•  16
    Nadia’s Case Revisited
    Studia Phaenomenologica 26 99-120. 2026.
    In the introduction to The Second Sex (1949), Simone de Beauvoir sketches a severe moralist view on the feminine existence by considering the woman’s consent to becoming other than the authentic phenomenological subject a moral fault. We may ask what happens within this view to altered existential modes that could elicit from the woman’s situation of oppression in patriarchal societies, as it is described by Beauvoir, and, in the case of psycho­logical fragility, could develop into painful psych…Read more
  •  8
    Index
    with Luke Collison, Cillian Ó Fathaigh, Georgios Tsagdis, Jennifer Rushworth, Giovanni Menegalle, Susanna Lindberg, Joseph Cohen, Raphael Zagury-Orly, Pheng Cheah, Rozemund Uljée, Kit Barton, Cathrine Bjørnholt Michaelsen, Isabelle Alfandary, Timothy Secret, David Ventura, Peggy Kamuf, Rosine Kelz, Naomi Waltham-Smith, Allan Parsons, Chris Lloyd, Nicole Anderson, Thomas Clément Mercier, and Gavin Rae
    In Derrida's Politics of Friendship: Amity and Enmity, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 305-310. 2021.
  •  9
    Le paradoxe de l’utopie
    Philosophiques 52 (1): 205-214. 2025.
  •  22
    Syntax Is the Metal Itself. Derrida on the Usure of the Metaphor
    In Lisa Foran & Rozemund Uljée (eds.), Heidegger, Levinas, Derrida: The Question of Difference, Springer Verlag. pp. 163-172. 2016.
    The following pages can be read as a preliminary study on Derrida’s thought of the usure. The point of departure is the reading of Levinas’ treatment of the spatial metaphor (such as “the Most-High” and “absolute exteriority”) that Derrida mobilizes in “Violence and Metaphysics. An Essay on the Thought of Emmanuel Levinas” (1964). What is at stake in this reading, I suggest, is not only the interpretation of Levinas’ metaphysics but also the formulation of another thought of the metaphor (of the…Read more
  •  55
    Editors’ Preface
    Oxford Literary Review 45 (2). 2024.
  •  59
    The Question of Metaphoricity: French Epistemology in Deconstruction
    Oxford Literary Review 45 (2): 274-294. 2024.
    In his recently published 1975–76 seminar on Life Death (§3), Jacques Derrida offers a severe critique of French epistemologists and philosophers of life. On Derrida’s view, they do not seem to be concerned with the question of the metaphoricity of metaphor but, rather, by taking the epistemological cut between (inadequate) metaphors and (adequate) concepts for granted, they explain the scientific process as a movement of critical rectification of metaphors by concepts. Moreover, they do not eng…Read more
  •  91
    Gift and Respect: Heidegger's Kant as Taught by Derrida
    Derrida Today 17 (2): 166-176. 2024.
    In this article, I focus on the reading of Heidegger's Kant that Derrida offers in his recently published 1978-9 seminar Donner le temps II (§§12–3). Here Derrida tracks across Heidegger's text the auto-affective or auto-dative structure (namely, the originary synthesis of spontaneity and receptivity) in which the Kantian conceptions of the experience of time and of transcendental imagination converge, and which is seen as scandalously underpinning the conception of respect. In particular, I dra…Read more
  •  101
    Mimetic Phantasia in Action: Marc Richir’s Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 55 (2): 149-166. 2024.
    In this article, I aim to cast light on the genetic analyses of the apperception of the other that the phenomenologist Marc Richir develops in his late masterwork Phénoménologie en esquisses (2000). My reading hypothesis is that these analyses consist in the original contribution that Richir makes to the standard phenomenological account of empathy from within his overall project of a non-standard revision/refoundation of the Husserlian genetic phenomenology. To test this hypothesis, I trace Ric…Read more
  •  102
    Engram: Derrida's Reply to Stiegler
    Paragraph 45 (3): 351-365. 2022.
    This article focuses on two indices from Geschlecht III session XIII: (1) an apparently insignificant reference to Stiegler and (2) the recourse to the concept of the engram as a trope of other grammatological figures that are more frequent in Derrida's work. By interweaving these indexes together, the article suggests that Derrida's text can be read as a noteworthy stage in his ongoing dialogue with Bernard Stiegler surrounding the question posed by human evolution to any accounts of the histor…Read more
  •  55
    An analysis of Derrida’s early work engaging Plato, Hegel, and the life sciences. Germs of Death explores the idea of genesis, or dissemination, in the early work of Jacques Derrida. Looking at Derrida’s published and unpublished work from “Force and Signification” in 1963 to Glas in 1974, Mauro Senatore traces the development of Derrida’s understanding of genesis both linguistically and biologically, and argues that this topic is an overlooked thread that draws together Derrida’s readings of Pl…Read more
  •  32
    En la noche de un no-saber: Derrida sobre la libertad
    Enrahonar: Quaderns de Filosofía 66 49-70. 2021.
    Jacques Derrida nunca escribió un libro sobre la «libertad». Esta palabra aparece muy raramente en sus escritos hasta finales de los años ochenta; desde entonces, Derrida la usó cada vez más, pero con cautela. En este artículo, me propongo mostrar que podemos rastrear un pensamiento de la libertad a lo largo de la obra de Derrida y que este pensamiento describe una trayectoria singular desde la libertad subjetiva de la historia humanista de la vida hasta la libertad presubjetiva de la vida simbó…Read more
  •  55
    Gaps in Differance
    Studia Phaenomenologica 22 323-345. 2022.
    This article casts light on Marc Richir’s remarkable and yet poorly known interpretation of the analyses of animality that Martin Heidegger develops in The Fundamental Concepts of Metaphysics: World, Finitude and Solitude. It shows that this interpretation unfolds as a two‑step critical revision of Heidegger’s analyses within the framework of Richir’s neo‑phenomenological project. On the one hand, Richir aims to offer the “right” interpretation of the cybernetic and grammatological history of li…Read more
  •  52
    The being-in-the-world of psyche: Derrida’s early reading of Freud
    Rivista Internazionale di Filosofia e Psicologia 13 (2): 82-93. 2022.
    _Abstract_: In this article, I propose an original re-interpretation of the encounter between deconstruction and psychoanalysis as it is described by Jacques Derrida in his early essay “_Freud and the scene of writing_” (1966). My working hypothesis is that Derrida first reads psychoanalysis as a _partially_ _deconstructive_ human science. To test this hypothesis, I begin by demonstrating that Derrida’s reading draws on the description of deconstructive sciences offered since his early version o…Read more
  •  56
    In his recently published seminar Life Death (1975–76), Derrida engages in a close reading of Heidegger's refutation of the biologistic interpretation of Nietzsche. Derrida explains that, building on his interpretation of Nietzsche as the peak of metaphysics, Heidegger wishes to rescue the latter's metaphysical discourse from its biologizing character. In this article, I argue that Derrida's reading centres on the ontological regionalism undergirding Heidegger's refutation. To develop this argum…Read more
  •  41
    The Question of Regionalism
    Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 26 (1): 231-250. 2021.
    In Of Grammatology (1967), Jacques Derrida explains that Western culture undergoes a transformation of knowledge and discourses that unfolds as the grammatization of experience. By resorting to the code of writing (grammē), as the elementary code of experience, modern sciences call into question ontological regionalism, that is, their traditional subordination to a fundamental ontology that assigns them the region of being corresponding to their field of investigation. Within this framework, Der…Read more
  •  62
    On the occasion of the publication of Derrida’s unedited seminar Geschlecht III: Sex, Race, Nation, Humanity, which includes significant pages on Heidegger’s discourse on animality, this article proposes reopening the dossier that the French philosopher had dedicated to that discourse throughout his work. It aims to elaborate an overall interpretation of this dossier in the light of the grammatological account of the living, which, at the moment of sketching his intellectual biography, Derrida h…Read more
  •  62
    Derrida’s animalism
    Angelaki 25 (5): 35-49. 2020.
    This article focuses on Jacques Derrida’s deconstructive re-elaboration of the tradition of mechanicism, from the Cartesian animal–machine to contemporary scientism. It shows that Derrida does not counter this tradition by resorting to the metaphysical presupposition of Freedom – as sovereign independence from the machine – which secures the traditional oppositions of Man and the Machine and of the biological and the psychical. Rather, since his interpretation of the cybernetic concept of progra…Read more
  •  27
    This essay traces Derrida’s interrogation of Nietzsche and Freud’s concept of cruelty and his attempt to think the beyond that this concept necessarily presupposes. On the one hand, it highlights the key traits of the Nietzschean and Freudian concept of cruelty, namely, its irreducibility to determination and its essential entanglement with life. On the other hand, it explains that the beyond cruelty, which Derrida thinks by dissociating life from cruelty, offers us the point of departure for an…Read more
  •  54
    Who is Nietzsche?
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 23 (2): 139-158. 2019.
    This article focuses on the constellation of texts in which Derrida engages with the autobiographical question raised by Heidegger in his lectures on Nietzsche. It argues that Derrida takes this question (“Who is Nietzsche?”) as the point of departure not only of two di-verging approaches to the problem of the signature of the philoso-pher, but also of the two texts that he devotes to the exploration of these approaches. In these texts, distancing himself from Heidegger, Derrida interprets Nietz…Read more
  •  62
    Teleotheology
    Philosophy Today 63 (1): 175-194. 2019.
    This article explores the hypothesis formulated by Derrida in his early work that structuralism is Aristotelian in foundation. To this end, it traces Derrida’s engagement with Aristotle’s Physics between the seminal essays “Force and Signification” and “Ousia and Grammē”. On the one hand, it demonstrates that Derrida reads Aristotle’s concept of time as the presupposition of what he designates as structuralism, that is, the teleological understanding of movement from its achieved structure and t…Read more
  •  112
    Drive to Drive: The Deconstruction of the Freudian Trieb
    Derrida Today 12 (1): 59-79. 2019.
    In the essay ‘To Speculate – On “Freud’”, which is published in The Postcards: From Socrates to Freud and Beyond (1980) and draws upon the last part of his unedited lecture course on La Vie la mort (taught in 1975), Jacques Derrida engages a close reading of Sigmund Freud's Beyond the Pleasure Principle. This article focuses on the deconstruction of the Freudian concept of drive (Trieb) that Derrida unfolds across his reading. It traces the analysis of the movement of autotelicity (auto-télie) t…Read more
  •  114
    This essay aims to bring to light a specific movement elaborated by Derrida in Of Grammatology, which goes from the experience of dispossession in speech and the economy of signs that replaces speech itself with writing, through the chains of supplements, to the merging of language and auto-erotism into the differentiated totality of auto-affection as the universal rule of experience or as life itself. I will point out that idealization, as the submission of the world to a certain power of repet…Read more
  •  93
    In Memoires for Paul de Man Derrida acknowledges the urgency, for any rigorous deconstruction, of closely confronting Austin's notion of the performative. This study aims to countersign Derrida' s acknowledgement by elaborating a certain deconstructive tradition of thinking the performativity of the performative and, thus, of retracing the performative back to the modem philosophical tradition of positing. In particular, it focuses on Derrida's thought of the iterability of the performative, as …Read more
  •  10
    Performative after Deconstruction
    Bloomsbury Academic. 2013.
    What has happened since de Man and Derrida first read Austin? How has the encounter between deconstruction and the performative affected each of these terms? In addressing these questions, this book brings together scholars whose works have been provoked in different ways by the encounter of deconstruction and the performative. Following Derrida's appeal to any rigorous deconstruction to reckon with Austin's theorems and his ever growing commitment to rethink and rewrite the performative and its…Read more
  •  118