Introduction: What Is Postmodernity Anyway?; Chapter 1 The Ethical Message of Negative Dialectics; Chapter 2 The “Postmodern” Challenge to the Ideal of Community; Chapter 3 The Ethical Significance of the Chiffonnier; Chapter 4 The Good, the Right and the Possibility of Legal Interpretation; Chapter 5 The Relevance of Time to the Relationship between the Philosophy of the Limit and Systems Theory: The Call to Judicial Responsibility; Chapter 6 The Violence of the Masquerade: Law Dressed Up as Justice; Conclusion: “The Ethical, Political, Juridical Significance of the End of Man”;
Drucilla Cornell
"This book is a major intellectual event. Nothing is more necessary
and timely today than thinking through the possibility of a
nonviolent relationship to the Other. The Philosophy of the Limit
does just that. Learned, eloquent, passionate, rigorous, this book
is not just a brilliantly original appropriation of Levinas, Lacan,
and Derrida for legal studies, feminism, and frontier work in
ethics. It also turns back from the perspective of legal theory to
make a signal intervention in the domains of philosophy, literary
theory, and cultural studies." -- J. Hillis Miller, University of
California, Irvine
"The book constitutes an important intervention in contemporary
intellectual debates by showing the ethical and juridical relevance
of trends which are often dismissed as amoral or destructive. By
rephrasing Derridian deconstruction as "philosophy of the limit,"
Cornell draws attention to what eludes our grasp: to alterity and
the "Other" who is not at our disposal but demands our recognition
and respect. Forging an innovative vista, Cornell integrates
insights of Derrida, Adorno, Lacan, and Levinas (as well as recent
jurisprudence), underscoring their significance for a
transformative moral and legal practice. Splendidly argued and
lucidly written, the book helps to refocus and reorient ongoing
discussions about modernity and postmodernity." -- Fred Dallmayr,
University of Notre Dame
"The Philosophy of the Limit is a brilliant exercise in thinking
through major themes of deconstruction. In her encounter with the
representative critical thinkers of today, Drucilla Cornell
challenges us to follow her complex arguments and powerful rhetoric
up to the limits of thinking finitude." -- Agnes Heller, Hannah
Arendt Professor of Philosophy, New School for Social Research
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |