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Journal ArticleDOI

Derrida, autobiography and postcoloniality

Jane Hiddleston
- 01 Oct 2005 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 3, pp 291-304
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TLDR
The authors argue that the intermingling of philosophy and autobiography can tell us something new about the dangers and difficulties of post-colonisation inquiry, and the hesitant incursion of the autobiographical subject into Derrida's later texts dramatises this aporia and its effects on postcolonial debate.
Abstract
The question of Derrida's relationship with postcolonial theory has for a long time been a fraught one. Some of the major postcolonial critics engage directly with Derrida's reflections on dissemination and excentricity, while others argue, on the contrary, that his mode of thinking is too abstract to tell us anything informative about the mechanics of colonial and neo-colonial oppression. This article responds to these postcolonial critics, and analyses two recent texts, L'Autre Cap and Le Monolinguisme de l'autre , in order to argue that the intermingling of philosophy and autobiography can tell us something new about the dangers and difficulties of postcolonial inquiry. These works attempt to examine the damaging effects of European cultural hegemony, and the imposition of the colonial language in Algeria, but, in including anxieties about this project expressed in the first person, they also convey a sense of doubt about the appropriateness of universalising philosophical language. The philosopher grapples with an aporia between the need to describe the universal experience of alienation and dispossession in language (since this indeed weakens the coloniser's assumed position of dominance and ownership), and attention to the very singularities that colonial culture oppresses, and that resist theorisation in general terms. The hesitant incursion of the autobiographical subject into Derrida's later texts dramatises this aporia and its effects on postcolonial debate.

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The post always rings twice? The Algerian War, poststructuralism and the postcolonial in IR theory

TL;DR: The authors make the case for rethinking the relation between poststructuralism and postcolonialism, by building on the claims advanced by Robert Young, Azzedine Haddour and Pal Ahluwalia that the history of deconstruction coincides with the collapse of the French colonial system in Algeria, and with the violent anti-colonial struggle that ensued.
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Transcendence and Immanence in Contemporary Psychotherapies: Trends, Tensions, and Treatment:

TL;DR: In the post-modern critique, psychotherapy has been transformed into a new paradigm called post-postmodern critique as mentioned in this paper, and psychotherapy can be seen as a form of post-structured psychoanalysis.
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Algeria as Postcolony? Rethinking the Colonial Legacy of Post-Structuralism

TL;DR: For instance, this article argued that if the term postcolonial is meant to describe those who were influenced by events in Algeria, then an entire generation of French thinkers might be considered post-colonial to varying degrees.
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The city of refuge: Deconstructing cosmopolitanism in Anthony Minghella’s Breaking and Entering

TL;DR: Minghella's feature film Breaking and Entering (2006) constitutes a kaleidoscopic portrait of the Camden cityscape around King's Cross/St Pancras, a North London area whose gradual gentrification at the beginning of the 21st century makes it the site of perpetual clashes along diverse lines of division, whether cultural, legal, social, ethnic or personal as mentioned in this paper.
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Jazzing the Novel: The Derridean Ethics of Michael Ondaatje's Coming through Slaughter

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References
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Location of Culture

Bhabha, +1 more
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TL;DR: The postcolonial and the post-modern: The question of agency as mentioned in this paper, the question of how newness enters the world: Postmodern space, postcolonial times and the trials of cultural translation, 12.
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The Post-Colonial Critic : Interviews, Strategies, Dialogues

TL;DR: The Post-Colonial Critic as mentioned in this paper is a collection of interviews and discussions in which Gayatri Spivak has taken part over the past five years, together they articulate some of the most compelling politico-theoretical issues of the present.
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De la grammatologie

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White Mythologies: Writing History and the West

TL;DR: In this paper, Young argues that all efforts to subsume history into a single narrative are doomed to failure: there remains always an unassimilable surplus, and suggests strategies for a hon-historicist history which avoids the trap of Eurocentricism.