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Full Description
Jacques Derrida and Gilles Deleuze are still best known for their respective attempts to theoretically formulate non-dialectical conceptions of difference. Now, for the first time, Vernon W. Cisney brings you a scholarly analysis of their contrasting concepts of difference. Cisney distinguishes them on the basis of their responses to Hegel and Nietzsche. The contrast between the two, Cisney argues, is that Deleuze formulates an affirmative conception of difference, while Derrida's différance amounts to an irresolvable negativity.
Contents
Acknowledgements; List of Abbreviations; Part I: Introduction; 1. The Question; 2. Grounding the Question; Part II: The Tremendous Power of the Negative; 3. The Two Pillars of Deconstruction; 4. Deleuze and Hegelian Difference; 5. The Tremendous Power of the Negative; Part III: Thinking Difference Itself; 6. Traces and Ashes; 7. Deleuze, Plato's Reversal, and Eternal Return; 8. Derrida, Deleuze, and Difference; Part IV: Implications and Conclusions; 9. Deconstruction v. Constructivism; 10. Conclusion(s); Bibliography.