Riera's patient labor of conceptual excavation shows cogently how today's "ethical turn" risks missing the mark if it returns to the idea of an autonomous subject. In order to respond adequately to the miscellaneous claims of an ethics of the other, one needs the cumulative force of Levinas with Blanchot. Their combined ethics of writing opens the letter to the violent irruption of an outside: there lies the only possible foundation for responsibility.---—Jean-Michael Rabate, Princeton University Combines perspectives from philosophy and literature in a study of 'the other' and the ethics of writing; draws on the theories of Maurice Blanchot, Martin Heidegger, and Emmanuel Levinas. (—The Chronicle of Higher Education) A first-rate work on a complex topic at the heart of contemporary interpretive debate.---—Claudia Brodsky, Princeton University