legacy
DERRIDA: NEGOTIATING THE LEGACY
| Publication Type | Book |
| Year of Publication | 2007 |
| Authors | Norris; Beardsworth; Thomson; Dillon; Zehfuss; Ansorge; Bulley; Biccum; Howells; Edkins; Watt; Thomassen |
| Series Editor | Fagan; Glorieux; Hasimbegovic; Suetsugu |
| City | Edinburgh |
| Publisher | Edinburgh University Press |
| Number of Pages | 256 |
| ISBN Number | 978-0748625475 |
| Key Words | Derrida; negotiation; legacy |
| Abstract | The death of Jacques Derrida in 2004 represented a major interruption in contemporary intellectual life. This death calls for an engagement with Derrida’s work and an attempt to understand his legacy. Such a discussion is fraught with tension between remaining faithful after death and putting Derrida’s writing to work in new directions, posing challenges and exposing limitations. In short this legacy is, necessarily, a negotiation. The aim of this book is to grapple with this specific theme and to explore the implications of Derrida’s death for the future of critical thought itself. The authors demonstrate that there is no single way to adopt or inherit Derrida’s thought. Rather, through their engagement with contemporary themes within Politics and International Studies, Philosophy, Literary Studies and Postcolonial Studies, each chapter illuminates the degree to which on-going reflection, radical critique, and above all radical self-critique are demanded by deconstruction. This book provides the key starting point for any serious assessment of what the implications of the work of one of the twentieth century’s most influential thinkers might be. |
| Notes |
'This wide-ranging encounter with Jacques Derrida’s legacy is consistently innovative, discerning, and challenging. Taken as a whole, the collection is both a fitting tribute and an original contribution to critical political philosophy.'
'Far from the hackneyed responses that greeted Derrida’s passing, this volume negotiates the profound legacy of his path-breaking thought for ethics, politics and global issues. Through a series of essays - some of them provocative, all of them original - this volume rightly understands that fidelity to Derrida’s memory is best expressed in terms of a critical engagement that both confronts and draws inspiration from the many challenges his work continues to pose.' |
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