Abstract
In Senses of the Subject (2016), Judith Butler argues that the subject’s ability to account for himself, a subject that according to her theory is already established before his own birth, is based on the literary models that present the characters recounting their own birth. This “impossible perspective” allows the subject to overcome two limits of the narration of oneself: the temporal and the logical- causal. The hypothesis of this article is that we find in the basis of the hermeneutics of the subject that Judith Butler proposes a hermeneutic of the literary text, which entails the revision of the Aristotelian Concepts of mimesis and verisimilitude. Judith Butler’s contribution to literary hermeneutics would have been to found her hermeneutics of the subject in a retroactive literary hermeneutics, close to Judith Revel’s hermeneutics of discontinuity, and not in the line of the discourse that is governed by the dialectics of cause and effect.
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