This link has been bookmarked by 5 people . It was first bookmarked on 16 Aug 2006, by Mike Wesch.
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30 Aug 15
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Like Barthes, Foucault, and Mikhail Bakhtin, Jacques Derrida continually uses the terms link (liasons) , web (toile) , network (réseau), and interwoven (s'y tissent), which cry out for hypertextuality; but in contrast to Barthes, who emphasizes the writerly text and its nonlinearity, Derrida emphasizes textual openness, intertextuality, and the irrelevance of distinctions between inside and outside a particular text.
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Derrida properly recognizes (in advance, one might say) that a new, freer, richer form of text, one truer to our potential experience, perhaps to our actual if unrecognized experience, depends upon discrete reading units.
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Like Barthes, Derrida conceives of text as constituted by discrete reading units. Derrida's conception of text relates to his "methodology of decomposition" that might transgress the limits of philosophy. "The organ of this new philospheme," as Gregory Ulmer points out, "is the mouth, the mouth that bites, chews, tastes. . . . The first step of decomposition is the bite" (57). Derrida, who describes text in terms of something close to Barthes's lexias, explains in
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Derrida, the experience of hypertext shows, gropes toward a new kind of text: he describes it, he praises it, but he can only present it in terms of the devices -- here those of punctuation -- associated with a particular kind of writing.
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24 Mar 13
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The implication of such citability, separability, appears in the fact, crucial to hypertext, that, as Derrida adds, "in so doing it can break with every given context, engendering an infinity of new contexts in a manner which is absolutely illimitable"
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text as constituted by discrete reading units
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06 Sep 10
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Barthes, Foucault, and Mikhail Bakhtin, Jacques Derrida
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but in contrast to Barthes, who emphasizes the writerly text and its nonlinearity, Derrida emphasizes textual openness, intertextuality, and the irrelevance of distinctions between inside and outside a particular text.
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extantextant
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graftgraft
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Derrida's conception of text relates to his "methodology of decomposition" that might transgress the limits of philosophy.
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gropinggroping
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As the Marxists remind us, thought derives from the forces and modes of production
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montagelike textuality
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16 Aug 06
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Derrida emphasizes textual openness, intertextuality, and the irrelevance of distinctions between inside and outside a particular text.
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