304 Pages
    by Routledge

    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    In Jacques Derrida: Opening Lines, Marian Hobson gives us a thorough and elegant analysis of this controversial and seminal contemporary thinker. Looking closely at the language and the construction of some of Derrida's philosophy, Hobson suggests the way he writes, indeed the fact he writes in another language, affects how he can be understood by English speakers.
    This superb study on the question of language will make illuminating reading for anyone studying or engaged with Derrida's philosophy.

    Introduction; Chapter 1 Histories and Transcendentals; Chapter 2 Replications; Chapter 3 Strange Attractors; Chapter 4 Negatives and Steps; Chapter 5 Contacts;

    Biography

    Marian Hobson is Professor of French at the University of London, Queen Mary and Westfield College. She is the author of The Object of Art (1982) and co-editor of Reappraisals of Rousseau (1980) and Rousseau et le dix-huitième siècle (1993).

    'Of great interest to anyone who wishes to engage at a serious level with Derrida's thought.' - Times Literary Supplement

    'A sophisticated analysis of the mode of Derrida's argumentation which explores what lies beneath the surface logic - or contestation of logic - in his texts.' - Christina Howells, FS, LIII.4, 1999

    'Provides... a series of sophisticated lines that re-open our critical conditioning.' - MLR