After Derrida
This collection of essays explores the main concepts and methods of reading launched by French philosopher Jacques Derrida who died in 2004. Derrida exerted a huge influence on literary critics in the 1980s, but later there was a backlash against his theories. Today, one witnesses a general return to his way of reading literature, the rationale of which is detailed and explained in the essays. The authors, both well-known and younger specialists, give many precise examples of how Derrida, who always remained at the cusp between literature and philosophy, posed fundamental questions and thus changed the field of literary criticism, especially with regard to poetry. The contributors also highlight the way Derrida made spectacular interventions in feminism, psychoanalytic studies, animal studies, digital humanities and post-colonial studies.
- Proposes a new and simple view of deconstruction
- Provides many concrete examples of applications of theories to literary readings
- The authors look to the future of literary studies
Product details
May 2018Paperback
9781108444521
244 pages
228 × 151 × 14 mm
0.37kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part I. Frames:
- 1. The instant of their debt: Derrida with Freud and Heidegger in Greece Vassiliki Kolocotroni
- 2. Derrida and the psychoanalysis of culture Andrea Hurst
- 3. Derrida and sexual difference Ginette Michaud
- 4. Derrida queries De Man: a note on the materiality of the letter vs the violence of the letter Martin Mcquillan
- Part II. Focus:
- 5. Derrida as literary reader Derek Attridge
- 6. Broken singularities (Derrida and Celan) Joshua Schuster
- 7. Derrida and the essence of poetry Yue Zhuo
- 8. From Mallarmé to the event: Badiou after Derrida Laurent Milesi
- Part III. Futures:
- 9. Ecce Animot: animal turns Jane Goldman
- 10. Deconstruction, collectivity, and world literature Jen Hui Bon Hoa
- 11. Literature calls justice: deconstruction's 'coming-to-terms' with literature Elisabeth Weber
- 12. The documental revolution and the archives of the future Maurizio Ferraris.