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The Other Heading: Reflections on Today's Europe » (1st Edition)

Book cover image of The Other Heading: Reflections on Today's Europe by Jacques Derrida

Authors: Jacques Derrida, Michael B. Naas (Translator), Pascale-Anne Brault
ISBN-13: 9780253316936, ISBN-10: 0253316936
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Date Published: June 1992
Edition: 1st Edition

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Author Biography: Jacques Derrida

Book Synopsis

Prompted by the unification of Europe in 1992 and by recent events in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, Jacques Derrida begins this compelling essay on contemporary world politics with the issue of European identity. What, he asks, is Europe? How has Europe traditionally been defined and how is the current world situation changing that definition? Might the prospects of a New Europe demand not only a new definition of European identity but also a new way of thinking identity itself?

Navigating in and through texts of Marx, Husserl, and especially Valéry, Derrida seeks a redefinition of European identity that includes respect both for difference and for universal values. The Other Heading appeals eloquently for a sustained effort at thinking through the complexity and the multiple dangers and opportunities of the contemporary world situation without resorting to easy or hasty solutions.

Publishers Weekly

Eminent French thinker Derrida sees the greatest threat facing Europe to be a return to old forms of nationalism, racism, xenophobia and religious fanaticism. Comprised of two recent newspaper articles linked by a preface, this opaque discourse applies deconstructionist theory to the contemporary political scene. Rejecting both the complete unification and the fragmentation of Europe, Derrida calls for a renewal of Enlightenment values and liberal democracy. Yet these values, he argues, cannot by themselves overcome Eurocentric biases and chauvinism. By deconstructing such concepts as public opinion, freedom of the press, responsibility and identity, he attempts to point the way toward a new language for contemplating Europe's destiny. Derrida makes use of texts by Martin Heidegger, Paul Valery and Karl Marx to aid his contemplation of the ferment unsettling Western Europe, as well as the waves of perestroika and democratization sweeping Central and Eastern Europe. (June)

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