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Derrida's Social Ontology: Institutions in Deconstruction presents the first dedicated study of Jacques Derrida's philosophy of institutions. While previous studies of Derrida's thought have considered his engagement with individual institutionsfrom the university to literature, law, and psychoanalysis, among others Derrida's Social Ontology offers the first attempt to reconstruct and defend the philosophical theory of institutions that underlies these engagements. In so doing, the book argues that the theme of the institution in Derrida's oeuvre offers the best throughline for understanding the substantively normative significance of deconstruction as a philosophical practice, arguing that Derrida is unique among so-called postmodern thinkers in providing an account of the relationship between the historically contingent character of institutions and the normative entitlements that such entities make possible. Specifically, the book shows how Derrida accounts for this relationship in a way that leaves room for a notion of unconditional responsibility for the social and political world to the extent that the latter is structured by perfectible institutions. In tracing the development of Derrida's account of this link between the historicity and normativity of institutional lifefrom his early writings on the historicity of the institution of philosophy, to his later critiques of practices of institutional cruelty like the death penalty Derrida's Social Ontology not only offers readers a new framework for making sense of the normative commitments that defined this philosopher's writings, but will also establish the terms for putting his works into conversation with contemporary debates in social and political philosophy and critical theory more broadly.
Provides an accessible introduction to Derrida's social and political thought Studies Derrida's writings on institutions from a philosophical perspective Models how deconstruction can be useful for social criticism broadly construed
Auteur
Ryan A. Gustafson, PhD, teaches at Eugene Lang College at The New School in New York City. His writings on Derrida have appeared in The Undecidable Unconscious: A Journal in Psychoanalysis and Deconstruction and Derrida Today.
Texte du rabat
Derrida's Social Ontology: Institutions in Deconstruction presents the first dedicated study of Jacques Derridäs philosophy of institutions. While previous studies of Derridäs thought have considered his engagement with individual institutions from the university to literature, law, and psychoanalysis, among others Derridäs Social Ontology offers the first attempt to reconstruct and defend the philosophical theory of institutions that underlies these engagements. In so doing, the book argues that the theme of the institution in Derrida's oeuvre offers the best throughline for understanding the substantively normative significance of deconstruction as a philosophical practice, arguing that Derrida is unique among so-called postmodern thinkers in providing an account of the relationship between the historically contingent character of institutions and the normative entitlements that such entities make possible. Specifically, the book shows how Derrida accounts for this relationship in a way that leaves room for a notion of unconditional responsibility for the social and political world to the extent that the latter is structured by perfectible institutions. In tracing the development of Derridäs account of this link between the historicity and normativity of institutional life from his early writings on the historicity of the institution of philosophy, to his later critiques of practices of institutional cruelty like the death penalty Derrida's Social Ontology not only offers readers a new framework for making sense of the normative commitments that defined this philosopher's writings, but will also establish the terms for putting his works into conversation with contemporary debates in social and political philosophy and critical theory more broadly.
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