The Trajectory of Leo Sammer in roberto Bolaño's 2666: Notes on ethics, autonomy and responsability
Notas sobre Ética, Autonomia e Responsabilidade
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.1984-1124.v0i21p1-15Keywords:
Ethics; Autonomy; Totalitarianism; Roberto BolañoAbstract
Roberto Bolaño’s novel 2666 introduces to the reader Leo Sammer, a nazi official who was in charge of the transportation of workers and supplies for the Reich. All of the sudden, Sammer receives by mistake a shipment of five hundred jews coming from Greece and a few days later the order to exterminate them. This episode and its ethical consequences yield the present article. First of all, Sammer is compared to Adolf Eichmann, a prominent member of the Nazi Party, in order to evaluate Sammer’s responsability and guilty in the context of the totalitarian regime. Secondly, the ethical orientation of Sammer is seen from the perspective of Ricoeur’s, Badiou’s and Lévinas’ respective ideas concerning the Self, the Other and the autonomy of of the individual facing the Evil. Finally, the article affirms that the ambivalente discourse of Sammer is in fact the repetition of the totalitarian pattern from which he persistently tries to detach himself.
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