272 Pages
    by Routledge

    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is a comprehensive investigation into the theme of time in the work of Jacques Derrida and shows how temporality is one of the hallmarks of his thought. Drawing on a wide array of Derrida's texts, Joanna Hodge:

    • compares and contrasts Derrida's arguments concerning time with those Kant, Husserl, Augustine, Heidegger, Levinas, Freud, and Blanchot
    • argues that Derrida's radical understanding of time as non-linear or irregular is essential to his aim of blurring the distinction between past and present, biography and literature, philosophical and religious meditation, and the nature of the self
    • explores the themes of death, touch and transcendence to argue that if considered under the theme of temporality there is more continuity to Derrida's thought than previously considered.

    Part 1: In the Beginning  Part 2: Interrupting Husserl  Part 3: Experience and Limit: Heidegger, Levinas, Blanchot  Part 4: The Politics of Places  Part Five: Animal/Machine: The Return of Transcendental Aesthetics as Biography

     

    Biography

    Joanna Hodge is Professor of Philosophy at Manchester Metropolitan University.

    ‘Perhaps there has been no more resilient form of thought in the last two hundred years than phenomenology, and yet, poignant critiques have been made of it. Joanna Hodge allows us to start to move beyond the horizon of phenomenology while recognizing the contributions it has made for thinking.’ - Leonard Lawlor, University of Memphis, USA