
Contents
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Degrees of Loneliness Degrees of Loneliness
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Loneliness as Potential Loneliness as Potential
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Seeking Loneliness on the Land Seeking Loneliness on the Land
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Cite
Abstract
Of relatedness and loneliness, it is mostly relatedness that has caught the imagination of anthropologists. Loneliness generally belongs to the realm of philosophy where it is thought of as the human condition: an inescapable fact of the human existence and intimately part of what makes us human. Others would argue that loneliness is part of modern existence. This chapter discusses the different degrees and temporalities of loneliness in Greenland, the most extreme of which is “to live in loneliness," which in practical terms means to be without kin. Although this kind of loneliness in some ways holds similarity to the philosophers’ existential loneliness, and some people even sometimes claim it as theirs and others may refute such claims citing drinking as its cause, the state of living in loneliness is practically impossible. It would not be possible to survive psychologically or physically without family, and so, this kind of loneliness cannot be a “human condition” in Illorsuit (pseudonym). Drawing on Agamben’s discussion of potentiality, which suggests that what makes potentiality lasting and compelling is its own impotentiality rather than its likely actualization, the chapter argues that the state of living in loneliness remains a meaningful potential.
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