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Cultural Graphology: Writing after Derrida
Juliet Fleming
€ 124.79
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Description for Cultural Graphology: Writing after Derrida
Hardcover. Num Pages: 176 pages. BIC Classification: CFLA. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational. Dimension: 152 x 264 x 19. Weight in Grams: 348.
Cultural Graphology could be the name of a new human science: this was Derrida's speculation when, in the late 1960s, he imagined a discipline that combined psychoanalysis, deconstruction, and a commitment to the topic of writing. He never undertook the project himself, but he did leave two brief sketches of how he thought cultural graphology might proceed. In this book, Juliet Fleming picks up where Derrida left off. Using his early thought and the psychoanalytic texts to which it is addressed to examine the print culture of early modern England, she drastically unsettles our knowledge of the key vehicle of modern writing: the book. Fleming shows that the single most important lesson to survive from Derrida's early work is that we do not know what writing is. Channeling Derrida's thought into places it has not been seen before, she takes on topics such as errors, spaces, and print ornaments that have hitherto been marginal to our accounts of print culture and excavates the long-forgotten reading practice of cutting printed books. Proposing radical deformations to the meanings of fundamental and apparently simple terms such as error, letter, surface, and cut, Fleming opens up exciting new pathways into our understanding of the book as a material and cultural object.
Product Details
Publisher
University Of Chicago Press
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2016
Condition
New
Weight
348g
Number of Pages
176
Place of Publication
, United States
ISBN
9780226390420
SKU
V9780226390420
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-12
About Juliet Fleming
Juliet Fleming is associate professor of English and director of the MA program in English at New York University. She is the author of Graffiti and the Writing Arts of Early Modern England.
Reviews for Cultural Graphology: Writing after Derrida
In putting Derrida together with book history, Fleming presents us with new versions of both... Cultural Graphology is a slim volume, but the horizons it opens up are dizzying. It not only retools the history of the book, but also reinvents it as an inquiry into something remarkable and urgent, which we have not yet understood.
(03/17/2017)
(03/17/2017)