|
|
| About site: Philosophy/Philosophers/D/Derrida, Jacques/Works - Excuse Me, But I Never Said Exactly So |
Return to Society also Society |
| About site: http://www.hydra.umn.edu/derrida/so.html |
Title: Philosophy/Philosophers/D/Derrida, Jacques/Works - Excuse Me, But I Never Said Exactly So An interview with Derrida, specifically on issues arising out of his De la grammatologie. |
|
|
|
|
Horizon_Solutions_Site Database of solutions to environmental, development, population and health issues.
| Gaylocation_Com Provides destination information world-wide including bars, hotels and nightclubs.
| Sekera Descendants of Daniel Sekera (b.abt.1769) and Katerina Kafkova (b.abt.1775). Includes a family tree, stories, and photographs. Aims to connect the Sekera family worldwide.
| Zonta_International_District_16 New Zealand. Includes club directory and news, calendar, district news, membership information, description of programs, and articles on the status of women.
| Why_Do_Intellectuals_Oppose_Capitalism? Nozick's essay at Cato Institute's site. Originally published in The Future of Private Enterprise in 1986, the revised version in Socratic Puzzles in 1997.
| Markets_&_Morality A journal that promotes intellectual exploration of the relationship between economics and morality from both social science and theological perspectives from the Action Institute, in Grand Rapids, Mi
|
|
| Alexa statistic for http://www.hydra.umn.edu/derrida/so.html |
Please visit: http://www.hydra.umn.edu/derrida/so.html
|
| Related sites for http://www.hydra.umn.edu/derrida/so.html |
| In_the_Loop Events in and around Toronto organized around single men and women's interests and passions. | | Wikipedia__Automatic_Writing A sardonic look at automatic writing and some of its' early influences. | | African_Woman_Leads_Crusade_Against_Polygamy Reproduced from the New York Times. Tells of an effort to end this traditional rural practice in Ivory Coast, where the economics of hardscrabble farming have long encouraged men to take more than one | | Access_Genealogy_-_Civil_War_Resource_Center Civil War regimental rosters, muster rolls, and histories for all states including battlefield maps and weekly articles. How to determine if your ancestor was in the Civil War and instructions to orde | | QueerNet Dozens of mailing lists for the gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgendered and leather/S&M communities. | | YazitaÅŸ,_Osman Personal home page. | | DiLascia,_Paul Contains programming information and articles. | | Vancouver_Hungarian_Scouts Home of the Raskai Lea and Apor Vilmos scout troops of Vancouver. | | French-Wood,_Julia Includes Bridges, French and Hancock genealogy projects as well as a surname index and personal pages. | | Crouch_Family_Heritage_Association Non-profit society formed by the heirs of Ralph Waldo Crouch to maintain the family farm and to preserve buildings and landmarks connected with the Crouch family. Includes grave preservation and the | | The_Religious_Movements_Page__Cult_Group_Controversies Information on counter-cult and anti-cult groups and on the concept of brainwashing. Features a detailed report on the Maryland Cult Task Force. | | Kaccayanagotta_Sutta The sutra on right view. | | J_SoulMate Personal ads for Jewish singles. Includes events listing. | | Glasgow_City_Mission An inter-denominational Christian agency works alongside churches to provide for the spiritual and material welfare of the poor and disadvantaged in city of Glasgow, Scotland. Includes emergency shel | | Janus__Jacob_Burckhardt_-_History_as_Education_and_Culture Article in the undergraduate history journal of the University of Maryland discussing Burkhardt's methodology in light of his contemporary world. | | Main_Causes_of_the_Great_Depression A short paper on the origins of the Great Depression. Discusses economic problems and policies that led to the American economic collapse in the 1930s. Includes bibliography. | | Kochani_Orkestar Gypsy brass band from Macedonia. | | New_African_Century News of the grand opening of the central Scientology organization in South Africa. Excerpts of speech by David Miscavige, Chairman of the Board of R.T.C. | | Four_Directions_Institute__Powhatan Tribal profile, timeline, and links. | | Honduras_Medical_Relief_at_U-M Students and medical professionals at the University of Michigan dedicated to improving health care in rural Honduras. |
|
This is websites2007.org cache of m/ as retrieved on 2008.10.11 websites2007.org's cache is the snapshot that we took of the page as we crawled the web. The page may have changed since that time.
|
| I have no illusion about thatOn the Beach (Glebe NSW, Australia), no. 1/1983: p. 42Excuse me, but I never said exactly so:Yet Another Derridean InterviewIn 1982, Paul Brennan spoke to Jacques Derrida at the Collège de France. He specified his questions to issues arising out of Derrida's De la grammatologie.P.B.: How would you respond to the assertion that you are trying to set up a kind of literary science? J.D.: It's not really a science in the traditional sense. It's strategy for interpreting sciences, and philosophy also... to deconstruct them, to look at them from many points of view (but of course also from a political point of view) and to show the implicit limits of sciences. For instance, language sciences are the dominant models of science on the French scene.P.B.: What can a grammatologist do that other philosophers and linguists can't do?J.D.: First I must say [laughs] that since grammatology is not a positive science... nor a philosophy, there is no "grammatologist". The book on grammatology is not a book for grammatology; it's also a book which insists on the limits of grammatology.P.B.: You talk about living languages, where the written language closely reflects the spoken language. And you talk also about dead languages, where the written language has no connection with the spoken language. If you look around the world at the hundreds of languages which exist at the moment, which ones would you say are very much alive and which ones are approaching death?J.D.: Excuse me, but I never said exactly so. I never said that there are totally living languages and that there are dead languages. I think that there is a part of death in every language. And the opposition of life and death in language is a false opposition. The traditional statement about language is that it is in itself living, and that writing is the dead part of language. And this is what I'm fighting against. So, I would not engage myself in saying that there is a hierarchy of more or less living languages today. There are more or less powerful languages - on for instance the technical level, on the economic, or scientific or military level. There are some languages - for instance, English, Russian, Chinese - which are spoken not only by more and more people, but by people and nations which are, for the moment, more powerful than others. But I wouldn't draw the consequence that they are more "living" than the others.P.B.: You do make a contrast between spoken language and written language and the relationship between them...J.D.: Ah... it's not an opposition. What I've been doing in the last few years is to extend I mean to give an absolute extension to - the concept of writing so that even the spoken language is written in some way. I mean, there is what I call an "arche-writing" (arche-écriture) which is implied within the spoken language, which implies that the concept of writing is transformed, of course. So there is no opposition between them. For instance, tape recordings are writings in some sense.P.B.: You've suggested we should stop thinking about various media - speech and writin - that we should stop thinking about them ethically and that the two media of language are beyond good and evil. This obviously puts you at variation with someone like Marshall McLuhan who talks about the medium in very ethical terms - "the microphone created Hitler" and so on.J.D.: Mm... I think that there is an ideology in McLuhan's discourse that I don't agree with, because he's an optimist as to the possibility of restoring an oral community which would get rid of the writing machines and so on. I think that's a very traditional myth which goes back to... let's say Plato, Rousseau... And instead of thinking that we are living at the end of writing, I think that in another sense we are living in the extension - the overwhelming extension - of writing. At least in the new sense... I don't mean the alphabetic writing down, but in the new sense of those writing machines that we're using now (e.g. the tape recorder). And this is writing too.P.B.: You end your book with a quotation from Rousseau, who has written about writing as a kind of dreaming. He says:The dreams of bad nights are given to us as philosophy. Younwill say that I too am a dreamer. I admit this. But I do what others fail to do. I give my dreams as dreams and leave the reader to discover whether there is anything in them which may prove useful to those who are awake. My question to you is: are you allowing me to interview in much the same spirit - as a dream to be taken as the listener or reader wishes?J.D.: Yes, but if I were to indulge in saying so, I would imply that I am totally awakened while dreaming, and I have no illusion about that.back up... |
|
| |
An | interview | with | Derrida, | specifically | on | issues | arising | out | of | his | De | la | grammatologie. |
|
http://www.hydra.umn.edu/derrida/so.html
Excuse Me, But I Never Said Exactly So 2008 October
dvd rental
dvd
An interview with Derrida, specifically on issues arising out of his De la grammatologie.
Rules
|
© 2008 Internet Explorer 5+ or Netscape 6+
|
|
Recommended Sites: 1.
Arts -
Business -
Computers -
Games -
Health -
Home -
Kids and Teens -
News -
Recreation -
Reference -
Regional -
Science -
Shopping -
Society -
Sports -
World
Miss Gallery
- Top Anime Hentai
- DVD rental by mail
- Samsung - Satellite TV - Wills - Remortgages - Samsung
|