How much of philosophical, scientific, and political thought is caught up with the idea of continuity? What if it were otherwise? This paper experiments with the disruption of continuity. The reader is invited to participate in a performance of spacetime (re)configurings that are more akin to how electrons experience the world than any journey narrated though rhetorical forms that presume actors move along trajectories across a stage of spacetime (often called history). The electron is here invoked as our host, an interesting body to inhabit (not in order to inspire contemplation of flat-footed analogies between ‘macro’ and ‘micro’ worlds, concepts that already presume a given spatial scale), but a way of thinking with and through dis/continuity – a dis/orienting experience of the dis/jointedness of time and space, entanglements of here and there, now and then, that is, a ghostly sense of dis/continuity, a quantum dis/continuity. There is no overarching sense of temporality, of continuity, in place. Each scene diffracts various temporalities within and across the field of spacetimemattering. Scenes never rest, but are reconfigured within, dispersed across, and threaded through one another. The hope is that what comes across in this dis/jointed movement is a felt sense of différance, of intra-activity, of agential separability – differentiatings that cut together/apart – that is the hauntological nature of quantum entanglements.
About this Journal
Derrida Today focuses on what Derrida's thought offers to contemporary debates about politics, society and global affairs. Controversies about power, violence, identity, globalisation, the resurgence of religion, economics and the role of critique all agitate public policy, media dialogue and academic debate. Derrida Today explores how Derridean thought and deconstruction make significant contributions to this debate, and reconsider the terms on which it takes place.
Derrida Today invites papers that deal with the ongoing relevance of Derrida's work and deconstruction in general to contemporary issues; the way it reconfigures the academic and social protocols and languages by which such issues are defined and discussed, and innovative artistic practices that adopt a 'deconstructive' approach to how our contemporary situation can be represented.
Editors and Editorial Board
Editor
Nicole Anderson, Arizona State University/Macquarie University
Reviews Editor
Philippe Lynes, Durham University
Associate Editors
Thomas Clément Mercier, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez
Philippe Lynes, Durham University
Armando Mastrogiovanni, CUNY, New York
Adam Rosenthal, Texas A&M University
Elina Staikou, Goldsmiths, University of London
Lynn Turner, Goldsmiths, University of London
Honorary Editor
Nick Mansfield, Macquarie University
Editorial Board
Derek Attridge, University of York
Karyn Ball, University of Alberta
Stephen Barker, University of California, Irvine
Andrew Benjamin, Monash University
Robert Bernasconi, Pennsylvania State University
Giovanna Borradori, Vassar College
Pascale-Anne Brault, DePaul University
Judith Butler, University of California, Berkeley
John D Caputo, Syracuse University
Claire Colebrook, Pennsylvania State University
Simon Critchley, New School for Social Research
Matthias Fritsch, Concordia University
Stella Gaon, St. Mary's University
Rodolphe Gasché, University of Buffalo, SUNY
Peter Gratton, Memorial University of Newfoundland
Sam Haddad, Fordham University
Joanna Hodge, Manchester Metropolitan University
Christina Howells, Oxford University
Leonard Lawlor, Pennsylvania State University
John P. Leavey Jr., University of Florida
Catherine Malabou, University of California, Irvine
Martin McQuillan, Kingston University
Michael Naas, DePaul University
Christopher Norris, Cardiff University
Kelly Oliver, Vanderbilt University
Paul Patton, University of New South Wales
Herman Rapaport, Wake Forest University
Alison Ross, Monash University
Elizabeth Rottenberg, DePaul University
Nicholas Royle, University of Sussex
Linnell Secomb, Greenwich University
Margrit Shildrick, Queens University, Belfast
Robert Sinnerbrink, Macquarie University
Henry Staten, University of Washington
Peter Pericles Trifonas, University of Toronto
David Wills, Brown University
Julian Wolfreys, Portsmouth University
Simon Morgan Wortham, Kingston University
Francesco Vitale, University of Salerno
Ewa Ziarek, University of Buffalo, SUNY
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Derrida Today

Sample Issue
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