Deconstruction and the Possibility of JusticeDrucilla Cornell, Michel Rosenfeld, David Gray Carlson Psychology Press, 1992 - 409 pages To many, the very title of this book, Deconstruction and the Possibility of Justice, would seem to be an oxymoron. At least by its critics, deconstruction has been associated with cynicism toward the very idea of justice. Justice, so the story goes, demands reconstruction, not deconstruction. Yet even its critics recognize that deconstruction is, in some way, aligned with the marginalized. Within literary studies we hear the same cry: deconstruction has brought in its wake the clamor for the recognition of many voices outside the traditional canon. While bringing the margin to the center is undoubtedly a result of deconstruction in political philosophy and literary criticism, deconstruction faces, and acknowledges that it faces a philosophical challenge of its own. What should be' demands an appeal to some criteria of justice. Jacques Derrida's more liberal critics have focused on just this problem. They have insisted that even if one can appreciate deconstruction's alliance with the underdog, deconstruction cannot provide an ethical basis for this alliance, let alone argue the necessity of such an alliance. The purpose of this volume is to rethink the questions posed by Derrida's writings and his unique philosophical positioning, without reference to the catch phrases that have supposedly captured deconstruction in a nutshell |
Table des matières
The Mystical Foundation of Authority | 3 |
Systems Theory and | 68 |
Writing Law According to Moses 95 55 | 95 |
Judgment After the Fall | 211 |
In the Name of the Law | 232 |
Forms | 258 |
On the Margins of Microeconomics | 265 |
Hermeneutics and the Rule of Law | 283 |
The Example of Kleist | 305 |
Statistical Stigmata | 330 |
Rights Modernity Democracy | 346 |
Algorithmic Justice | 361 |
Conditions of Evil | 387 |
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Deconstruction and the Possibility of Justice Drucilla Cornell,Michel Rosenfeld,David Gray Carlson Aucun aperçu disponible - 1992 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
Amalek argue authority Barbara Herrnstein Smith Benjamin Chronik claim collaboration command conception constitution context corrective justice cost court covenant Critical Legal Studies critique culture decision deconstruction Derrida discourse distinction distributive justice doctrine dynamic jurisprudence economic rents Elohim erase erasure ethical example feminist final solution Fish's force gender hierarchy Gewalt hermeneutics human individual intersubjective judge judgment judicial jurisprudence Kleist Kohlhaas Chronicle Kohlhaas's Lacan language law droit legal formalism legal interpretation legal system Luhmann meaning Michael Kohlhaas modern moral Moses natural Nazism Niklas Luhmann norms notion objective particular past perfect market persons perspective philosophy political position possible practice present production propositions purely question Rashi Rashi's reading reconciliation record reference relation requires rewriting right-language Rousseau rule-governance rules sense singular social contract society speak story structure summons supra note things tion tradition trans universal violence Weinrib words writing Yahweh