theotherblog

PhD's, fatherhood, and getting organised

Two Letter Day

Do you enjoy the arrival of post?  The sound of the Postman at the letterbox, the surprise of receiving an unexpected piece of mail, the excitement of opening the envelope?  So much more satisfying than an email! Lately, I have taken to writing letters to people.  I’m not too fussed on my addressee needing to reply in a similar fashion, but this last week, I received not one, but two replies on the same day.  A two letter day!

For many of the scholars that I read, hand-written correspondence played an enormous part in their lives.  If you read a Jane Austen novel, the plots often hinge upon letters received at certain times, in certain places.  Letters, postcards, mail, make history.  For example:

“In the past, psychoanalysis would not have been what it was (any more than so many other things) if E-mail, for example, had existed.  And in the future it will no longer be what Freud and so many psychoanalysts have anticipated, from the moment E-mail, for example, became possible.  One could find many clues other than E-mail.  As a postal technology, the example undoubtedly merits some privelege. First of all because of the major and exceptional role (exceptional in the history of scientific projects) played at the center of the psychoanalytic archive by a hand-written correspondence. We have yet to finish discovering and processing this immense corpus…”

Jacques Derrida, Archive Fever, 17

Filed under: Derrida, quotations , , , , , , , ,

Does Derrida have a future?

This is a post attempting to sketch out some preliminary thoughts on the thesis material I’ve been reading.  That is, nerd alert.

Derrida’s relationship to the pursuit of history as an academic discipline, is, at first glance, somewhat distant. 

Insofar as his work consists of specific engagements with Husserl, Heidegger, Hegel, Levinas, Plato, Rousseau, Levi-Strauss, and so many more (a voracious reader if there ever was one), then it is of interest to historians of philosophy, which is indistinguishable (although this is a debateable point) from philosophy, and little else.  In his engagements with the first four that I listed, Derrida makes glancing comments on a philosophy of history – for example, in his Introduction to Husserl’s Origin of Geometry, or in Violence and Metaphysics, usually when the passages he is exegeting do so.  But historians are rarely interested in rigorous discussions on the philosophy of history, as Louis Mink points out so well.

However, this is not to say that Derrida and history are finished.  For there is an important historical element to Derrida’s general approach, particularly visible in early texts like Violence and Metaphysics and Of Grammatology, that should be accounted for.  I’ll try and summarise it as follows, mainly based on the intro part of Violence and Metaphysics:

Philosophy (defined as an ‘adventure of the question’) is, citing Husserl and Heidegger who call us to return to this root, primarily Greek.  Meanwhile, we live in a ‘today’ when ”the Greco-European adventure is in the process of taking over all of humanity.”* This raises the question of whether philosophy is a determined, which is to say finite and historical, moment of the question, or if it is the only form of the question in general.  The difference between these two points is “the difference between philosophy as a power and adventure of the question itself and philosophy as a determined event or turning point within this adventure.”**  That is to say, Derrida is devoted to thinking the difference between these two poles – it is an act of philosophy to think about the possibility of philosophy.  Hence the interest of Emmanuel Levinas’ thought, in that it seeks to confront Greek thought with another – Jewish thought. 

But this moment is prompted by, is a response to, a specific historical trajectory; what we call in general ‘the history of the west’.  Thus we see the source of Derrida’s interest in political and legal questions about Europe, its states, and its future, about international law and other realities of a ‘globalised’ world, a word he is ever suspicious of.  Particularly in his early works Derrida is concerned with conducting this debate at a technical and rigorous level, a terrain that is difficult ground for historians - the presuppositions inherent in detailed phenomenological analysis.  However, there are some points which we can derive from this that are relevant to historical practice. 

1. Philosophy is solicited by non-philosophy, that is, empiricism.  That is, contrary to what many historians have taken Derrida to mean, he is not opposed necessarily to empiricism.  Neither is this a relativism.  But it is an injunction to think in response to what one finds.

2. Derrida’s thought is inherently historical in its considerations.  It testifies to the way ideas are inseperably intertwined with our material history.  Again, this is not a relativism.

3. A pressing question to be considered is the relationship of the inheritors of Western traditions to those who are foreign to such traditions, not as an academic question, but as one of responsibility in the face of the domination of the West being expanded to a world wide scale.  That this debate is conducted in the very terms designated by that tradition is inescapable. 

4. That the history of ‘history’ as a discipline has a parallel one to that of metaphysics – think Herodotus, Tacitus… Greeks, should be considered.  What other traditions of history exist – Jewish, Chinese – and what differences exist between them?

It strikes me that these general principles are not foreign to historiography.  Afterall, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak – translator of Of Grammatology - is quite influential in historical debates, particularly those about colonialism, which is, precisely the point in issue.  Also, historians like Henry Reynolds, who attempt to imagine The Other Side of the Frontier, are attempting something in this vein.  What Derrida brings to such a discussion is a philosophical awareness of the difficulty of achieving such a task. 

Given all of this then, it would seem bizarre that Derrida has been employed in debates about the theories underpinning historical practice mostly in an epistemological sense.  That is, historians who get hot under the collar, or excited, by the thought of there being ‘nothing outside the text’.  That is, that there is no substance that historical narratives are referring to.  There are some historians who have read Derrida well and applied his work in the ways I listed above – but they are often few and far between.  Strangely enough, the epistemological readings of Derrida’s work have perhaps partially contributed to quite a rigorous rethinking of the concept of ‘event’ and ‘narrative’, something which is no bad thing, and in the case of the former, something that Derrida himself invisages in Spectres of Marx.  A comparison of their findings might be in order. 

Historians, however, when giving an account of recent developments in the development of history as an academic discipline, still feel the need to touch, ie. reference, on Derrida’s thought as a key point in debates over a ‘linguistic turn’ or ‘postmodernism’.  The actual role of his work in these debates is not as great as one would think from the number of general invocations.  Thus Derrida’s name serves as a guiding star from which historians orient themselves – despite it not having quite the sense and direction that they think it might. 

This suggests then that there is a future of deconstruction, and of continuing the injunction of Derrida’s work to think responsibly – in more than one sense of this word – which does not need either the vocabulary of Derrida or deconstruction.  I have no doubt that ‘Derrida’ studies will continue, and that ‘deconstruction’ will continue as a name for various vague designations.  But so will thinking that uses none of these resources, and may still perhaps be considered faithful to this tradition. 

*Violence and Metaphysics, Writing and Difference, ([1967] Routledge, 2001), p101.

** Ibid.

Filed under: Derrida, Historiography, Philosophy, history, postmodernism, research , , ,

Heretical Derridas?

Numerous times over the last couple of months, not suprisingly, I’ve been asked the question of ‘what’s your thesis on?’ This inevitably leads to someone asking ‘can you explain Derrida’s philosophy in a couple of simple sentences’, or something to this effect.

Usually, my answer is, politely, ‘no, I can’t’.

But actually, I will need to. Not just for my sanity, either. I think I will need to present a summary of what I think Derrida was doing, in a plain language that readers not acquainted with Derrida will be able to grasp, for the sake of my argument. To complicate it further, many of the standard ‘explanations’, I really don’t like. Some of them I do -like J.K. Smith’s short book based around ‘alterity’ – otherness. But there is little consensus over Derrida’s writing. There are many different Derridas – a cultural studies Derrida, closely allied to a literary Derrida; a phenomenological Derrida, with Husserlian or Heideggerean variants; the classical philosopher Derrida who comments on Plato, Aristotle, Hegel and Kant, or his evil nemesis, the destructive arch-enemy of philosophy Derrida; or the Jewish or Levinasian Derrida… let alone the nihilist Derrida, the Nietzschean Derrida: you name it, someone champions it.

How to provide a gentle entry point to the enormous sweep of his thought? He offers an abundance of metaphors to choose from – the post card, the archive, the ghost; take your pick.

Or perhaps we should just say, he lived, he thought, he died, the rest is hearsay, or heresy?

Still, this is perhaps not a bad thing to explore on a blog… a bit of feedback, random collections of readers. So, lets explore a little heresy, yes?

Filed under: Derrida, Philosophy, research , , , ,

tangents