noel emits
a wonderful wooden reason
Heh. Edited by a Mr. Robert Dobalina.
"The idea of hauntology and the question of Marx's continued relevance has been criticised by a number of philosophers including Jurgen Hambermas, Richard Rorty, Miller Quitney and Dom Passantino."
lol
I watched Michael McCarthy rip Jurgen Habermas to shreds in person, I would probably edit that post and mention how even if Marx is relevant, Derrida may not be.
I watched Michael McCarthy rip Jurgen Habermas to shreds in person, I would probably edit that post and mention how even if Marx is relevant, Derrida may not be.
I watched Michael McCarthy rip Jurgen Habermas to shreds in person, I would probably edit that post and mention how even if Marx is relevant, Derrida may not be.
Whether or not Derrida is worthwhile for your own work and thinking will depend of course on your own intellectual interests and projects (he is for me, certainly, but I know plenty for whom he is not), in some cases he may be and in others perhaps not useful at all. Really depends on one's work, I'd say. But of course Derrida and Habermas are both important to the intellectual history of post-WWII thought, whether one's stance towards them is oppositional, in conversation, enthusiastic, or whatever. I mean, why not arm yourself with as much fluency in contemporary thought as possibe, even (or especially) if you view a thinker as someone to whom your own approach/methods/thought will be opposed? I wouldn't myself place much of a premium on "academic trends" ....Isn't Derrida on the way out as far as theory trends in academia? Not that it makes a difference as to his worth (though I haven't found the little Derrida I've read very worthwhile), just wondering if my assessment was accurate.
I've read parts of that public sphere book, thought it was kind of interesting and wanted to pick it up at some point -- worth it?
Isn't Derrida on the way out as far as theory trends in academia? Not that it makes a difference as to his worth (though I haven't found the little Derrida I've read very worthwhile), just wondering if my assessment was accurate.
Whether or not Derrida is worthwhile for your own work and thinking will depend of course on your own intellectual interests and projects (he is for me, certainly, but I know plenty for whom he is not), in some cases he may be and in others perhaps not useful at all. Really depends on one's work, I'd say. But of course Derrida and Habermas are both important to the intellectual history of post-WWII thought, whether one's stance towards them is oppositional, in conversation, enthusiastic, or whatever. I mean, why not arm yourself with as much fluency in contemporary thought as possibe, even (or especially) if you view a thinker as someone to whom your own approach/methods/thought will be opposed? I wouldn't myself place much of a premium on "academic trends" ....
Yep, it's definitely true that Derrida's gone out of fashion, there's no question about it, though it makes me feel a bit icky talking about intellectual 'fashions' given how quickly they mutate. Part of the shift away from Derrida is the feeling that 'it's difficult to take deconstruction any farther' (in quotes because I hear it said fairly frequently) but also because he was in many ways a very traditional philosopher whose work is less immediately transferable for new problematics, questions, and domains. The question of Derrida's role in academic studies is one of those topics that is a bit like a chinese box, it sort of depends on how inside baseball you want to get in terms of the past forty years or so, and how many layers deep you want to take the discussion.I think you're right that he's falling out of favor
Yep, it's definitely true that Derrida's gone out of fashion, there's no question about it, though it makes me feel a bit icky talking about intellectual 'fashions' given how quickly they mutate. Part of the shift away from Derrida is the feeling that 'it's difficult to take deconstruction any farther' (in quotes because I hear it said fairly frequently) but also because he was in many ways a very traditional philosopher whose work is less immediately transferable for new problematics, questions, and domains. The question of Derrida's role in academic studies is one of those topics that is a bit like a chinese box, it sort of depends on how inside baseball you want to get in terms of the past forty years or so, and how many layers deep you want to take the discussion.
I remember the NYT obit for Derrida was incredibly unfair...
And also how many languages you want to learn well in order to do justice to his writing as a reader. I've heard him dismissed as a "Jewish mystic" one too many times, but at the same time I find the application of "hauntology" to music strange just because he was clearly talking about a metaphysical condition in much the same way Lyotard was when he talked about "post-modernism." To limit "hauntology" to music with spooky sonics misses the point.
This framework rests on the argument called universal pragmatics - that all speech acts have an inherent telos (the Greek word for "purpose" or "goal") — the goal of mutual understanding, and that human beings possess the communicative competence to bring about such understanding.
from the Wiki on Habermas...Man doesn't watch much TV or Bush press conferences, eh? Though I seem to remember liking what I had read for the historical description and good writing as well... I see he had an acrimonious debate with Mr. D as well, maybe worth checking out some of that stuff. That Foucault-Chomsky debate was a highlight of my theory class, though not because I learned anything about theory -- more about the creepy way Foucault was constantly picking at himself!
Actually I'd guess that Habermas is very well apprised of recent Bush press conferences and I'd bet one hundred german marks that he would be able to diagnose and critique them at long, long length.from the Wiki on Habermas...Man doesn't watch much TV or Bush press conferences, eh? Though I seem to remember liking what I had read for the historical description and good writing as well... I see he had an acrimonious debate with Mr. D as well, maybe worth checking out some of that stuff. That Foucault-Chomsky debate was a highlight of my theory class, though not because I learned anything about theory -- more about the creepy way Foucault was constantly picking at himself!
Foucault was an interesting guy in his personal life, too. Got really involved in the S&M circuit in San Francisco and eventually died of AIDS.