Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

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7 years, 5 months ago

the problems with deconstruction and metafiction

[...] Derrida and Barth's goals are not to destroy what they regard as both illusory and indispensable notions, but to maintain their unresolvability, endlessly revoking, postponing the determination of meaning.

Here, in this endless cycle of affirmation and undermining, we can readily see that …

—p.108 Existentialist Engagement in Wallace, Eggers and Foer: A Philosophical Analysis of Contemporary American Literature Postmodernist Metafiction: John Barth (88) by Allard Pieter den Dulk
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7 years, 5 months ago

phonocentrism

According to Derrida, Western philosophy has always privileged speech over writing, and he calls this engrained preference 'phonocentrism'.

—p.102 Postmodernist Metafiction: John Barth (88) by Allard Pieter den Dulk
notable
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7 years, 5 months ago

ineluctable

by constructing an attempt to establish presence, deconstruction exposes an ineluctable, ineffaceable element of absence that undermines the ideal of presence

—p.98 Postmodernist Metafiction: John Barth (88) by Allard Pieter den Dulk
notable
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7 years, 5 months ago

Derrida on metaphysics

According to Derrida, the most fundamental notions of Western thought--that is, the notions of metaphysics, the branch of philosophy that tries to contemplate the deepest ground, the first causes of existence--are based on illusions. The illusion that dominates Western thought, and that therefore i…

—p.95 Postmodernist Metafiction: John Barth (88) by Allard Pieter den Dulk
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7 years, 5 months ago

the challenges of defining deconstruction

[...] one of the main features of deconstruction seems to be the impossibility of a message, text, or philosophy having a clear unequivocal meaning. This means that Derrida's philosophy of deconstruction, as Eddo Evink formulates it, 'cannot be discussed as "Derrida's philosophy" without opposing t…

—p.94 Postmodernist Metafiction: John Barth (88) by Allard Pieter den Dulk