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Since the death of Jacques Derrida in 2004, Geoffrey Bennington, a close friend and collaborator, has elucidated the philosopher's complex thought, especially his persistent interrogation of life and death, mourning and melancholia, and what Derrida sometimes called "half-mourning." Bennington relates this "ethical" interruption of mourning to the persistent but still ill-understood motif of interrupted teleology, which, it is argued here, is definitive of deconstruction. He moves through the whole of Derrida's rich and varied corpus.
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