ignorance of Jewish culture is based on three parameters: the biased teaching of Jewish history at school, partial and biased information processing, and exclusive media focus on the conflict in the Middle East.

The history of psychological warfare based upon the examination of rhetorical disinformation, propaganda("totalitarian" or "commercial") rests in principle on the inversion of values, and the strategic designation of a "scapegoat." After two millennia of cultural development, it is not surprising that Jewish symbolism has been subject to all types of distortions. The first lessons of the Jewish Bible (the concepts of the individual, free choice, equality in human dignity, justice, love for neighbors, moral obligation towards everything alien, in the categories of hope and utopia) have been subverted into their opposite, through ideological discourse. This can be seen from the infamous stereotypes that prevailed in the Middle Ages to modern accusations of "communitarianism", "racism", and "cruelty".

It follows that the "globalization" of the market doubles as a "globalization" of this ignorance. In this hazardous context, it is imperative to revive a tradition of scholarship and intellectual clarity, one which specifically rehabilitates textual sources and values of Jewish humanism, restoring a historical heritage broken by a culture of slogan. This perspective includes the exhumation and comments of the scholarly tradition that preceded and accompanied the development of Western civilization, especially the teachings of the Musar, relayed through the rabbinical chain of transmission, the ancient discipline of spiritual exercises.

The analysis of this social pathology brings up questions regarding language mechanisms in the production of opinion (doxa), and the way in which it dominates public space.

This critical point of view contributes to the renewal of social philosophy, showing that in a world saturated by media communication, discourse experiences organize the social representations highly, and determine new forms of alienation and reification. G.-E. Sarfati coined the neologism doxopathia that, in a context of cultural destruction, the enslavement and dependency phenomenon of the masses is a direct result of the automation of the dominant opinion. Extending Antonio Gramsci's thinking about the dissemination of standards, and knowledge through society,[2] he developed a general theory of the common understanding, by creating the methodological tools of a counter-discourse.[3]

But the semantics and anthropological questions surrounding the establishment of a meaning find their other honored expression in the context ofexistential analysis, and logotherapy,[4] where one must give meaning to one's own life, confronted with the requisites of its own existence, by splitting up all determinations that affect the project, with one's current degree of autonomy. From this point of view, the subjective search for meaning remains inseparable from the ethical and political struggle for freedom, from the snares of conformity and totalitarianism.

In light of foregoing aspects of research, the work of poetic language is understood as shimmering memories of a subject through the evocation of the crux of the matter at hand. The exploration of the signs of presence to the world, according to the metamorphoses of history, is a defense of the singularity that confronts the new "idols of the tribe", that is the impersonal rule of "hearsay" and production of an objectified language.

Bibliography

Authority record

Books

Studies, essays, interviews

Linguistics, discourse analysis

Translations

Poetry

Anthologies

Work supervising

Articles (selected)

References

  1. Entretien avec Mar Knobel : Israël représente la part maudite de l’Europe
  2. Cf. "Georges Elia Sarfati", in T. Briault, Les philosophies du sens commun. Pragmatique et déconstruction, Paris, L'Harmatan, Col. "La philosophie en commun", 2004, Chap. 3, pp. 282-286; "La sémantique du sens commun", in J. Longhi, Objets discursifs et doxa. Essai de sémantique discursive, Paris, L'Harmattan, Col. "Sémantiques", Chap. 1.4, pp. 93-107; in F. Hailon, L'ordre idéologique. Eléments de cognition politique, Paris, L'Harmattan, Col. "Logiques sociales", 2014, pp. 71,76; 96-99.
  3. Article de Jacques Guilhaumou : le sens commun un concept généralisé. Le revival de la tradition des Lumières et de la Révolution
  4. « Entretien avec Claire Lesegretain (La Croix) : Il y a chez tout être humain une volonté de sens »

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