•  51
    Reflections
    with R. M. Rilke, Immanuel Kant, and Dave Smith
    Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 9 (1): 21-21. 1990.
  •  22
    Hegel and Contemporary Identity Politics
    The Owl of Minerva 55 (1): 141-155. 2024.
    While modern liberal theory has adapted to the emergence of so-called “identity politics,” the question of how identity figures into politics remains unclear. Insofar as this concerns the public perception of identity, an account of reflexive imagination, developed from Hegel’s aesthetic theory, helps address this challenge in contemporary political theory.
  •  77
    Derrida enisled
    In William John Thomas Mitchell & Arnold Ira Davidson (eds.), The late Derrida, University of Chicago Press. pp. 248-276. 2007.
  •  47
    Derrida and de Man: Two Rhetorics of Deconstruction
    In Zeynep Direk & Leonard Lawlor (eds.), A Companion to Derrida, Wiley-blackwell. 2014.
    This chapter contrasts Derrida's strategies of “deconstruction” with Paul de Man's. It shows how each characteristically puts an essay together to make it performatively effective. The author's primary concern is to understand better Derrida's rhetorical strategies in his essays by contrasting them with de Man's. He begins the comparison with a description of de Man's essay. Unlike de Man's essay, Derrida's “Faith and Knowledge” does not end in a climactic unforeseen concluding formulation. It j…Read more
  •  8
    The ‘Quasi-Turn-of-Screw Effect’: How To Raise a Ghost with Words
    Oxford Literary Review 25 (1): 121-137. 2003.
  •  88
    Deconstruction and the Yale School: An Interview with J. Hillis Miller
    with Ning Yizhong
    Derrida Today 16 (2): 170-184. 2023.
    J. Hillis Miller (1928–2021) was one of the most prominent figures in literary criticism and theory. After receiving his Ph.D. from Harvard University, he taught at Johns Hopkins University, Yale University and the University of California at Irvine. He retired as Professor Emeritus in 2002. Miller was president of the Modern Language Association of America in 1986 and contributed significantly to professional academic institutions and organizations throughout his career. As an important represe…Read more
  •  43
    Traditional Chinese philosophy, if engaged at all, is often regarded as an object of antiquated curiosity and dismissed as unimportant in the current age of globalization. Written by a team of internationally renowned scholars, this book, however, challenges this judgement and offers an in-depth study of pre-modern Chinese philosophy from an interdisciplinary perspective. Exploring the relevance of traditional Chinese philosophy for the global age, it takes a comparative approach, analysing anci…Read more
  •  74
    On First Looking into Derrida's Glas
    Paragraph 39 (2): 129-148. 2016.
    This essay attempts to ‘read’ the first page of Jacques Derrida's Glas, while at the same time reporting as best I can what actually goes on when I make this effort of reading. I try to exemplify in detail my claim that what goes on in reading is much stranger and more complex that one might think. An intricate series of events took place when I first received Glas in the mail and opened it, reading first the single-sheet insert and then looking at the cover, the title page, and, finally, the fi…Read more
  •  76
    Tradition and Difference (review)
    Diacritics 2 (4): 6. 1972.
  •  59
    "Beginning with a Text"
    Diacritics 6 (3): 2. 1976.
  •  67
    Deconstructing the Deconstructers
    Diacritics 5 (2): 24. 1975.
  •  130
    Moving Critical Inquiry On
    Critical Inquiry 30 (2): 414-420. 2004.
  • Index To Volume Xvii
    Journal of the History of Ideas 17 (4): 567. 1956.
  •  50
    What Do Stories about Pictures Want?
    Critical Inquiry 34 (5). 2008.
  •  127
    Derrida Enisled
    Critical Inquiry 33 (2): 248. 2007.
  •  103
    Baird's IshmaelIshmael
    with James Baird
    Journal of the History of Ideas 17 (4): 555. 1956.
  •  172
    Deconstruction and Criticism
    with Harold Bloom, Paul de Man, Jacques Derrida, and Geoffrey Hartman
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 39 (2): 219-221. 1979.
  •  120
    The Ethics of Reading: Kant, de Man, Eliot, Trollope, and Benjamin
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 46 (2): 312-314. 1987.
  •  67
    Fiction and Repetition
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 41 (4): 452-454. 1983.
  •  44
    Index to Volume XVII
    Renascence 17 (4): 223-224. 1965.
  •  85
    The ethics of hypertext
    Diacritics 25 (3): 27-39. 1995.
  •  243
    Theory’s Empire: Reflections on a Vocation for Critical Inquiry
    with Stanley Fish, Peter Galison, Sander L. Gilman, Miriam Hansen, Harry Harootunian, Fredric Jameson, Jerome McGann, Robert Morgan, and Robert Pippin
    Critical Inquiry 30 (2): 396. 2004.
  •  456
    Authenticity in Painting: Remarks on Michael Fried’s Art History
    with Michael Fried, Robert Pippin, Michel Chaouli, Stefan Andriopoulos, Richard Menke, Carlo Ginzburg, Dragan Kujundzic, and Jacques Derrida
    Critical Inquiry 31 (3): 575. 2005.
    My topic is authenticity in or perhaps as painting, not the authenticity of paintings; I know next to nothing about the problem of verifying claims of authorship. I am interested in another kind of genuineness and fraudulence, the kind at issue when we say of a person that he or she is false, not genuine, inauthentic, lacks integrity, and, especially when we say he or she is playing to the crowd, playing for effect, or is a poseur. These are not quite moral distinctions (no one has a duty to be a…Read more
  •  4
    12 the stone and the shell
    In Robert Young (ed.), Untying the text: a post-structuralist reader, Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 244. 1981.
  •  26
    Taking Up a Task
    In Simon Critchley & Oliver Marchart (eds.), Laclau: A Critical Reader, Routledge. pp. 216--24. 2012.
  •  75
    Theory and Practice: Response to Vincent Leitch
    Critical Inquiry 6 (4): 609-614. 1980.
    Leitch speaks of his procedure with my work as employing an "abrupt asyndetic format" and as being "a metonymic montage in which themes and citations are playfully and copiously combined." One form of this playfulness is the panoply of figures he uses to describe me and my criticism. The need to use figures for this is interesting, as is their incoherence, though the figures can be shown to fall into a rough antithetical pattern. At one moment the deconstructive critic is a fairy godmother able …Read more