Description
Product ID: | 9780804772754 |
Product Form: | Paperback / softback |
Country of Manufacture: | US |
Series: | Cultural Memory in the Present |
Title: | Testing the Limit |
Subtitle: | Derrida, Henry, Levinas, and the Phenomenological Tradition |
Authors: | Author: Francois-David Sebbah, Stephen Barker |
Page Count: | 336 |
Subjects: | Phenomenology and Existentialism, Phenomenology & Existentialism |
Description: | Through three different versions of phenomenological discourse (Derrida, Henry, and Levinas), this book explores the notions of excess and the excess of excess relative to conceptions of the self. In exploring the nature of excess relative to a phenomenology of the limit, Testing the Limit claims that phenomenology itself is an exploration of excess. What does it mean that "the self" is "given"? Should we see it as originary; or rather, in what way is the self engendered from textual practices that transgress—or hover around and therefore within—the threshold of phenomenologial discourse? This is the first book to include Michel Henry in a triangulation with Derrida and Levinas and the first to critique Levinas on the basis of his interpolation of philosophy and religion. Sebbah claims that the textual origins of phenomenology determine, in their temporal rhythms, the nature of the subjectivation on which they focus. He situates these considerations within the broader picture of the state of contemporary French phenomenology (chiefly the legacy of Merleau-Ponty), in order to show that these three thinkers share a certain "family resemblance," the identification of which reveals something about the traces of other phenomenological families. It is by testing the limit within the context of traditional phenomenological concerns about the appearance of subjectivity and ipseity that Derrida, Henry, and Levinas radically reconsider phenomenology and that French phenomenology assumes its present form. |
Imprint Name: | Stanford University Press |
Publisher Name: | Stanford University Press |
Country of Publication: | GB |
Publishing Date: | 2012-05-09 |