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Title:Someone Called Derrida : An Oxford Mystery
Author:John Schad
ISBN:1845190319 : 9781845190316
Format:Paperback
Size:152x229mm
Pages:211
Weight: .332 Kg.
Published:Sussex Academic Press - December 2007
List Price: 16.95 Pounds Sterling
Availability:In Print
Subjects:Crime & mystery: Jewish studies


Someone called Jacques Derrida, someone called him on the phone, someone who was dead -- this was August 22nd 1979. A mystery, he thought; but it is a mystery that began more than ten years earlier, in 1968, when Derrida, a philosopher, visits Oxford and there, before the very eyes of the Philosophy Sub-Faculty, he dies, several times. Murder, he thought. And so I shall investigate, and begin with a sign that the philosopher says he left within a book from the thirteenth century, a strange fortune-telling book that he had found in the oldest part of Oxford's Bodleian Library. In the book are a host of cryptic questions, but the philosopher directs us to one in particular, a peculiar question about a boy, and the question is this: Does the boy live? The philosopher will not, though, give the answer; he requires, instead, that we go to Oxford to open the book for ourselves.

'Si puer vivet'; A Sleep of Prisoners; XX; Silences; Freiburg; Esther; "They Weren't Really You Know"; The House; Stolen Evening; High Places; Fast Cars; Secret Marriage; Hastings; Sacrifice; Elijah; Index.

"John Schad deftly splices stories inherited from his two fathers, the real one from Oxford, a minister of religion who may have witnessed Satanic rituals as a boy, and the symbolic father coming from across the Channel who invented deconstruction. All the secrets and traumas of recent history return in this non-linear chronicle that throws new light on the divide between analytic philosophy and continental philosophy. This generates endless narratives in which verve, erudition and suspense appear laced with wry Freudian Schadenfreude. Should we laugh when philosophy discloses old skeletons in its libraries, or just follow odd couples like Derrida and Gilbert Ryle, Hugh Trevor-Roper and Paul de Man, Elijah and Aleister Crowley since they seem to hold the key to the murder mystery? Or, should we attend to one single question: can I die of a death that is not mine?" -- Jean-Michel Rabaté, Vartan Gregorian Professor in the Humanities at the University of Pennsylvania.