Jacques Derrida
(1930-2004)
(born July 15, 1930, El Biar, Algeria—died October 8, 2004, Paris, France) French philosopher whose critique of Western philosophy and analyses of the nature of language, writing, and meaning were highly controversial yet immensely influential in much of the intellectual world in the late 20th century.
Life and work
Derrida
was born to Sephardic Jewish parents in French-governed
Derrida
is most celebrated as the principal exponent of deconstruction, a term he
coined for the critical examination of the fundamental conceptual distinctions,
or “oppositions,” inherent in Western philosophy since the time of the ancient
Greeks. These oppositions are characteristically “binary” and “hierarchical,”
involving a pair of terms in which one member of the pair is assumed to be
primary or fundamental, the other secondary or derivative. Examples include nature
and culture, speech and writing, mind and body, presence and absence, inside
and outside, literal and metaphorical, intelligible and sensible, and form and
meaning, among many others. To “deconstruct” an opposition is to explore the
tensions and contradictions between the hierarchical ordering assumed or
asserted in the text and other aspects of the text's meaning, especially those
that are indirect or implicit. Such an analysis shows that the opposition is
not natural or necessary but a product, or “construction,” of the text itself.
The
speech/writing opposition, for example, is manifested in texts that treat
speech as a more authentic form of language than writing. These texts assume
that the speaker's ideas and intentions are directly expressed and immediately
“present” in speech, whereas in writing they are comparatively remote or
“absent” and thus more easily misunderstood. As Derrida points out, however,
speech functions as language only to the extent that it shares characteristics
traditionally assigned to writing, such as absence, “difference,” and the
possibility of misunderstanding. This fact is indicated by philosophical texts
themselves, which invariably describe speech in terms of examples and metaphors
drawn from writing, even in cases where writing is explicitly claimed to be
secondary to speech. Significantly, Derrida does not wish simply to invert the
speech/writing opposition—i.e., to show that writing is really prior to speech.
As with any deconstructive analysis, the point is to restructure, or
“displace,” the opposition so as to show that neither term is primary.
The
speech/writing opposition derives from a pervasive picture of meaning that
equates linguistic meaning with the ideas and intentions in the mind of the
speaker or author. Building on theories of the Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure, Derrida coined the term différance,
meaning both a difference and an act of deferring, to characterize the way in
which linguistic meaning is created rather than given. For Derrida as for Saussure, the meaning of a word is a function of the
distinctive contrasts it displays with other, related meanings. Because each
word depends for its meaning on the meanings of other words, it follows that
the meaning of a word is never fully “present” to us, as it would be if
meanings were the same as ideas or intentions; instead it is endlessly
“deferred” in an infinitely long chain of meanings. Derrida expresses this idea
by saying that meaning is created by the “play” of differences between words—a
play that is “limitless,” “infinite,” and “indefinite.”
In
the 1960s Derrida's work was welcomed in
In
other work, particularly three books published in 1967— L'Écriture
et la différence (Writing and Difference),
De la grammatologie (Of Grammatology),
and La Voix et le phénomène
(Speech and Phenomena)—Derrida explored the treatment of writing by several
seminal figures in the history of Western thought, including the philosophers
Edmund Husserl and Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the
psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud. Other books, published in 1972, include analyses
of writing and representation in the work of philosophers such as Plato (La Dissémination [Dissemination]) and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Husserl,
and Martin Heidegger (Marges de la philosophie [Margins of Philosophy]). Glas (1974) is an experimental book printed in two
columns—one containing an analysis of key concepts in the philosophy of Hegel,
the other a suggestive discussion of the thief, novelist, and playwright Jean
Genet. Although Derrida's writing had always been marked by a keen interest in
what words can do, here he produced a work that plays with juxtaposition to
explore how language can incite thought.
One
might distinguish in Derrida's work a period of philosophical deconstruction
from a later period focusing on literature and emphasizing the singularity of
the literary work and the play of meaning in avant-garde writers such as Genet,
Stéphane Mallarmé, Francis Ponge, and James Joyce. His later work also took up a host
of other issues, notably the legacy of Marxism (Spectres de Marx: l'état de la dette, le travail du deuil et la nouvelle Internationale [1993; Specters
of Marx: The State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning, and the New International])
and psychoanalysis (La Carte postale: de Socrate à Freud et au-delà [1980; The Post Card: From Socrates to Freud
and Beyond]). Other essays considered political, legal, and ethical issues,
as well as topics in aesthetics and literature. He also addressed the question
of Jewishness and the Jewish tradition in Shibboleth
and the autobiographical “Circumfession” (1991).
Criticism
Although
critical examination of fundamental concepts is a standard part of
philosophical practice in the Western tradition, it has seldom been carried out
as rigorously as in the work of Derrida. His writing is known for its extreme
subtlety, its meticulous attention to detail, and its tenacious pursuit of the
logical implications of supposedly “marginal” features of texts. Nevertheless,
his work has met with considerable opposition among some philosophers,
especially those in the Anglo-American tradition. In 1992 the proposal by the
University of Cambridge to award Derrida an honorary doctorate generated so
much controversy that the university took the unusual step of putting the issue
to a vote of the dons (Derrida won); meanwhile, 19 philosophers from around the
globe published a letter of protest in which they claimed that Derrida's
writing was incomprehensible and his major claims either trivial or false. In
the same vein, other critics have portrayed Derrida as an antirational and
nihilistic opponent of “serious” philosophical thinking. Despite such
criticism, Derrida's ideas remain a powerful force in philosophy and myriad
other fields.
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