2. The Corpus and the Corpse: Amelia Rosselli, Jacques Derrida, Sylvia Plath, Sarah Kofman

After Words ◽  
2010 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Avital Ronell

Avital Ronell is currently one of the world´s most renowned and stimulating literary scholars; she has worked with Jacques Derrida and Sarah Kofman, among others. Her new book analyses the decline of various forms of authority. In writing about Alexandre Kojève, Sarah Kofman and Hannah Arendt, Ronell examines the melancholy which accompanies the diagnosis of the burnout of authority. Didn´t we conceive of authority as a stabilizing factor for many forms of life, criticizing which was always borne by respect for what was criticized? Indeed, deconstruction never simply equals destruction. In times of widespread political regression, of which populism is only one manifestation among others, Ronell's inventive ideas have a contemporary significance.


Acta Poética ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Joana Masó

El presente ensayo se propone relacionar tres figuras del texto literario después de la deconstrucción de la comunidad: el fin del relato literario en La folie du jour y “L’Idylle” de Maurice Blanchot, la palabra sofocada [La parole soffoquées] de Sarah Kofman y la archi-escritura en el pensamiento de Jacques Derrida. Abordaremos la escritura como un gesto filosófico con la finalidad de pensar la interrelación de lo literario y lo filosófico en estos autores franceses de la segunda mitad del siglo xx.


Paragraph ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-57
Author(s):  
Ginette Michaud

This article examines the relationship that Jacques Derrida and Sarah Kofman developed throughout their lifetimes, both as close friends and as philosophers who shared many common research interests. In his tribute to Sarah Kofman, published in Les Cahiers du Grif in 1997, Derrida stated that ‘These interests and exercises go far beyond the limits of a short narrative, indeed of a terminable analysis’, thus challenging the reader to delve into these ‘elliptical greetings’. The numerous interactions present in Kofman's and Derrida's respective bodies of work are not without conflicts nor dissymmetry, and their often oblique modes of acknowledgement are far from any ‘balance’ on either side. Revisiting some of the différends among two great thinkers of différance, this article highlights the Derridean logic of gift and debt at work between them. Focusing on the posthumous tribute Derrida pays to his friend (left untitled, which is itself a revealing gesture), one can sense that there is much at stake in that piece that touches on the major question of forgiveness and the affirmation of survie or living on, thus setting a scene of reading where Derrida's debt towards Kofman turns out to be more telling than one may have expected.


Paragraph ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 58-72
Author(s):  
Charlotte Thevenet

Since Sarah Kofman's death in 1994, many critics have investigated her friendship with Jacques Derrida, and have tried to make sense of its striking dissymmetry. Contrary to those merely deeming Kofman ‘an orthodox Derridean’ (Alice Jardine), thus ascribing to her the unrewarding role of the disciple, Penelope Deutscher and more recently Ginette Michaud, among others, have endeavoured to interpret Derrida's odd silences and omissions regarding Kofman's work in a more subtle manner. Drawing on these readings, this article questions the erasure of ‘Sarah Kofman’ from Derrida's oeuvre by comparing it to the paradoxical effacement of ‘woman’ in the philosopher's texts, arguing that ‘Sarah Kofman’ both as a proper name and as a corpus figures the ‘woman’ missing from Derrida's work. Drawing on the work of feminist critics like Jardine, Miller and Spivak, the article retraces the ambiguous function of ‘woman’ in Derrida's writing, before stressing parallels between ‘Sarah Kofman’ and the Derridean ‘woman’.


2004 ◽  
Vol 38 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 103-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodolphe Gasché

Résumé La pensée de Jacques Derrida a souvent été qualifiée d’autocontradictoire et accusée de se complaire dans des contradictions performatives conduisant à des apories insolubles. Si cette accusation est sans fondement, il est vrai que la notion d’aporie est présente dans le travail du philosophe ­depuis le début et occupe de plus en plus le centre de la scène dans son oeuvre récente. Cet essai tente de démontrer que, par le moyen de cet intérêt pour l’aporie, Derrida entreprend de discuter à nouveaux frais une question qui, depuis l’origine de la philosophie en Grèce, est intimement liée à la possibilité de la pensée philosophique. Par une analyse des positions de Sarah Kofman et de Martin Heidegger sur le concept de l’aporie, ce texte cherche à décrire la contribution propre de Derrida à ce problème philosophique.


2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linda Wagner-Martin
Keyword(s):  

CounterText ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 232-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Callus

In this essay Ivan Callus provides some reflections on literature in the present. He considers the tenability of the post-literary label and looks at works that might be posited as having some degree of countertextual affinity. The essay, while not setting itself up as a creative piece, deliberately structures itself unconventionally. It frames its argument within twenty-one sections that are self-contained but that also echo each other in their attempt to develop an overarching argument which draws out some of the challenges that lie before the countertextual and the post-literary. Punctuating the essay and contributing to its unconventional take on the practice of literary criticism is a series of exercises for the reader to complete, if so wished; the essay makes no attempt, however, to suggest that a countertextual criticism ought to make a routine of such devices. The separate sections contain reflections on a number of texts and writers, among them, and in order of appearance, Hamlet, Anthony Trollope, Jacques Derrida, The Time Machine, Don Quixote, Mark Z. Danielewski, Mark B. N. Hansen, Gunter Kress, Scott's Reliquiae Trotcosienses, W. B. Yeats, Kate Tempest, David Jones, Anne Michaels, Bernice Eisenstein, Paul Auster, J. M. Coetzee, Billy Collins, Deidre Shauna Lynch, Tim Parks, Tom McCarthy – and Hamlet again. The essay's length fulfils a performative function but also facilitates as extensive a catalogue of aspects of the countertextual in literature and elsewhere as is feasible or as might be dared at this stage.


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