Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Works by Jacques Derrida Cited
- Series Editor's Preface
- Introduction: Watchwords
- 1 “Tape-Recorded Surprise”: Derrida Interviewed
- 2 “Bartleby,” or Decision: A Note on Allegory
- 3 Urgent Translation
- 4 Coming to the Beginning
- 5 To Follow
- 6 La Morsure
- 7 “One day someone …”
- 8 The Affect of America
- 9 From Now On
- 10 Stunned: Derrida on Film
- 11 Aller à la ligne
- 12 Composition Displacement
- 13 The Ear, Who?
- 14 To Do Justice to “Rousseau,” Irreducibly
- 15 The Deconstitution of Psychoanalysis
- 16 The Philosopher, As Such, and the Death Penalty
- Epitaph
- Index
14 - To Do Justice to “Rousseau,” Irreducibly
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Works by Jacques Derrida Cited
- Series Editor's Preface
- Introduction: Watchwords
- 1 “Tape-Recorded Surprise”: Derrida Interviewed
- 2 “Bartleby,” or Decision: A Note on Allegory
- 3 Urgent Translation
- 4 Coming to the Beginning
- 5 To Follow
- 6 La Morsure
- 7 “One day someone …”
- 8 The Affect of America
- 9 From Now On
- 10 Stunned: Derrida on Film
- 11 Aller à la ligne
- 12 Composition Displacement
- 13 The Ear, Who?
- 14 To Do Justice to “Rousseau,” Irreducibly
- 15 The Deconstitution of Psychoanalysis
- 16 The Philosopher, As Such, and the Death Penalty
- Epitaph
- Index
Summary
Of Grammatology is a monstrous work. One should say that, if possible, in the best sense, which is to say the sense evoked, now famously, in the last sentences of that book's initial chapter, titled “Exergue”:
Perhaps patient meditation and painstaking investigation on and around what is still provisionally called writing … are the wanderings of a thinking that is faithful and attentive to the world that, irreducibly, is coming and that proclaims itself at present, beyond the closure of knowledge. The future cannot be anticipated except in the form of an absolute danger. It is what breaks absolutely with constituted normality and can announce itself, present itself only as a sort of monstrosity. (Grammatology, 4–5)
Monstrous are “wanderings … beyond the closure of knowledge” and it is with just such a wandering, without the security of known and normal compass points, that Derrida makes his way, blindly or monstrously, toward a future for thought and a thought of the future. Wandering, errancy [errance] is the name he will claim again, some two hundred pages later, for the “method” he is following, that is, the path toward the exit from “the closure of knowledge,” of metaphysics: “[This exiting] proceeds in the manner of an errant thinking on the possibility of itinerary and of method. It affects itself [s'affecte] with nonknowledge as with its future and it ventures out [s'aventure] deliberately” (162).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- To FollowThe Wake of Jacques Derrida, pp. 166 - 177Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2010