Title
Inventions of the Other: Maurice Blanchot, Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas,Used
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The socalled ?end of philosophy' has been announced successively in modern philosophy since G.W.F. Hegel whose systematic thinking of the ?end' was implicated in his view of the relation of identity to difference. This work does not argue against the ?end,' but rather locates the resources for thought's renewal through key philosophical tropes (experience, originality, being, time, place and community) in order to show how thought's end fails to arrive. When taken to its limits, rather than ending, thought opens to the inventiveness of difference. Daley develops her argument by focusing on the work of three major figures in twentiethcentury European philosophy: Maurice Blanchot, Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas, each of whom negotiate their positions through the legacy of Martin Heidegger. Daley shows how these thinkers maintain a double relation to the limits of identity and difference, which Blanchot calls ?writing,' Levinas, the trace of the Other, and Derrida speaks of its many guises as diffrance. The mutually informing work of these three key figures assures a fertile legacy in contemporary European thought of always and already beginning anew.
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