Difficult Bond. Derrida and Jewishness

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Difficult Bond. Derrida and Jewishness. / Siegumfeldt, Inge Birgitte.

I: Jewish Quarterly Review, Bind 103, Nr. 3, 2013, s. 385-400.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Siegumfeldt, IB 2013, 'Difficult Bond. Derrida and Jewishness', Jewish Quarterly Review, bind 103, nr. 3, s. 385-400. <http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/jewish_quarterly_review/v103/103.3.siegumfeldt.html>

APA

Siegumfeldt, I. B. (2013). Difficult Bond. Derrida and Jewishness. Jewish Quarterly Review, 103(3), 385-400. http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/jewish_quarterly_review/v103/103.3.siegumfeldt.html

Vancouver

Siegumfeldt IB. Difficult Bond. Derrida and Jewishness. Jewish Quarterly Review. 2013;103(3):385-400.

Author

Siegumfeldt, Inge Birgitte. / Difficult Bond. Derrida and Jewishness. I: Jewish Quarterly Review. 2013 ; Bind 103, Nr. 3. s. 385-400.

Bibtex

@article{2d95ef4823094762b228f828cad8394b,
title = "Difficult Bond. Derrida and Jewishness",
abstract = "Watchful insomnia can be a nerve-wracking business especially if there is a question to be, if not resolved, then at least confronted; or a decision called for, not despite the famous undecidablity hypothesis, but precisely because of it. Thus it is that finally, casting off the shadows of the night, Jacques Derrida steps into the daylight, in Paris in December 2000, to address directly the question of his Jewishness. Even if his presentation remains marked by the reservations shown in the past, and in particular the casting of affiliation in the self-cancelling terms of its annulment, Derrida nevertheless here lets down his guard in a way he had not done before. And the outcome is remarkable: for the first time he ascribes the aporetic structure of his thinking to a particular propensity for indeterminacy, which he aligns –not with Judaism in any of its doctrinal forms— but with the haunting event of {\textquoteleft}circumcision{\textquoteright} and with his own, somewhat idiosyncratic, experience of being Jewish. As both theme and strategy, {\textquoteleft}circumcision{\textquoteright} has indeed become a trope of tremendous significance in Derrida{\textquoteright}s writing as it articulates itself inside the aporia where affiliation is inevitably determined by its own effacement. It epitomizes a difficult double bond which may well have a direct bearing on Derrida{\textquoteright}s construal of what it means to think deconstructively.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Jacques Derrida, circumcision, deconstruction, Jewish thought, indeterminacy, cryptogramme, promise",
author = "Siegumfeldt, {Inge Birgitte}",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
volume = "103",
pages = "385--400",
journal = "Jewish Quarterly Review",
issn = "0021-6682",
publisher = "University of Pennsylvania Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Difficult Bond. Derrida and Jewishness

AU - Siegumfeldt, Inge Birgitte

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Watchful insomnia can be a nerve-wracking business especially if there is a question to be, if not resolved, then at least confronted; or a decision called for, not despite the famous undecidablity hypothesis, but precisely because of it. Thus it is that finally, casting off the shadows of the night, Jacques Derrida steps into the daylight, in Paris in December 2000, to address directly the question of his Jewishness. Even if his presentation remains marked by the reservations shown in the past, and in particular the casting of affiliation in the self-cancelling terms of its annulment, Derrida nevertheless here lets down his guard in a way he had not done before. And the outcome is remarkable: for the first time he ascribes the aporetic structure of his thinking to a particular propensity for indeterminacy, which he aligns –not with Judaism in any of its doctrinal forms— but with the haunting event of ‘circumcision’ and with his own, somewhat idiosyncratic, experience of being Jewish. As both theme and strategy, ‘circumcision’ has indeed become a trope of tremendous significance in Derrida’s writing as it articulates itself inside the aporia where affiliation is inevitably determined by its own effacement. It epitomizes a difficult double bond which may well have a direct bearing on Derrida’s construal of what it means to think deconstructively.

AB - Watchful insomnia can be a nerve-wracking business especially if there is a question to be, if not resolved, then at least confronted; or a decision called for, not despite the famous undecidablity hypothesis, but precisely because of it. Thus it is that finally, casting off the shadows of the night, Jacques Derrida steps into the daylight, in Paris in December 2000, to address directly the question of his Jewishness. Even if his presentation remains marked by the reservations shown in the past, and in particular the casting of affiliation in the self-cancelling terms of its annulment, Derrida nevertheless here lets down his guard in a way he had not done before. And the outcome is remarkable: for the first time he ascribes the aporetic structure of his thinking to a particular propensity for indeterminacy, which he aligns –not with Judaism in any of its doctrinal forms— but with the haunting event of ‘circumcision’ and with his own, somewhat idiosyncratic, experience of being Jewish. As both theme and strategy, ‘circumcision’ has indeed become a trope of tremendous significance in Derrida’s writing as it articulates itself inside the aporia where affiliation is inevitably determined by its own effacement. It epitomizes a difficult double bond which may well have a direct bearing on Derrida’s construal of what it means to think deconstructively.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Jacques Derrida

KW - circumcision

KW - deconstruction

KW - Jewish thought

KW - indeterminacy

KW - cryptogramme

KW - promise

M3 - Journal article

VL - 103

SP - 385

EP - 400

JO - Jewish Quarterly Review

JF - Jewish Quarterly Review

SN - 0021-6682

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 45614710