Differentiating Derrida and Deleuze

Gordon C.F. Bearn

pp. 441-465

Repetition plays a significant, productive role in the work of both Derrida and Deleuze. But the difference between these two philosophers couldn't be greater: it is the difference between negation and affirmation, between Yes and No. In Derrida, the productive energy of repetition derives from negation, from the necessary impossibility of supplementing an absence. Deleuze recognizes the kind of repetition which concerns Derrida, but insists that there is another, primary form of repetition which is fully positive and affirmative. I will argue that there is nothing in Derrida's philosophy to match the affirmative, primary form of repetition articulated by Deleuze. Moreover, it is precisely this difference that accounts for the most exciting features of Deleuze's work: the possibility of breaking through to the other side of representation, beyond authenticity and inauthenticity, becoming-becoming.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1023/A:1026518220135

Full citation:

Bearn, G. C. (2000). Differentiating Derrida and Deleuze. Continental Philosophy Review 33 (4), pp. 441-465.

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