The Critic Magazine

Derrida deconstructed

SAY WHAT YOU LIKE about Jacques Derrida, he was one cool looking dude. As a boy, the young Jackie (he was christened for the star of Chaplin’s The Kid, Jackie Coogan) wore a straw boater and sang along with Maurice Chevalier records. As a man, with his high cheekbones and his sly, ophidian eyes, not to mention that shock of quiffed white hair, he could have been a pop chanteur: the Sacha Distel of semiotic deconstruction.

Certainly Derrida looked good on TV — all fey irony and corduroy blouson — in those oh so serious talk shows the French still specialise in. Not that he was on TV all that much. He was too busy writing. Over the years, Derrida, who was born in Algeria in 1931 and died in 2004 in Paris, published more than 40 books. So Peter Salmon’s title, , is something of a hostage to fortune. Biographies, even biographies of idealist philosophers who doubt

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Critic Magazine

The Critic Magazine6 min read
Was The Bible Written By Slaves?
IN THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND, THE GOSPEL reading for Good Friday is John 18:1–19:42, the narrative of Christ’s betrayal, arrest and passion. The reading is relatively long, at least for Anglicans, and temptation abounds to drift off as the familiar story
The Critic Magazine2 min read
Nova’s Diary
“I can’t decide,” says Rishi. “What do you think?” “The blue socks are nice, darling,” says Akshata. We are in the flat. Rishi has been a bit down lately. There has been some voting happening in local places, but not very much of it was for him. Jame
The Critic Magazine3 min read
Put The Money Back Into Politics
IT’S AN ELECTION YEAR, so political finance is back in the headlines. We have had the tawdry tale of Yorkshireman Frank Hester, the £10 million Conservative donor who said Diane Abbot makes you “want to hate all black women”. Then there was the hulla

Related Books & Audiobooks