Story at BBC News. Le Monde (more fitting).
I am not sure what to say about that – he was a mythological figure when I began my university studies and I suppose I always thought he was interesting and provocative while being unintelligible and plain old wrong half of the time. And clever me always thought that while arguing against logocentrism, he was the biggest logocentrist of them all. And so on.
Perhaps the BBC piece doesn’t quite get what it was all about. When I watched the Derrida movie in Boston, the presenter explained that Derrida had always fought for the oppressed people of the Earth – which is a really far-fetched interpretation. I mean, he was an esoteric intellectual arguably working from a Christian/Jewish tradition of seeing everything as beginning with the word. (I read an article making this connection somewhere – makes sense.)
But I think the perception of Derrida-as-activist is going to stick nevertheless.
(Update: The New York Times obituary is much better and captures the whole range of responses to deconstruction from the accusation of defending Nazism to its contemporary association with progressive causes.)
RIP/ finnegan’s wake/ art slipped between philosophy/ applied grammatology/ pretty horrible documentary/ pun politics 4 mediamania outside the academy