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Jacques Derrida

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5, 29-30, 46-7, 103 Conversations{{Infobox_Philosopher | <!-- Scroll down to edit this page --blockquote> <!-- Philosopher Category --ref> region = Western Philosophy | era = Žižek, S. (2000) [[Post-modern philosophyThe Fragile Absolute]], |or Why the Christian Legacy is Worth Fighting For, London and New York: Verso. p. 47</ref></blockquote>   color = #B0C4DE |=References==<references/>
<!-- Image and Caption -->==See Also== image_name = Derrida.jpg|* * image_caption = Jacques Derrida|[[Category:Slavoj Žižek]]
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name = Jacques Derrida|
birth = [[July 15]], [[1930]] |
death = [[October 8]], [[2004]]|
school_tradition = [[Deconstruction]] |
main_interests = [[Philosophy of language]], [[Literary theory]]|
influences = [[Heidegger]], [[Husserl]], [[Michel Foucault]], [[Emmanuel Levinas]] |
influenced = [[Michel Foucault]], [[Paul De Man]]|
notable_ideas = |
}}
'''Jacques Derrida''' ([[July 15]], [[1930]] &ndash; [[October 8]], [[2004]]) was an [[Algeria]]n-born [[France|French]] [[literary critic]] and [[philosopher]] of [[Jew]]ish descent, most often referenced as the founder of "[[deconstruction]]" or, by more unsympathetic theorists, "[[deconstructionism]]". His work had a significant impact on [[continental philosophy]] and on [[literary theory]], particularly through his long-time association with the [[literary critic]] [[Paul de Man]]; though the reception of deconstruction in literary criticism is not universally agreed to be consonant with Derrida's work. Derrida also referenced [[analytic philosophy]] in his work, particularly the work of [[J.L. Austin]].
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