1st Edition

Derrida, Responsibility and Politics

By Morag Patrick Copyright 1997
    182 Pages
    by Routledge

    181 Pages
    by Routledge

    Published in 1997, Jacques Derrida's ’deconstructive method’ or ’deconstructionism’ is renowned as a species of anarchic free play, an antifoundationalism which can only end in a ruinous irrationalism and thereby the denial of all possibility of discrimination or judgement. In this book, Morag Patrick argues that far from having abandoned critique, Derrida's questioning of Western metaphysics responds to an ethical injunction, to a duty to recall the necessary incalculability of moral and political responsibility. In the first part of the study, Patrick examines the philosophical background to and the basic features of deconstruction. Derrida is located in a tradition of thinkers for whom the question of the possibility of philosophy is fundamental. The deconstructive endeavour is then explained as an attempt to secure a question that would further and transform thinking, a question that would no longer be philosophy's question. Patrick maintains that Derrida's strategy to this end is not anarchic, but rather adheres to strict protocols of reading. Subsequently, the ethical and political implications of this manner of reading are pursued. It is shown that if Derrida undermines the certainty with which we may assume moral and political responsibilities, if he establishes the essential excessiveness of responsibility, he does so in order to effect judgement and not to annul it.

    Part 1: Thinking After Metaphysics  1. The Dialogue of the Question  2. Deconstructive Strategies  Part 2: Rewriting Responsibility and Politics  3. The Ethics and Politics of Deconstruction  4. A Question of Significance?  5. Assuming Responsibility.

    Biography

    Morag Patrick