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De la grammatologie

E Vicipaedia

De la grammatologie (titulus Francogallicus, scilicet 'De grammatologia') est liber Iacobi Derrida, philosophi Francici, qui pro primo criticismi deconstructivi textu valet. Hic est singulus ex trinis libris cognatis qui famam Derridanam confirmaverunt, omibus anno 1967 prolatis, quorum alii sunt La voix et le phénomène ('Vox et res') et L'écriture et la différence ('Scriptura et varietas'). De scriptoribus Claudio Lévi-Strauss, Ferdinando de Saussure, Ioanne Iacobo Rousseau, Stephano Condillac, Martino Heidegger, Ludovico Hjelmslev, Edmundo Husserl, Romano Iacobson, Godefrido Gulielmo Leibnitio, Andrea Leroi-Gourhan, et Gulielmo Warburton disceptat.

Nexus interni

  • 1967. De la grammatologie. Lutetiae: Les Éditions de Minuit.
  • 1976. Of Grammatology. Conversus a Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak.Baltimorae et Londinii: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • 1997. Of Grammatology. Editio correcta. Conversus a Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak. Baltimorae et Londinii: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Bibliographia

[recensere | fontem recensere]
  • Bradley, Arthur. 2008. Derrida's Of Grammatology. Edimburgi: University of Edinburgh Press.
  • Culler, Jonathan. 1982. On Deconstruction. Ithacae: Cornell University Press.
  • Derrida, Jacques. 1997. Of Grammatology. Baltimorae: The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0-8018-5830-5.
  • de Man, Paul. 1983. The Rhetoric of Blindness: Jacques Derrida's Reading of Rousseau. In Blindness and Insight: Essays in the Rhetoric of Contemporary Criticism, 102-141. Ed. 2a. Minneapoli: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Harris, Roy. 2001. Interpreters of Saussure. Edimburgi: University of Edinburgh Press.

Nexus externi

[recensere | fontem recensere]