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Derrida and Autobiography

Derrida and Autobiography

Derrida and Autobiography

Robert Smith, University of Oxford
June 1995
Paperback
9780521465816
£30.99
GBP
Paperback
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eBook

    The work of Jacques Derrida can be seen to reinvent most theories. In this book Robert Smith offers both a reading of the philosophy of Derrida and an investigation of current theories of autobiography. Smith argues that for Derrida autobiography is not so much subjective self-revelation as relation to the other, not so much a general condition of thought as a general condition of writing - what Derrida calls the 'autobiography of the writing' - which mocks any self-centred finitude of living and dying. In this context, and using literary-critical, philosophical, and psychoanalytical sources, Smith thinks through Derrida's texts in a new, but distinctly Derridean, way, and finds new perspectives to analyse the work of classical writers including Hegel, Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, Freud, and de Man.

    • Brings insight into a new area of Derrida's work, including some of the most difficult (therefore neglected), and the most recent, texts
    • Reinvents autobiographical theories and contextualises the work of past and present thinkers
    • Important addition to popular CUP series Literature, Culture, Theory

    Product details

    June 1995
    Paperback
    9780521465816
    212 pages
    215 × 141 × 14 mm
    0.28kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. The Book of Esther:
    • 1. Incipit
    • 2. Pure reason, absolute knowledge, pure change
    • 3. Suffering:
    • 4. His life story
    • Part II. Clarifying Autobiography:
    • 5. Worstward ho: some recent theories
    • 6. Labyrinths
    • Part III. The Book of Zoë:
    • 7. auto
    • 8. bio
    • 9. graphy.
      Author
    • Robert Smith , University of Oxford