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
8 - The Affect of America
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
My remarks are going to be somewhat personal. I do not mean I am preparing to talk about myself, at least not much. Rather, I want to say something about Jacques Derrida's personal America. Many attempts have been made to characterize the intense relations that, forty years ago, began evolving between Derrida's work and his readers (or nonreaders) in the US, relations mediated in very complex ways by the body of his writing, by its reception and translation, by the different institutions or traditions that welcomed or resisted it, and so forth. Instead of another attempt in that general direction, I thought I would try to address the topic of “Derrida's America” in a less, or rather differently mediated sense by saying something about his affective relation to the US. Certainly this is hardly less complex, if only because affect can rarely be assigned to a positive or negative pole without admixture. But there is also the complication—if indeed one can call it that—introduced when someone presumes to be able to talk about another's affective experience in order to say what this other feels or felt, the quality of his affect, what has affected him, and how. This ought to be not just complicated but impossible, practically and morally, or rather ethically. To think it is not impossible is to yield too complacently to the biographer's temptation and to the belief that whatever obstacles there may be in the way of putting oneself in the other's place can be swept aside by dint of good will.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- To FollowThe Wake of Jacques Derrida, pp. 74 - 88Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2010