Deconstruction began as a series of techniques invented by Jacques Derrida, Paul de Man, and others to analyze literary and philosophical texts. These techniques, in turn, were connected to larger philosophical claims about the nature of language and meaning. One such assertion is that the repetition of a text in a new context often subtly changes its meaning. There could be no better example of this principle than the career of deconstruction itself. To be adapted to the needs and concerns of the legal academy, deconstruction had to be translated and altered in significant ways, making it more flexible, practical, and attentive to questions of justice and injustice. This essay describes some of the changes that deconstruction underwent as ...
This dissertation gives an account of the philosophy of Jacques Derrida. Most interpretations of thi...
Jacques Derrida was, without doubt, one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth centur...
This chapter discusses Jacques Derrida's work on deconstruction, and its implications for critical c...
Deconstruction began as a series of techniques invented by Jacques Derrida, Paul de Man, and others ...
The purpose of this Article is to introduce legal readers to the ideas of the French philosopher Jac...
The explication of "deconstruction" put forward in this short essay seeks to recover the radicality ...
This article offers an historical commentary on Jacques Derrida’s influential essay ‘Force of Law’, ...
This Article examines the treatment of deconstruction in United States judicial opinions.\u27 A hand...
OR SEVERAL years now I have been concerned with the problem of how one should apply the insights of ...
At the time of its presentation, Derrida's 'Force of law' represented deconstruction's perhaps most ...
An examination of how/if the work of Jacques Derrida can be used as an aid to judicial interpretatio...
The Deconstruction of Philosophy : The Spectres of Jacques Derrida - Irfan Ajvaz
Since it is imposed to thinking, deconstruction can be seen as a law, the Law itself. Deconstruction...
This paper aims to discuss the post-structural philosopher Jacques Derrida’s philosophy of deconstru...
To many, the very title of this book, Deconstruction and the Possibility of Justice, would seem to b...
This dissertation gives an account of the philosophy of Jacques Derrida. Most interpretations of thi...
Jacques Derrida was, without doubt, one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth centur...
This chapter discusses Jacques Derrida's work on deconstruction, and its implications for critical c...
Deconstruction began as a series of techniques invented by Jacques Derrida, Paul de Man, and others ...
The purpose of this Article is to introduce legal readers to the ideas of the French philosopher Jac...
The explication of "deconstruction" put forward in this short essay seeks to recover the radicality ...
This article offers an historical commentary on Jacques Derrida’s influential essay ‘Force of Law’, ...
This Article examines the treatment of deconstruction in United States judicial opinions.\u27 A hand...
OR SEVERAL years now I have been concerned with the problem of how one should apply the insights of ...
At the time of its presentation, Derrida's 'Force of law' represented deconstruction's perhaps most ...
An examination of how/if the work of Jacques Derrida can be used as an aid to judicial interpretatio...
The Deconstruction of Philosophy : The Spectres of Jacques Derrida - Irfan Ajvaz
Since it is imposed to thinking, deconstruction can be seen as a law, the Law itself. Deconstruction...
This paper aims to discuss the post-structural philosopher Jacques Derrida’s philosophy of deconstru...
To many, the very title of this book, Deconstruction and the Possibility of Justice, would seem to b...
This dissertation gives an account of the philosophy of Jacques Derrida. Most interpretations of thi...
Jacques Derrida was, without doubt, one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth centur...
This chapter discusses Jacques Derrida's work on deconstruction, and its implications for critical c...