7 found
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  1. The Necessity of Discrimination: Disjoining Derrida and Levinas.Martin Hagglund - 2004 - Diacritics 34 (1):40-71.
  2.  25
    On Chronolibido: A Response to Rabaté and Johnston.Martin Hägglund - 2013 - Derrida Today 6 (2):182-196.
    This paper is a response to Jean-Michel Rabaté’s and Adrian Johnston's essays on my book Dying for Time. In responding, I further develop my notions of mortality and immortality, pleasure and pain, the flow of libido and the anticipation of loss. I also elaborate the stakes of my critique of Freud and Lacan, underlining why desire does not derive from a lack of timeless fullness. Rather, desire is both animated and agonized by temporal finitude.
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  3.  40
    Time, Desire, Politics: A Reply to Ernesto Laclau.Martin Hägglund - 2008 - Diacritics 38 (1/2):190-199.
    The paper elucidates the author's conception of finitude and the logic of survival, which involves a deconstruction of the opposition between mortality and immortality. Returning to Laclau's deployment of a psychoanalytic conception of lack in his thinking of politics, the paper concludes with a discussion of democracy. Radical atheism does not seek to replace Laclau's approach to politics, as a struggle through articulation for a hegemonic position, but to demonstrate through immanent critique that it requires a different conception of desire.
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  4.  42
    Beyond the Performative and the Constative.Martin Hägglund - 2013 - Research in Phenomenology 43 (1):100-107.
  5.  3
    Derrida's Radical Atheism.Martin Hägglund - 2014 - In Zeynep Direk & Leonard Lawlor (eds.), A Companion to Derrida. Oxford, UK: Wiley. pp. 166–178.
    Radical atheism thus provides a new framework for understanding Derrida's engagement with religious concepts and challenges the numerous theological accounts of deconstruction. The proliferation in Derrida's late works of apparently religious terms, which will here examine through the triad of faith, the unconditional, and the messianic, has given rise to a widespread notion that there was a “religious turn” in his thinking. Deconstructing the religious conception of the good, Derrida develops a notion of “radical evil”. Derrida highlights the logic of (...)
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  6.  35
    Radical Atheism and “The Arche-Materiality of Time”.Martin Hägglund - 2011 - Journal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 6 (14):61-65.
  7.  51
    The Non-Ethical Opening of Ethics: A Response to Derek Attridge.Martin Hägglund - 2010 - Derrida Today 3 (2):295-305.
    This paper is a response to Derek Attridge's review of my book Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008. Attridge's review was published in Derrida Today Vol. 2, Issue 2 (2009), pp. 271–281, the arguments of which have also been incorporated in Attridge's recent book Reading and Responsibility, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2010.
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