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Derrida
[ der-ee-dah ]
noun
- Jacques, 1930–2004, French philosopher and literary critic, born in Algiers.
Derrida
/ dɛrɪda /
noun
- DerridaJacques19302004MFrenchPHILOSOPHY: philosopherWRITING: literary criticWRITING: deconstructionist Jacques. 1930–2004, French philosopher and literary critic, regarded as the founder of deconstruction: author of L'Ecriture et la différence (1967)
Example Sentences
A more serious term is "deconstructor," derived from the "deconstruction" concept pioneered by philosopher Jacques Derrida.
As the Algerian French philosopher Jacques Derrida wrote: “A ghost never dies; it remains always to come and to come-back.”
He was anti-theory at a time when graduate students in the arts and humanities could not afford to be oblivious of Foucault, Derrida and the army of faddish post-modernists.
And he has engaged with other leading thinkers like Jacques Derrida, becoming one of the most important literary critics and philosophers in his native Japan.
A series of Derrida’s lectures was published as the book “The Politics of Friendship,” which includes a eulogy for Jean-Francois Lyotard.
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