Democracy is usually identified with openness, order and pluralism and thus peace. Yet, everywhere, from the political convulsions that bring it into being to the wars that aim to extend it, democracy is violent. Usually this violence is seen as accidental or forced upon democracy. The aim of this paper is to argue that the violence of democracy springs from its inextricable if denied relationship to revolution, the drive to re-found the political order properly and definitively. Through a reading of Derrida’s account of the relationship between violence and justice in Walter Benjamin, violence is identified as the unstable founding moment which democracy must both pass through in order to emerge and also endlessly recall in its drive to bo...
Degree awarded: Ph.D. Politics. The Catholic University of America"Democracy to Come" in the Politic...
I argue that a distinction between three autoimmunities is implied in Derrida’s Rogues. These are th...
In his “Critique of Violence,” Walter Benjamin seeks to rethink justice as the interruption of the j...
Democracy is usually identified with openness, order and pluralism and thus peace. Yet, everywhere, ...
Shortly before his death in 2004, Jacques Derrida provocatively suggested that the greatest problem ...
The aim of the present study is to reveal the problematic relation between violence, law and justice...
This essay presents a critical interpretation of Derrida’s deconstructive reading of Walter Benjamin...
W. Benjamin expresses his political concerns in his theses on “revolutionary violence” as “divine ex...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Frazer, Elizabeth, and Kimberly Hutching...
It is a startling fact that when in the mid-80s a ‘third wave’ of democracy took hold in Latin Ameri...
This article enquires into the understanding of violence, and the place of violence in the understan...
Abstract: In a recent article, Martin McQuillan has inaugurated a vigorous Derridean critique of a “...
It is a startling fact that when in the mid-80s a ‘third wave’ of democracy took hold in Latin Ameri...
This book explores the possibilities offered by Derrida’s work on democracy for interpreting contemp...
Jacques Derrida and Giorgio Agamben both consider the question of whether there can be politics with...
Degree awarded: Ph.D. Politics. The Catholic University of America"Democracy to Come" in the Politic...
I argue that a distinction between three autoimmunities is implied in Derrida’s Rogues. These are th...
In his “Critique of Violence,” Walter Benjamin seeks to rethink justice as the interruption of the j...
Democracy is usually identified with openness, order and pluralism and thus peace. Yet, everywhere, ...
Shortly before his death in 2004, Jacques Derrida provocatively suggested that the greatest problem ...
The aim of the present study is to reveal the problematic relation between violence, law and justice...
This essay presents a critical interpretation of Derrida’s deconstructive reading of Walter Benjamin...
W. Benjamin expresses his political concerns in his theses on “revolutionary violence” as “divine ex...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Frazer, Elizabeth, and Kimberly Hutching...
It is a startling fact that when in the mid-80s a ‘third wave’ of democracy took hold in Latin Ameri...
This article enquires into the understanding of violence, and the place of violence in the understan...
Abstract: In a recent article, Martin McQuillan has inaugurated a vigorous Derridean critique of a “...
It is a startling fact that when in the mid-80s a ‘third wave’ of democracy took hold in Latin Ameri...
This book explores the possibilities offered by Derrida’s work on democracy for interpreting contemp...
Jacques Derrida and Giorgio Agamben both consider the question of whether there can be politics with...
Degree awarded: Ph.D. Politics. The Catholic University of America"Democracy to Come" in the Politic...
I argue that a distinction between three autoimmunities is implied in Derrida’s Rogues. These are th...
In his “Critique of Violence,” Walter Benjamin seeks to rethink justice as the interruption of the j...