For What Tomorrow
Book (italiano):
<DIV>?For what tomorrow will be, no one knows,” writes Victor Hugo.<BR><BR>This dialogue, proposed to Jacques Derrida by the historian Elisabeth Roudinesco, brings together two longtime friends who share a common history and an intellectual heritage. While their perspectives are often different, they have many common reference points: psychoanalysis, above all, but also the authors and works that have come to be known outside France as ?post-structuralist.”<br><BR>Beginning with a revealing glance back at the French intellectual scene over the past forty years, Derrida and Roudinesco go on to address a number of major social and political issues. Their extraordinarily wide-ranging discussion covers topics such as immigration, hospitality, gender equality, and ?political correctness”; the disordering of the traditional family, same-sex unions, and reproductive technologies; the freedom of the ?subject” over and against ?scientism”; violence against animals; the haunting specter of communism and revolution; the present and future of anti-Semitism (as well as that which marked Derrida's own history) and the hazardous politics of criticizing the state of Israel; the principled abolition of the death penalty; and, to conclude, a chapter ?in praise of psychoanalysis.”<br><BR>These exchanges not only help to situate Derrida's thought within the milieu out of which it grew, they also show more clearly than ever how this thought, impelled by a deep concern for justice, can be brought to bear on the social and political issues of our day. What emerges here above all, far from an abstract, apolitical discourse, is a call to take responsibility?for the inheritance of a past, for the singularities of the present, and for the unforeseeable tasks of the future.<BR><BR></div>
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