Islam and the West
A Conversation with Jacques Derrida
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Author
Contributions
- Cherif, Mustapha, 1950- - Contributor
- Fagan, Teresa Lavender. - Contributor
- Borradori, Giovanna. - Contributor
Publication
2008 - The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois
Language
English
Word Count
28,500 words, Guess
Page Count
114 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archiveislamwestconvers00derr
- ISBN-100226102866
- ISBN-139780226102863
- LibraryThing6740520
- Goodreads4621466
and 4 more
- Library of Congress Control Number2008003988
- OCLC Control Number191732517
- Better World Books9780226102863
- Open LibraryOL16474946M
Classifications
- DDC909/.09767
- LCCCB251 .D4 2008
- LCCCB251 .D413 2008
and 2 more
- LCCCB251.D4 2008
- LCCCB251 .C44 2008
Description
The sentiments at the heart of this book are admirable: an understanding that democracy is constantly evolving (“democracy is the only political system... which accepts its perfectibility.... Democracy is always to come”); the belief that it is only by engaging the Other that we can end humanity's struggles; the need to remember that there is no single way of being Muslim or Western. However, the ideas are enervated by their poor presentation; the conversation between Derrida and Chérif is meandering and esoteric and not intended for a general audience; furthermore, this slim volume is also deeply repetitive and all but devoid of actionable suggestions—readers will be frustrated by repeated calls for dialogue that come unencumbered by suggestions as to how to work toward that goal. The book's most peculiar flaw is its paucity of Derrida—the short conversation is overwhelmed by two introductions, a conclusion and a touching afterword—a eulogy to the philosopher, who died some 15 months after this discussion took place.
Subjects
Genres
- Interviews
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