'The Work of Mourning' by Jacques Derrida
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In The Work of Mourning, Jacques Derrida writes through loss, in response to the deaths of friends, collaborators, and intellectual companions: Roland Barthes, Michel Foucault, Louis Althusser, and others. They are eulogies, fragments, meditations—where philosophy is forced into proximity with grief.
What emerges is a quiet but destabilising idea: that mourning is not something one completes or resolves, but something that reorganises how we relate to others, to memory, and to language itself. Derrida circles the problem of how to speak to the dead without reducing them, how to remember without appropriating, how to continue thinking in the absence of those who shaped that thinking.
You’re not reading his theory applied to life; you’re watching his thought struggle to keep pace with it.
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