Foran, LisaLisaForan2024-02-292024-02-292022 Vishv2022Journal of Comparative Literature and Aesthetics0252-8169http://hdl.handle.net/10197/25489How we name each other sets in motion how we treat each other, each act of naming both opens up a certain mode of engagement and closes off others. When we tell each other our nationality or our political affiliation, our religion or our ethnicity, our gender or our class, and so on; we reveal an aspect of who we are. Sometimes we do this explicitly, at other times we do so implicitly or unintentionally. We each have many aspects and often these sides of who we are affirm our membership of a group – Republicans or Democrats; Catholics or Hindus; male or trans and so on. This group membership may be an integral part of how we understand ourselves and relate to others, or it may be experienced as merely incidental. As Iris Marrion Young has argued, group membership is part of the contemporary human condition that in itself is relatively neutral but is also not simple or exclusive. Rather, group membership is “multiple, cross-cutting, fluid, and shifting […]. In complex, highly differentiated societies like our own, all persons have multiple group identifications.” (Young, 48)enContemporary politicsPolitical organisationSimone de BeauvoirBarbara CassinHuman experienceAmbiguityUntranslatable otherAn Ethical Suspension of the Political: Untranslatability with Beauvoir and CassinJournal Article45110162023-07-24https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/