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International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

182241

Breaking bonds

White lines of love and hate

Sara Waller

pp. 191-198

Abstract

Why do Jesse and Walt remain a team for such a long time? They are not friends; Walt has forced Jesse to be his partner through threat of exposure. Jesse manifests the worst behaviors of Walt's students: irresponsibility, flippancy, drug-use, ignorance and immaturity. Jesse has equal reason to despise Walter; he's arrogant, uncaring, self-interested, and dismissive. Walter has a son to love; Jesse isn't an obvious surrogate child; Jesse's own life is full of friends and lovers. I explore the strange bond between Jesse and Walt, and argue that Jesse's practice of an ethic-of-care (and Walter's poor enactment of this kind of ethical system) finally, emotionally separates them from one another. Jesse is "family-man" Walter believes himself to be.

Publication details

Published in:

Arp Robert (2017) Philosophy and breaking bad. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 191-198

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-40343-4_13

Full citation:

Waller Sara (2017) „Breaking bonds: White lines of love and hate“, In: R. Arp (ed.), Philosophy and breaking bad, Dordrecht, Springer, 191–198.