- Shopping Bag ( 0 items )
- Spend $25, Get FREE SHIPPING
List Price
$27.95
Textbook Details
Used & New From our Trusted Marketplace Sellers
To try again, please visit the B&N Marketplace.
Jacques Derrida's revolutionary theories about deconstruction, phenomenology, psychoanalysis, and structuralism, first voiced in the 1960s, forever changed the face of European and American criticism. The ideas in De la grammatologie sparked lively debates in intellectual circles that included students of literature, philosophy, and the humanities, inspiring these students to ask questions of their disciplines that had previously been considered improper. Thirty years later, the immense influence of Derrida's work is still igniting controversy, thanks in part to Gayatri Spivak's translation, which captures the richness and complexity of the original. This corrected edition adds a new index of the critics and philosophers cited in the text and makes one of contemporary criticism's most indispensable works even more accessible and usable.
The tool-kit for anyone who wants to empty the 'presence' out of any text he has taken a dislike to. A handy arsenal of deconstructive tools are to be found in its pages, and the technique, once learnt, is as simple, and as destructive, as leaving a bomb in a brown paper bag outside (or inside) a pub.
Roger Poole
More Reviews and RecommendationsJacques Derrida (1930-2004) taught at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak is Avalon Foundation Professor in the Humanities at Columbia University.
The tool-kit for anyone who wants to empty the 'presence' out of any text he has taken a dislike to. A handy arsenal of deconstructive tools are to be found in its pages, and the technique, once learnt, is as simple, and as destructive, as leaving a bomb in a brown paper bag outside (or inside) a pub.
Roger Poole
The translation is a noble job, and we should be grateful to have this distinguished book in our hands... [Spivak's] situating of Derrida among his precursors—Nietzsche, Freud, Heidegger, Husserl—and contemporaries—Lacan, Foucault, and the elusive animal known as structuralism—is very lucid and extremely useful.
Michael Wood
Reading Derrida was the shock of a decentering, the critical shift into a world of the interminable movement of difference, the crisis of any closure. Of Grammatology was and remains the most tightly worked... and exemplary... demonstration of the science of this shift and crisis.
There is cause for rejoicing in the translation of De la grammatologie... Just as Derrida discloses in Rousseau a writer who distrusts writing and longs for the proximity of the self to its voice, so Spivak approaches Derrida through the structure of his diction; no ideas but in the words themselves.
Denis Donoghue
The translation is a noble job, and we should be gratdful to have this distinguished book in our hands. -- New York Review of Books
One of the major works in the development of contemporary criticism and philosophy.
J. Hillis Miller, Yale University
| Acknowledgments | ||
| Translator's Preface | ||
| Preface | ||
| Exergue | 3 | |
| 1 | The End of the Book and the Beginning of Writing | 6 |
| The Program | 6 | |
| The Signifier and Truth | 10 | |
| The Written Being/The Being Written | 18 | |
| 2 | Linguistics and Grammatology | 27 |
| The Outside and the Inside | 30 | |
| The Outside Is [word is struck out] the Inside | 44 | |
| The Hinge [La Brisure] | 65 | |
| 3 | Of Grammatology as a Positive Science | 74 |
| Algebra: Arcanum and Transparence | 75 | |
| Science and the Name of Man | 81 | |
| The Rebus and the Complicity of Origins | 87 | |
| Introduction to the "Age of Rousseau" | 97 | |
| 1 | The Violence of the Letter: From Levi-Strauss to Rousseau | 101 |
| The Battle of Proper Names | 107 | |
| Writing and Man's Exploitation by Man | 118 | |
| 2 | "... That Dangerous Supplement ..." | 141 |
| From/Of Blindness to the Supplement | 144 | |
| The Chain of Supplements | 152 | |
| The Exorbitant. Question of Method | 157 | |
| 3 | Genesis and Structure of the Essay on the Origin of Languages | 165 |
| I | The Place of the "Essay" | 165 |
| II | Imitation | 195 |
| III | Articulation | 229 |
| 4 | From/Of the Supplement to the Source: The Theory of Writing | 269 |
| The Originary Metaphor | 270 | |
| The History and System of Scripts | 280 | |
| The Alphabet and Absolute Representation | 295 | |
| The Theorem and the Theater | 302 | |
| The Supplement of (at) the Origin | 313 | |
| Notes | 317 |
To try again, please visit the B&N Marketplace.



