Uncannily similar projects, Beckett's and Derrida's oeuvres have been linked by literary and philosophy scholars since the 1990s. Taking into consideration their shared historical and personal contexts as writers whose main language of expression was 'adopted' or 'imposed', this Element proposes a systematic reading of their main points of connection. Focusing on their engagement with the intricacies of beginnings and origins, on genetic grounds or surfaces analogous to the Platonic khôra, and on their similar critiques of the aporias of sovereignty, it exposes the reasons why multiple readers, like Coetzee, consider Derridean deconstruction a philosophical mirror of Beckett's literary achievements.
The late Jacques Derridaundefineds notion of literature is explored in this new study. Starting with Derridaundefineds self-professed inability to comment on the work of Samuel Beckett, whom Derrida...
Repetition, Difference, and Knowledge dialogues with novels, theatre, philosophy, and literary theory in order to explore how three thinkers - Samuel Beckett, Jacques Derrida, and Gilles Deleuze -...
"On Beckett: Essays and Criticism" is the first collection of writings about the Nobel Prizewinning author that covers the entire spectrum of his work, and also affords a rare glimpse of the private...
When the daughter of a federal judge is abducted, private security firm Blackout must find her.Psychologist Samantha Reynolds doesn't know why someone is targeting her. Even after a risky mission to...
This book-the culmination of forty years of friendship between J. Hillis Miller and Jacques Derrida, during which Miller also closely followed all Derrida's writings and seminars-is "for Derrida" in...