When
Jacques Derrida died ten years ago, all the major newspapers
of the world remembered the Algerian-born thinker as the most
important French philosopher since Jean-Paul Sartre. On the
day of his death President Jacques Chirac declared "that
with Derrida France gave to the world one of the greatest contemporary
philosophers, one of the major intellectual figures of our time."
Ten
years later it's important to remember a thinker who fought
all his life against metaphysical impositions, and who insisted
that how every philosophical, religious, or political system,
no matter how framed and secure it seems, is never fully complete
and self-sufficient. Instead, as Derrida argued, every system
depends on non-systematizable elements that produce and sustain
the system's very possibility.
The
term for which the philosopher has become best known is deconstruction
which he coined in the late sixties, and which has become an
intellectual movement not only in France but also throughout
the world, forever changing philosophical, religious and political
studies. For Derrida, however, deconstruction was not a doctrine
but a way of analyzing the genealogy of the history of philosophy
- "its concepts, its presuppositions, its axiomatics and
doing so not only theoretically but also by questioning its
institutions, its social and political practices, in short the
political culture of the West."
The
conferences and work shops that will take place this year must
be considered not simply a commemoration of the philosopher
but also an invitation to continue his deconstruction of occupying
forces (theoretical and practical) in the name of the weak,
powerless, and forgotten.
If
Derrida, as he often said, was 'at war with institutions', it's
not because he wished to destroy them but rather because he
wanted to recall how they could never be as authoritative as
they seemed.
However,
deconstruction did not influence only philosophical studies
but also great architects such as Frank Gehry; literary critics
such as J Hillis Miller and Jonathan Culler; and musicians such
as Ornette Coleman, with whom Derrida also collaborated. Although
he was the author of dozens of books, a professor and visitor
at prestigious institutions (Sorbonne, UC Irvine, Johns Hopkins
University, EGS), recipient of innumerable honourary degrees,
and probably the philosopher most quoted in journals and newspapers
in the last forty years, he was also the subject of severe criticism
by conservative philosophers afraid of change, progress and
innovation.
This
is probably why in the documentary and biography dedicated to
him, he is portrayed as someone who wished to overcome our self-sufficient
certainties, beliefs, and most of all, institutions so that
our "differences," that is, what constitute us as
human beings, can emerge. But when and how did Derrida come
up with deconstruction?
At
the age of 37 Derrida released three books at once (Writing
and Difference, Speech and Phenomena, and Of Grammatology),
and here he used for the first time the word "deconstruction"
to describe his philosophical project. To his surprise, the
word immediately caught on not only within the international
philosophical community but also in the culture at large. While
many philosophers (Richard Rorty, Gianni Vattimo) welcomed it
as the first philosophical novelty since critical theory and
structuralism, others (Willard Quine, John Searle) considered
it mere obscurantism or intellectual terrorism.
These
criticisms were directed against the postmodern twist of his
post-metaphysical position but also against his style of writing,
which many found too literary for philosophy's traditional argumentative
nature. Given Derrida's success in the Anglo-Saxon universities,
these accusations primarily came from analytic philosophers
who were particularly uncomfortable with deconstruction's revealing
and undermining the speech/writing opposition that has been
such an influential factor in Western thought. But what should
be deconstructed?
As
he explained several times, although deconstruction "is
also a thinking of Being, of metaphysics, thus a discussion
that has it out with, s'explique avec, the authority of Being,"
it "is not a philosophy" and can be reduced "to
neither a method nor an analysis." When he developed it
for the first time he had the feeling of translating two words
from Martin Heidegger's vocabulary: Abba and Destruktion.
But
he still thought that deconstruction "is not demolition
or destruction" because it is not about destroying ideas
or concepts, but rather pointing out their limits, margins and
vulnerability. Deconstruction is "a way of reminding the
other and reminding me, myself, of the limits of power, of mastery."
But why is this so important?
Among
many reasons, and probably the one that most irritated analytical
philosophers, was that deconstruction undermined the authority
of educational institutions. If Derrida, as he often said, was
"at war with institutions," it's not because he wished
to destroy them but rather because he wanted to recall how they
could never be as authoritative as they seemed.
This
is why he was so interested in the margins of philosophy or
institutional edges, that is, those places where counter-institutions
could arise. "The irony," as he once explained, "is
that the institution par excellence, the state, convinced that
there is no absolute exteriority which can make any objection
or form any opposition to it, always ends up recognizing counter-institutions."
In
1990 a group of conservative philosophers attempted (without
success) to convince Cambridge University to avoid honouring
the French thinker with a doctorate. In order to persuade the
university that honouring Derrida was a mistake, Barry Smith,
John Searle and other academics published a letter in the Times
where they declared that the philosopher's assertions are "either
false or trivial" and that his "originality does not
lend credence to the idea that he is a suitable candidate for
an honourary degree."
As
Terry Eagleton and many others pointed out, by submitting this
letter, these professors demonstrated their unfamiliarity with
Derrida's writings and also provided a clear example of the
"winner's history," that is, a desire to avoid disclosing
different positions or traditions of philosophy that might threaten
the recognition of their own theories or institutions. When
asked about the whole event, Derrida replied by saying: