Posts tagged ‘Jacques Derrida’
‘For all that gives rise to an inscription in general’
by Hans-Jörg Rheinberger / RP 187 (Sept/Oct 2014) / Article
Of Grammatology, which history seems likely to confirm as Jacques Derrida’s most influential book, was published almost four decades ago.* This book marked the beginning of my pathway into philosophy and it has accompanied me throughout my investigations of science and the history of science. I shall therefore begin these remarks with quite a long …
Generative grafting
Reproductive technology and the dilemmas of surrogacy
by Elina Staikou / RP 183 (Jan/Feb 2014) / Commentary
In 2013, at the advanced age of 101, Howard W. Jones, a medical pioneer in reproductive technology, published Personhood Revisited: Reproductive Technology, Bioethics, Religion and the Law. Looking back at the development of what came to be called the ARTs (assisted reproductive technologies), Jones chronicles the initial controversies surrounding their emergence and his own participation …
Conditions of the university
by Martin McQuillan / RP 181 (Sept/Oct 2013) / Review
Andrew McGettigan, The Great University Gamble: Money, Markets and the Future of Education, Pluto Press, London, 2013. 232 pp., £54.00 hb., £15.00 pb., 978 0 74533 294 9 hb., 978 0 74533 293 2 pb.
In an interview with Giovanna Borradori given after 9/11, Jacques Derrida said: ‘I am incapable of knowing who today …
Grande biog
by David Cunningham / RP 176 (Nov/Dec 2012) / Review
Benoît Peeters, Derrida: A Biography, trans. Andrew Brown, Polity Press, Cambridge and Malden MA, 2012. 603 pp., £25.00 hb., 978 0 74565 615 1.
‘What matter who’s speaking, someone said, what matter who’s speaking?’ Despite post-structuralist philosophies’ association with Beckettian questions such as these, they remain surprisingly bound to what Foucault …
Fabrication defect
Fabrication defect: François Laruelle’s philosophical materials
by Andrew McGettigan / RP 175 (Sep/Oct 2012) / Article
François Laruelle, professor of philosophy at Paris X, Nanterre, has been publishing since the early 1970s and now has around twenty book-length titles to his name. English-language reception of his work owes most to the efforts of Ray Brassier, who published an account of Laruelle’s ‘non-philosophy’ in Radical Philosophy in 2003 and critically incorporated aspects …
The Valuation of Nature
The Natural Choice White Paper
by Kathryn Yusoff / RP 170 (Nov/Dec 2011) / Commentary
How to value biodiversity and the mutable thing called nature, in the context of biodiversity loss in the UK and elsewhere, is a question that has been vexing biologists, conservation groups, environmental lawyers and indigenous groups. The question is posed in the context of that modestly named ‘sixth mass extinction event’, the Holocene …
Euphemism, the university and disobedience
by Alexander Garcia Duttmann / RP 169 (Sep/Oct 2011) / Commentary
Euphemism is the linguistic condition of contemporary society and spreads through the university as much as through any other institution. But what, exactly, is a euphemism? After having turned his attention to the different meanings of the Greek word from which ‘euphemism’ is derived, and having considered the fact that they seem to contradict each other and bring about a …
Subjectivity as medium of the media
Dossier: What is German Media Philosophy?
by Boris Groys / RP 169 (Sep/Oct 2011) / Article, Dossier, What is German Media Philosophy?
Contemporary, let us say ‘post-modern’, discourses on media, communication, information and so on are functioning in our society in at least two different – if interconnected – ways.* First, they describe scientifically the functioning of contemporary media and their growing role in our society. But the development of media theory during recent decades was, in …
The performative without condition
A university sans appel
by Barbara Cassin and Philippe Büttgen / RP 162 (Jul/Aug 2010) / Article
‘Responsibility’ and the homonymy of autonomy
‘Take your time but be quick about it, because you don’t know what awaits you’, said French philosopher Jacques Derrida in 1998 at Stanford.1 Indeed. He would not have expected to be cited like this by Valérie Pécresse, French Minster for Higher Education and Research, in January …
Claude Lévi-Strauss, 1908–2009
A Lévi-Straussian century
by Patrice Maniglier / RP 160 (Mar/Apr 2010) / Obituary
Patrice Maniglier argues that if the next century might be one day be recognized as Deleuzian or Badiouian, it won’t be so without us first realizing that the one that has just ended was Lévi-Straussian.
Who was Oscar Masotta?
Psychoanalysis in Argentina
by Philip Derbyshire / RP 158 (Nov/Dec 2009) / Article
As Manuel Vázquez Montalbán’s sardonic detective Pepe Carvalho ruefully observed, in a dictionary of Argentine clichés, psychoanalysis would have a crucial place, along with ‘tango and the disappeared’.1 ‘One’ knows that along with Paris, Buenos Aires is one of the centres of psychoanalytic practice, and one of the leading training centres …
Walter Benjamin and the Red Army Faction, Part 2
by Irving Wohlfarth / RP 153 (Jan/Feb 2009) / Article
Aporias of free trade
The nature of biodiversity
by Diana Reese and Lecia Rosenthal / RP 151 (Sep/Oct 2008) / Article
Primitive accumulation is not produced just once at the dawn of capitalism, but is continually reproducing itself.
Deleuze and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus 1
In a climate rife with threats of species extinction, we propose a genealogy of the discourse of the late twentieth century in which the meaning of the natural …
138 Reviews
by Steve Edwards, Ian James, Andrew McGettigan, Alberto Toscano, Robin Durie and Christian Kerslake / RP 138 (Jul/Aug 2006) / Reviews
Hal Foster, Rosalind Krauss, Yve-Alain Bois, Benjamin H.D. Buchloh, Art since 1900: Modernism, Antimodernism, Postmodernism Steve Edwards
Jacques Derrida, On Touching – Jean-Luc Nancy Ian James
Matthias Fritsch, The Promise of Memory: History and Politics in Marx, Benjamin, and Derrida Andrew McGettigan
Michael Scott Christofferson, French Intellectuals against the Left:The Antitotalitarian Moment of the …
Vocabulary of European Philosophies, Part 1 (Subject)
Subject
by Peter Osborne, Étienne Balibar, Barbara Cassin and Alain de Libera / RP 138 (Jul/Aug 2006) / Article
Étienne Balibar, Barbara Cassin, Alain de Libera
Introduction by Peter Osborne.
Re-presentation of the repressed: The political revolution of the neo-avant-garde
Dossier: Spheres of action - Art and politics
by Peter Weibel / RP 137 (May/Jun 2006) / Article, Dossier, Spheres of action - Art and politics
Philosophy’s malaise
Philosophy and its history
by Pierre Macherey / RP 132 (Jul/Aug 2005) / Article
Exchange on ‘Fixing meaning’
Where does meaning get its fix? A response to Rachel Malik’s ‘Fixing meaning’ & Reply
by Howard Feather and Rachel Malik / RP 128 (Nov/Dec 2004) / Extras
121 Reviews
by Philip Derbyshire, Alessandra Tanesini, Alberto Toscano, Stewart Martin, Timothy Hall and Andrew Aitken / RP 121 (Sep/Oct 2003) / Reviews
Jacques Derrida, Without Alibi Philip Derbyshire
Bernard Williams, Truth and Truthfulness: An Essay in Genealogy Alessandra Tanesini
Jean-Jacques Lecercle, Deleuze and Language Alberto Toscano
Dieter Freundlieb, Dieter Henrich and Contemporary Philosophy:The Return to Subjectivity Stewart Martin
Timothy Bewes, Reification, or the Anxiety of Late Capitalism Timothy Hall
Manuel DeLanda, Intensive Science and Virtual Philosophy Andrew …
‘For all that gives rise to an inscription in general’
by Hans-Jörg Rheinberger / RP 187 (Sept/Oct 2014) / ArticleOf Grammatology, which history seems likely to confirm as Jacques Derrida’s most influential book, was published almost four decades ago.* This book marked the beginning of my pathway into philosophy and it has accompanied me throughout my investigations of science and the history of science. I shall therefore begin these remarks with quite a long …
Generative grafting
Reproductive technology and the dilemmas of surrogacyby Elina Staikou / RP 183 (Jan/Feb 2014) / Commentary
In 2013, at the advanced age of 101, Howard W. Jones, a medical pioneer in reproductive technology, published Personhood Revisited: Reproductive Technology, Bioethics, Religion and the Law. Looking back at the development of what came to be called the ARTs (assisted reproductive technologies), Jones chronicles the initial controversies surrounding their emergence and his own participation …
Conditions of the university
by Martin McQuillan / RP 181 (Sept/Oct 2013) / ReviewAndrew McGettigan, The Great University Gamble: Money, Markets and the Future of Education, Pluto Press, London, 2013. 232 pp., £54.00 hb., £15.00 pb., 978 0 74533 294 9 hb., 978 0 74533 293 2 pb.
In an interview with Giovanna Borradori given after 9/11, Jacques Derrida said: ‘I am incapable of knowing who today …
Grande biog
by David Cunningham / RP 176 (Nov/Dec 2012) / ReviewBenoît Peeters, Derrida: A Biography, trans. Andrew Brown, Polity Press, Cambridge and Malden MA, 2012. 603 pp., £25.00 hb., 978 0 74565 615 1.
‘What matter who’s speaking, someone said, what matter who’s speaking?’ Despite post-structuralist philosophies’ association with Beckettian questions such as these, they remain surprisingly bound to what Foucault …
Fabrication defect
Fabrication defect: François Laruelle’s philosophical materialsby Andrew McGettigan / RP 175 (Sep/Oct 2012) / Article
François Laruelle, professor of philosophy at Paris X, Nanterre, has been publishing since the early 1970s and now has around twenty book-length titles to his name. English-language reception of his work owes most to the efforts of Ray Brassier, who published an account of Laruelle’s ‘non-philosophy’ in Radical Philosophy in 2003 and critically incorporated aspects …
The Valuation of Nature
The Natural Choice White Paperby Kathryn Yusoff / RP 170 (Nov/Dec 2011) / Commentary
How to value biodiversity and the mutable thing called nature, in the context of biodiversity loss in the UK and elsewhere, is a question that has been vexing biologists, conservation groups, environmental lawyers and indigenous groups. The question is posed in the context of that modestly named ‘sixth mass extinction event’, the Holocene …
Euphemism, the university and disobedience
by Alexander Garcia Duttmann / RP 169 (Sep/Oct 2011) / CommentaryEuphemism is the linguistic condition of contemporary society and spreads through the university as much as through any other institution. But what, exactly, is a euphemism? After having turned his attention to the different meanings of the Greek word from which ‘euphemism’ is derived, and having considered the fact that they seem to contradict each other and bring about a …
Subjectivity as medium of the media
Dossier: What is German Media Philosophy?by Boris Groys / RP 169 (Sep/Oct 2011) / Article, Dossier, What is German Media Philosophy?
Contemporary, let us say ‘post-modern’, discourses on media, communication, information and so on are functioning in our society in at least two different – if interconnected – ways.* First, they describe scientifically the functioning of contemporary media and their growing role in our society. But the development of media theory during recent decades was, in …
The performative without condition
A university sans appelby Barbara Cassin and Philippe Büttgen / RP 162 (Jul/Aug 2010) / Article
‘Responsibility’ and the homonymy of autonomy
‘Take your time but be quick about it, because you don’t know what awaits you’, said French philosopher Jacques Derrida in 1998 at Stanford.1 Indeed. He would not have expected to be cited like this by Valérie Pécresse, French Minster for Higher Education and Research, in January …
Claude Lévi-Strauss, 1908–2009
A Lévi-Straussian centuryby Patrice Maniglier / RP 160 (Mar/Apr 2010) / Obituary
Patrice Maniglier argues that if the next century might be one day be recognized as Deleuzian or Badiouian, it won’t be so without us first realizing that the one that has just ended was Lévi-Straussian.
Who was Oscar Masotta?
Psychoanalysis in Argentinaby Philip Derbyshire / RP 158 (Nov/Dec 2009) / Article
As Manuel Vázquez Montalbán’s sardonic detective Pepe Carvalho ruefully observed, in a dictionary of Argentine clichés, psychoanalysis would have a crucial place, along with ‘tango and the disappeared’.1 ‘One’ knows that along with Paris, Buenos Aires is one of the centres of psychoanalytic practice, and one of the leading training centres …
Walter Benjamin and the Red Army Faction, Part 2
by Irving Wohlfarth / RP 153 (Jan/Feb 2009) / ArticleAporias of free trade
The nature of biodiversityby Diana Reese and Lecia Rosenthal / RP 151 (Sep/Oct 2008) / Article
Primitive accumulation is not produced just once at the dawn of capitalism, but is continually reproducing itself.
Deleuze and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus 1
In a climate rife with threats of species extinction, we propose a genealogy of the discourse of the late twentieth century in which the meaning of the natural …
138 Reviews
by Steve Edwards, Ian James, Andrew McGettigan, Alberto Toscano, Robin Durie and Christian Kerslake / RP 138 (Jul/Aug 2006) / ReviewsHal Foster, Rosalind Krauss, Yve-Alain Bois, Benjamin H.D. Buchloh, Art since 1900: Modernism, Antimodernism, Postmodernism Steve Edwards
Jacques Derrida, On Touching – Jean-Luc Nancy Ian James
Matthias Fritsch, The Promise of Memory: History and Politics in Marx, Benjamin, and Derrida Andrew McGettigan
Michael Scott Christofferson, French Intellectuals against the Left:The Antitotalitarian Moment of the …
Vocabulary of European Philosophies, Part 1 (Subject)
Subjectby Peter Osborne, Étienne Balibar, Barbara Cassin and Alain de Libera / RP 138 (Jul/Aug 2006) / Article
Étienne Balibar, Barbara Cassin, Alain de Libera
Introduction by Peter Osborne.
Re-presentation of the repressed: The political revolution of the neo-avant-garde
Dossier: Spheres of action - Art and politicsby Peter Weibel / RP 137 (May/Jun 2006) / Article, Dossier, Spheres of action - Art and politics
Philosophy’s malaise
Philosophy and its historyby Pierre Macherey / RP 132 (Jul/Aug 2005) / Article
Exchange on ‘Fixing meaning’
Where does meaning get its fix? A response to Rachel Malik’s ‘Fixing meaning’ & Replyby Howard Feather and Rachel Malik / RP 128 (Nov/Dec 2004) / Extras
121 Reviews
by Philip Derbyshire, Alessandra Tanesini, Alberto Toscano, Stewart Martin, Timothy Hall and Andrew Aitken / RP 121 (Sep/Oct 2003) / ReviewsJacques Derrida, Without Alibi Philip Derbyshire
Bernard Williams, Truth and Truthfulness: An Essay in Genealogy Alessandra Tanesini
Jean-Jacques Lecercle, Deleuze and Language Alberto Toscano
Dieter Freundlieb, Dieter Henrich and Contemporary Philosophy:The Return to Subjectivity Stewart Martin
Timothy Bewes, Reification, or the Anxiety of Late Capitalism Timothy Hall
Manuel DeLanda, Intensive Science and Virtual Philosophy Andrew …