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A. Berger & M. Segarra (dir.), Demenageries. Thinking (of) Animals after Derrida

A. Berger & M. Segarra (dir.), Demenageries. Thinking (of) Animals after Derrida

Publié le par Matthieu Vernet (Source : Editions Rodopi)

Demenageries.Thinking (of) Animals after Derrida.

Sous la direction de Anne Emmanuelle Berger and Marta Segarra

Amsterdam/New York : Rodopi, coll. "Critical Studies", 2011.

267 p.

EAN 9789042033504

Prix 54EUR

Présentation de l'éditeur :

Demenageries, Thinking (of) Animals after Derrida is a collection of essays on animality following Jacques Derrida's work. The Western philosophical tradition separated animals from men by excluding the former from everything that was considered “proper to man”: laughing, suffering, mourning, and above all, thinking. The “animal” has traditionally been considered the absolute Other of humans. This radical otherness has served as the rationale for the domination, exploitation and slaughter of animals. What Derrida called “la pensée de l'animal” (which means both thinking concerning the animal and “animal thinking”) may help us understand differently such apparently human features as language, thought and writing. It may also help us think anew about such highly philosophical concerns as differences, otherness, the end(s) of history and the world at large. Thanks to the ethical and epistemological crisis of Western humanism, “animality” has become an almost fashionable topic. However, Demenageries is the first collection to take Derrida's thinking on animal thinking as a starting point, a way of reflecting not only on animals but starting from them, in order to address a variety of issues from a vast range of theoretical perspectives: philosophy, literature, cultural theory, anthropology, ethics, politics, religion, feminism, postcolonialism and, of course, posthumanism.

Contents

Anne E. Berger and Marta Segarra: Thoughtprints

Marie-Dominique Garnier: Animal Writes: Derrida's Que Donc and Other Tails

Ginette Michaud: On a Serpentine Note

Claudia Simma: Ver(s): Toward a Spirituality of One's Own

Anne E. Berger: When Sophie Loved Animals

Joseph Lavery: Deconstruction and Petting: Untamed Animots in Derrida and Kafka

Adeline Rother: Say the Ram Survived: Altering the Binding of Isaac in Jacques Derrida's “Rams” and J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace

Rosalind C. Morris: Crowds and Powerlessness: Reading //kabbo and Canetti with Derrida in (South) Africa

James Siegel: “Tout Autre est Tout Autre”

David Wills: Meditations for the Birds

Contributors