biography
pronunciation:
[derida]
| sex:
| male
|
| lived:
| (1930– )
|
| biography:
| French philosopher-linguist, born in Algeria. He studied in Paris, and teaches at the Ecole Normale Supérieure there. His critique of the referentiality of language and the objectivity of structures founded the school of criticism called deconstruction. He advocated that the reader should look at how a text was put together in order to reveal its hidden meanings and the assumptions of the author. Among his highly influential works are De la Grammatologie (1967, Of Grammatology), L'écriture et la différence (1967, Writing and Difference), and La dissémination (1972, Dissemination). His essay Apories appeared in 1996. The award of an honorary degree by Cambridge University in 1992 was publicly contested, prompting attacks on and defences of his work. |
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