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Melancholia Melancholia
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Mourning Mourning
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1 From Absolute Love to the Politics of Friendship
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Published:May 2015
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Abstract
This chapter explores the issue of friendship in Derrida's writings. It starts by considering the analysis of the phenomena of mourning and melancholia suggested by Freud and Derrida. It discusses how Derrida—both in Memoires and in his article “Like the Sound of the Sea Deep within a Shell: Paul de Man's War”—joins a topical elucidation of the idea of absolute friendship and its activation by means of melancholic writing. While the chapter follows in Derrida's footsteps in order to deconstruct conceptual contradictions in Freud—contradictions that turn out to be less pronounced and unambiguous than they appear—it refers to Freud to illuminate Derrida's own contradictory and tortured textual spectacle. It is argued that the texts Derrida writes actively “constitute” friendship. Friendship as writing and writing as friendship construct the idea of friendship, its essence, its dos and don'ts, and its implications. Such a perspective on deconstruction enables us to approach one of its fundamental problems: since writing is a replacement for actual friendship, and always already remembers the friend, it forgets, as it were, her or his presence.
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