Deconstruction: A ReaderMartin McQuillan Edinburgh University Press, 2000 - 579 Seiten This is not a Derrida Reader. It is the first volume to offer a selection of texts from the field of deconstruction in all its radical diversity. The collection examines the fortunes of the term deconstruction, and the ideas associated with it, in the work of the leading commentators on Derrida's texts. It includes previously untranslated, newly translated and uncollected work by Derrida and others. Deconstruction: A Readerbegins with examples of pre-Derridean deconstruction, then divides into sections covering philosophy, literature, culture, sexual difference, psychoanalysis, politics, ethics, and memorial texts and interviews by Derrida. It covers a broad range of topics including: AIDS, architecture, art, feminism, ghosts, law, Marxism, postmodernism, race, revolution, Shakespeare, technology, telepathy and theology. This is an indispensable anthology and a guide both to the history of deconstruction and to its current scene. It provides a significant introduction to the challenge of deconstruction. Key Features
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Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 83
... event which poses the challenge to think its own im - pertinence ? This im - pertinence consists in the impossibility , for the event , of appropriating itself and of belonging to itself . This does not mean , however , that it ...
... event would still hollow out , if it were possible , the sad infinity of another event . More than anything else , Deleuze the thinker is the thinker of the event and always of this event in particular . From beginning to end , he ...
... event . A desert within a desert , one signalling to the other , the desert of a messianics without messianism and therefore without religious doctrine or dogma . This dry and desolate expectation , this expectation without horizon ...
Inhalt
from Capital | 47 |
The meaning of general economy | 56 |
Critique of violence | 62 |
Urheberrecht | |
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