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Jacques Derrida and the Question of Interpretation

The Phenomenological Reduction, the Intention of the Author, and Kafka’s Law

by Aino Mäkikalli (Author) Tomi Kaarto (Author)
©2008 Thesis 652 Pages

Summary

Jacques Derrida emphasized the importance of Husserl and especially his concept of phenomenological reduction for his own philosophical work. A central thesis in this book is that Derrida’s deconstruction can in fact be understood as a kind of radicalization of the phenomenological reduction. To show this, the author reconstructs Derrida’s criticism of Husserl, which even as it is inspired by and partly based on Heidegger’s criticism of phenomenology, can be conceived as applying the «method» of phenomenological reduction to Husserl’s phenomenological reduction itself. That the problems of truth, interpretation and reading are crucial not only in his philosophy but also in Derrida’s concept of literature is elucidated by his Kafka reading and an extended «Derridean» reading of Kafka’s short story In the Penal Colony.

Details

Pages
652
Year
2008
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631560051
Language
English
Keywords
Husserl, Edmund Rezeption Derrida, Jacques Dekonstruktion Deconstruction Temporality Heidegger, Martin Reduktion (Phänomenologie)
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2008. 651 pp.

Biographical notes

Aino Mäkikalli (Author) Tomi Kaarto (Author)

The Author: Tomi Kaarto, 1972-2006, was an Assistant of Comparative Literature at the University of Turku (Finland).

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Title: Jacques Derrida and the Question of Interpretation