An inquiry into the problematic of perjury, or lying, and forgiveness
from one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth
century. “One only ever asks forgiveness for what is
unforgivable.” From this contradiction begins Perjury and Pardon, a
two-year series of seminars given by Jacques Derrida at the École des
hautes études en sciences sociales in Paris in the late 1990s. In
these sessions, Derrida focuses on the philosophical, ethical,
juridical, and political stakes of the concept of responsibility. His
primary goal is to develop what he calls a “problematic of lying”
by studying diverse forms of betrayal: infidelity, denial, false
testimony, perjury, unkept promises, desecration, sacrilege, and
blasphemy. Although forgiveness is a notion inherited from multiple
traditions, the process of forgiveness eludes those traditions,
disturbing the categories of knowledge, sense, history, and law that
attempt to circumscribe it. Derrida insists on the unconditionality of
forgiveness and shows how its complex temporality destabilizes all
ideas of presence and even of subjecthood. For Derrida, forgiveness
cannot be reduced to repentance, punishment, retribution, or
salvation, and it is inseparable from, and haunted by, the notion of
perjury. Through close readings of Kant, Kierkegaard, Shakespeare,
Plato, Jankélévitch, Baudelaire, and Kafka, as well as biblical
texts, Derrida explores diverse notions of the “evil” or
malignancy of lying while developing a complex account of forgiveness
across different traditions.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226819181
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter