000 01643nam a2200133Ia 4500
999 _c159194
_d159194
020 _a9788120827646
040 _cCUS
082 _a149
_bCRI/T
100 _aCritchley, Simon
245 4 _aThe ethics of deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas/
_cSimon Critchley
260 _aDelhi :
_bMBP,
_c2007.
300 _axv,293p. ;
_c23cm.
505 _a1 The Ethics of Deconstruction: The Argument 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Levinasian Ethics 1.3 Dcrrida and Lcvinas: An Emerging Homolog)- 1.4 Derrida's Double-Handed Treatment of Ethics 1.5 Dcconstructive Reading and the Problem of Closure 1.6 From Text to Context: Deconstruction and the Thought of an Unconditional Ethical Imperative 1.7 The Ethics of Reading; Hillis Miller's Version Notes 2 The Problem of Closure in Derrida 2.1 Introducuon 2.2 The Sense of Closure 2.3 The Genesis of Closure in Derrida's Reading of Husserl 2. The Closure of Metaphysics 2.5 Heidegger and Derrida: Closure and the End of Philosophy 2.6 Clotoral Reading Notes 3 Clotural Readings I: 'Bois' - Derrida's Final Word on Lcvinas 3.1 How the Work Works 3.2 How Levinas Writes his Work VI 3.3 How Levinas's Work does not Work 3.4 How the Work is Given to Levinas Notes Clotural Readings II: Wholly Otherwise: Levinas's Reading of Derrida 4.1 It s Today Tomorrow 4.2 Scepdcism 4.3 Indication Notes A Quesrion of Politics: The Future of Deconstruction 5.1 Introduction 5.2 The Question of the Quesrion: An Ethico-Polirical Response to a Note in Of Spirit 5.3 Lacoue-Labarthe and Nancy: Re-tracing the Political 5.4 A Levinasian PoUrics of Ethical Difference 5.5 Conclusion: Philosophy, Politics, and Democracy Notes
650 _a Derrida, Jacques.
650 _a LĂ©vinas, Emmanuel.
650 _aDeconstruction.
942 _cWB16