Get Free Shipping on orders over $0
Re-reading Derrida : Perspectives on Mourning and Its Hospitalities - Authorized Gateway Customer

Re-reading Derrida

Perspectives on Mourning and Its Hospitalities

By: Authorized Gateway Customer

eText | 8 March 2013 | Edition Number 1

At a Glance

eText


$134.99

or 4 interest-free payments of $33.75 with

 or 

Instant online reading in your Booktopia eTextbook Library *

Why choose an eTextbook?

Instant Access *

Purchase and read your book immediately

Read Aloud

Listen and follow along as Bookshelf reads to you

Study Tools

Built-in study tools like highlights and more

* eTextbooks are not downloadable to your eReader or an app and can be accessed via web browsers only. You must be connected to the internet and have no technical issues with your device or browser that could prevent the eTextbook from operating.
Re-reading Derrida: Perspectives on Mourning and its Hospitalities, edited by Tony Thwaites and Judith Seaboyer, is a unique collaborative exploration of the legacies of the late philosopher, Jacques Derrida, across a wide variety of fields.
Anchoring the book are two major essays on mourning by two of the best-known Derridean thinkers today, who were close friends of Derrida: J. Hillis Miller and Derek Attridge. Each of the other essays has been written to respond to these, and—in a novel move—to at least two of the other contributions. As a result, the very form of the book is a way of exploring the thematics of hospitality, and the ways in which disciplines open themselves to one another, extending lines of flight across the archipelagos of knowledge—the politics of the memorial, poetry, trauma, film, neoliberalism, the novel, and psychoanalysis. Throughout the book themes and concerns recur, each time refracted, developed, and questioned under the pressures of new conjunctures.

As the editors' Introduction argues, what the book seeks to show is not that a certain general body of theoretical work can be applied in all sorts of areas, but something more interesting: that from the outset, theoretical work itself takes on its meaning only in its grappling with the specific, the singular, even the unique. Miller's and Attridge's essays have at their heart, after all, the loss of a friend.
on
Desktop
Tablet
Mobile

More in Literary Theory

Plantations : Extraction, Extinction, Emergence - Sophie Chao

eBOOK

Formations - Catherine Malabou

eBOOK

RRP $54.99

$49.99

Exorbitance : A Grammar of Overdoing - Steven Connor

eBOOK

RRP $54.02

$48.61

10%
OFF