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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Stella GaonPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.544kg ISBN: 9781138610828ISBN 10: 1138610828 Pages: 290 Publication Date: 11 February 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education , Undergraduate Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsStella Gaon explores how the radicality of Derridean deconstruction lies in its unwavering fidelity to the very conditions of reason. This is what drives deconstruction to uncover the irreducible violence at the heart of every law, but also every moral claim, with far-reaching consequences for political and pedagogical theory and practice. For Gaon, deconstruction exemplifies critical thinking: the unflinching interrogation of the categories through which good and evil, fact and fiction, the righteous and the reprehensible are established. With admirable conceptual clarity Gaon's captivating book explores the pivotal ramifications of a deconstructive mode of analysis for pedagogy, politics and ethics. -Elisabeth Weber, University of California, Santa Barbara Anyone still in doubt about the political and ethical relevance or force of deconstruction will have to read Stella Gaon's brilliant new work The Lucid Vigil. Gaon demonstrates with a stunning lucidity and attentiveness of her own that Derridean deconstruction was never a nihilistic attack on Enlightenment values but a relentless questioning of the foundations of ethical and political legitimacy in line with the most exacting demands of reason and self-critique. This work should set the record straight once and for all and should cause anyone interested in questions of ethics and politics to return to Derrida's work, both early and late, with renewed attention, passion, and urgency. -Michael Naas, DePaul University, Chicago Gaon's The Lucid Vigil: Deconstruction, Desire and the Politics of Critique is evidently the culmination of an extended period of reading and reflection on Derrida's texts. It shows remarkable insight into Derrida's texts, as well as of those he reads, of those who read him, and of other, related texts. The rigorous analyses contained in these pages deserve to be read and re-read as they elucidate Derrida's thinking in a manner that has not as yet been undertaken before. - Jacques de Ville, Professor and Dean of Law, University of the Western Cape, South Africa Stella Gaon explores how the radicality of Derridean deconstruction lies in its unwavering fidelity to the very conditions of reason. This is what drives deconstruction to uncover the irreducible violence at the heart of every law, but also every moral claim, with far-reaching consequences for political and pedagogical theory and practice. For Gaon, deconstruction exemplifies critical thinking: the unflinching interrogation of the categories through which good and evil, fact and fiction, the righteous and the reprehensible are established. With admirable conceptual clarity Gaon's captivating book explores the pivotal ramifications of a deconstructive mode of analysis for pedagogy, politics and ethics. -Elisabeth Weber, University of California, Santa Barbara Stella Gaon explores how the radicality of Derridean deconstruction lies in its unwavering fidelity to the very conditions of reason. This is what drives deconstruction to uncover the irreducible violence at the heart of every law, but also every moral claim, with far-reaching consequences for political and pedagogical theory and practice. For Gaon, deconstruction exemplifies critical thinking: the unflinching interrogation of the categories through which good and evil, fact and fiction, the righteous and the reprehensible are established. With admirable conceptual clarity Gaon's captivating book explores the pivotal ramifications of a deconstructive mode of analysis for pedagogy, politics and ethics. Elisabeth Weber, University of California, Santa Barbara Anyone still in doubt about the political and ethical relevance or force of deconstruction will have to read Stella Gaon's brilliant new work The Lucid Vigil. Gaon demonstrates with a stunning lucidity and attentiveness of her own that Derridean deconstruction was never a nihilistic attack on Enlightenment values but a relentless questioning of the foundations of ethical and political legitimacy in line with the most exacting demands of reason and self-critique. This work should set the record straight once and for all and should cause anyone interested in questions of ethics and politics to return to Derrida's work, both early and late, with renewed attention, passion, and urgency. Michael Naas, DePaul University, Chicago Gaon's The Lucid Vigil: Deconstruction, Desire and the Politics of Critique is evidently the culmination of an extended period of reading and reflection on Derrida's texts. It shows remarkable insight into Derrida's texts, as well as of those he reads, of those who read him, and of other, related texts. The rigorous analyses contained in these pages deserve to be read and re-read as they elucidate Derrida's thinking in a manner that has not as yet been undertaken before. Jacques de Ville, Professor and Dean of Law, University of the Western Cape, South Africa The Lucid Vigil will undoubtedly constitute a valuable resource for scholars interested in exploring the implications of deconstruction for normative political theory. It is a virtue of The Lucid Vigil that Gaon develops a set of coordinates for understanding the link - intimated but perhaps never sufficiently explicated by Derrida himself - between deconstruction and the Kantian Enlightenment emancipatory project. In so doing, Gaon has set the stage for a much more productive conversation between Derrida scholars and a discourse of critical theory that has been largely allergic to deconstruction. Ryan A. Gustafson, Derrida Today Author InformationStella Gaon is Professor of Political Science and Adjunct Professor of Women and Gender Studies at Saint Mary’s University. She is the editor of Democracy in Crisis: Violence, Alterity, Community. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |