
To Follow
The Wake of Jacques Derrida
Peggy Kamuf(Author)
Edinburgh University Press
Published on 5. October 2010
Book
Hardback
224 pages
978-0-7486-4154-3 (ISBN)
Description
This book collects ten years of Peggy Kamuf's writing on the work and friendship of Jacques Derrida. The majority of the chapters discuss a key aspect of Derrida's thought, either from a single work or across several texts. Kamuf engages with a broad array of his work, from the 1960s to the posthumous publication of his teaching seminars. She also considers press interviews and the collaboration on a film. These close readings are punctuated by brief recollections from their long friendship.The chapters trace a reflection that undergoes the sudden event of Derrida's death. Rather than take this interruption as its premise, however, the book sets out from Derrida's own teaching that mourning begins with friendship and not just at the death of the friend. Thus, the strict chronology of the chapters, from 2000 to 2010, highlights a general illusion of 'before' and 'after' that comes undone over the course of the sequence.
Reviews / Votes
Already recognized as one of the most brilliant and resourceful critical voices on both sides of the Atlantic, Peggy Kamuf's new book once again demonstrates her exemplarity as a reader of Derrida's texts. From her remarks on sovereignty and possibility to her commentaries on death and mourning, Kamuf's writing bears witness to an outstanding mind at work. -- Lawrence D. Kritzman, John D. Willard Professor of French, Oratory and Comparative Literature Dartmouth Jacques Derrida used the phrases "friendly vigilance" and "rigorous collaboration" to describe Peggy Kamuf's long engagement with his work. The essays collected in this volume amply demonstrate the twin qualities he thus summed up: a warm appreciation of his achievement and the positive force of his example together with an acute eye, and ear, for the fine details of his language and his argumentation. No-one gets closer to both the spirit and the letter of Derrida's writing. -- Derek Attridge, University of York. Already recognized as one of the most brilliant and resourceful critical voices on both sides of the Atlantic, Peggy Kamuf's new book once again demonstrates her exemplarity as a reader of Derrida's texts. From her remarks on sovereignty and possibility to her commentaries on death and mourning, Kamuf's writing bears witness to an outstanding mind at work. Jacques Derrida used the phrases "friendly vigilance" and "rigorous collaboration" to describe Peggy Kamuf's long engagement with his work. The essays collected in this volume amply demonstrate the twin qualities he thus summed up: a warm appreciation of his achievement and the positive force of his example together with an acute eye, and ear, for the fine details of his language and his argumentation. No-one gets closer to both the spirit and the letter of Derrida's writing.More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Edinburgh
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Cloth over boards
With dust jacket
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
544 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7486-4154-3 (9780748641543)
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E-Book
10/2010
Edinburgh University Press
€0.00
Available for download
Person
Peggy Kamuf writes on literary theory and contemporary French thought, particularly that of Jacques Derrida. She has translated numerous texts by Derrida and several works by Helene Cixous, including Insister of Jacques Derrida (EUP 2007). Director of the Derrida Seminars Translation Project, she also co-edits the series publishing Derrida's teaching seminars in English. She is Marion Frances Chevalier Professor of French and Comparative Literature at the University of Southern California.
Author
Marion Frances Chevalier Professor of French and Comparative LiteratureUniversity of Southern California
Content
Acknowledgments; Works by Jacques Derrida Cited; Introduction: Watchwords; 1. Tape-Recorded Surprise: Derrida Interviewed; 2. "Bartleby," or Decision: A Note on Allegory; 3. Urgent Translation; 4. Coming to the Beginning; 5. To Follow; 6. La Morsure; 7. "One day someone . . ."; 8. The Affect of America; 9. From Now On; 10. Stunned: Derrida on Film; 11. Aller a la ligne; 12. Composition Displacement; 13. The Ear, Who?; 14. To Do Justice to "Rousseau," Irreducibly; 15. The Deconstitution of Psychoanalysis; 16. The Philosopher, As Such, and the Death Penalty; Epitaph; Index.