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  1. Hace 1 día · Dimensiones: 230 cm × 145 cm × 0 cm. Fecha de publicación: 2008. Materia: FILOSOFÍA. ISBN: 978-84-8164-962-8. Se reúnen aquí varios trabajos, algunos inéditos, de Jacques Derrida dedicados a la cuestión de «los animales». Preocupación constante y casi obsesiva que procede de una exquisita sensibilidad afectiva e intelectual hacia ...

  2. Hace 1 día · Jacques Derrida and the Question of Hospitality,’ Michael Naas reformulates Derrida’s claim as follows: ‘conditional hospitality can only ever be called hospitality and experienced as hospitality by means of the pure or absolute hospitality toward which it is drawn and by which it is inspired.’ 98.

  3. Hace 4 días · El filósofo francés Jacques Derrida planteó una hospitalidad incondicionada: al extranjero no se le puede pedir que deje fuera su bagaje vital. (GROSBY GROUP) Hospitalidad y literatura en ...

  4. 30 de abr. de 2024 · Notes | The Traces of Jacques Derrida's Cinema | Oxford Academic. End Matter. Notes. Timothy Holland. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197694374.002.0007. Pages. 213–250. Published: April 2024. Split View. Annotate. Cite. Permissions. Share. Subject. Literary Theory and Cultural Studies. Collection: Oxford Scholarship Online. Introduction. 1.

  5. 3 de may. de 2024 · In 1993, Jacques Derrida presented a paper entitled “Specters of Marx: The State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning, and the New International.” Later turned into a book of the same name, Specters represents a part of what some have called an “ethical turn” in the philosopher’s work.

    • peter.salmon@live.co.uk
  6. 8 de may. de 2024 · This special issue of Angelaki on “Derrida: Ethics in Deconstruction” appears twenty years after the sad occasion of the death of Jacques Derrida in Paris on 12 October 2004, after an extraordinary life as an academic philosopher and a thinker. He was a philosopher in a very broad sense, whose work was important across the humanities and ...

  7. Hace 5 días · Derrida (ibid II, 105–7, 150–3) links this analysis with debates about ‘the end of work’ as a result of recent and future technological developments; see also Jacques Derrida, Without Alibi (Stanford University Press 2002) 222–30; Derrida (n 24) 377–81.

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