Deconstruction: A ReaderMartin McQuillan Routledge, 25.09.2017 - 596 Seiten Philosophers 'do' 'it', literary critics 'do' 'it', even architects, poets, painters 'do' 'it'. It can involve the concepts of capital, politics, and justice. So what, after all, is deconstruction? Deconstruction: A Reader makes an answer to this question available in the only way possible - by offering a selection of breathtaking range and depth of essential texts. With more than sixty selections by fifty contributors, including nine pieces by Jacques Derrida, this is the ultimate anthology of deconstructive reading, demonstrating that deconstruction is vivid, surprising, varied, and true to the text. |
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... truth. This is the least apt description of deconstruction because deconstruction must always be open to the other, which speaks in the text even before an act of reading has begun. Deconstruction cannot help but do this since the other ...
... truth. This is the least apt description of deconstruction because deconstruction must always be open to the other, which speaks in the text even before an act of reading has begun. Deconstruction cannot help but do this since the other ...
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... truth it never will have governed' (p. 7). It is strategic in the sense that it is only provisional and so can be changed. Différance (as a word) is a play on the French verb différer meaning both 'to defer' and 'to differ'. Différance ...
... truth it never will have governed' (p. 7). It is strategic in the sense that it is only provisional and so can be changed. Différance (as a word) is a play on the French verb différer meaning both 'to defer' and 'to differ'. Différance ...
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... (truth, teleology, death and so on). There is no limit to this field of reference, and language becomes not a system of metaphorical illustration in comparison to a stable 'reality' but an unbounded set of metaphors referring only to one ...
... (truth, teleology, death and so on). There is no limit to this field of reference, and language becomes not a system of metaphorical illustration in comparison to a stable 'reality' but an unbounded set of metaphors referring only to one ...
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... truth and to responsibility. Perhaps it is no accident that communities of drug users became visible in Britain in the 1980s when the State decreed that there was no such thing as society. It is a basic assumption of Western Modernity ...
... truth and to responsibility. Perhaps it is no accident that communities of drug users became visible in Britain in the 1980s when the State decreed that there was no such thing as society. It is a basic assumption of Western Modernity ...
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... truth about the events he narrates? That is not the point of reading this text as a text. These are good reasons but there are better ones. Namely, that what we have been casually calling the real lives behind this narrative were ...
... truth about the events he narrates? That is not the point of reading this text as a text. These are good reasons but there are better ones. Namely, that what we have been casually calling the real lives behind this narrative were ...
Inhalt
Critique of violence | |
The task of destroying the history of ontology | |
The moment after | |
Deconstruction is not what you think | |
Violence of architecture | |
Thinking technicity | |
Toward a narcoanalysis | |
Speech acts politically | |
Unnecessary introductions | |
The same difference | |
Gender theory and the Yale School | |
In praise of water | |
A number of yes Nombre de oui | |
Deconstruction postmodernism and the visual arts | |
Philosophy as a kind of writing | |
Genuine Gasché perhaps | |
Black Socrates? Questioning the philosophical | |
Discussions or phrasing After Auschwitz | |
Derridas topographies | |
Autobiography as defacement | |
Ghost writing | |
The phantom review | |
Hamlets dilemma | |
The ghosts of critique and deconstruction | |
Domestication | |
Recognising the virus | |
What is it oclock? or The door we never enter | |
The French connection | |
from The Wolf Mans Magic Word | |
Remarks on a canny moment | |
Telepathy | |
from Prosthesis | |
Marx and Derrida | |
Spectres of Engels | |
The deconstruction of politics | |
Practical politics of the open end | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
absolute already architecture becomes binary castration concept constituted context criticism critique culture Dasein death deconstruction Descartes différance difference discourse dream drugs effect Emmanuel Levinas essay ethical event everything example fact feminism Freud Gasché Geoffrey Bennington ghost Hamlet happens Hegel Heidegger Heidegger’s idea identity impossible Jacques Derrida Jean-Luc Nancy kind Lacan language Levinas’s limits literal literary literature logic logocentrism Man’s Marxism means metaphor metaphysics metonymy Michel de Certeau nature negative theology never notion one’s ontology opposition Paris Peggy Kamuf perhaps phantom philosophy play political possible precisely present produced psychoanalysis question reading reference relation remains reprinted by permission responsibility rhetoric Rousseau sense sexual signifier simply social space speak Specters of Marx Spectres of Marx structure telepathy textual theory things thought trace tradition trans translation truth understand University Press violence word writing