Nationalist invocations, democratic disenchantment, widespread creation of dehumanizing exclusion areas, populations kept on the margins even within their territories, inter-racial, intercultural and religious conflicts seen as avatars of civility. Our contemporary world demands that we look once again to hospitality—a hospitality yet to come, unknown, unnamable, which will certainly require an exercise in repositioning and displacing the concepts of subject, citi-zenship, humanity, politics, justice, borders, inside and outside. But this exercise of becoming-hospitality will require us to look back to [re]think the present and the future. Thus, thinkers such as Kant, Lévinas, Ricoeur, Arendt, Derrida, Rancière and others who dedi-cated themselves to theorizing about citizenship, the other’s right to exist, the idea of justice from the arrival of the other and with the other were called upon to help us think about an [im]possible re-enchantment of a hospitality that governments never cease to call into question by questioning its limits and virtue