Ghostly Demarcations: A Symposium on Jacques Derrida's Spectres of Marx

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Michael Sprinker
Verso, 1999 - Philosophy - 278 pages
Fredric Jameson, Antonio Negri, Terry Eagleton, Pierre Macherey and others engage in a debate on Marx with Jacques Derrida. With the publication of Specters of Marx in 1993, Jacques Derrida redeemed a longstanding pledge to confront Marx's texts directly and in detail. His characteristically bravura presentation provided a provocative re-reading of the classics in the Western tradition and posed a series of challenges to Marxism. In a timely intervention in one of today's most vital theoretical debates, the contributors to Ghostly Demarcations respond to the distinctive program projected by Specters of Marx. The volume features sympathetic meditations on the relationship between Marxism and deconstruction by Fredric Jameson, Werner Hamacher, Antonio Negri, Warren Montag, and Rastko Mücnik, brief polemical reviews by Terry Eagleton and Pierre Macherey, and sustained political critiques by Tom Lewis and Aijaz Ahmad. The volume concludes with Derrida's reply to his critics in which he sharpens his views about the vexed relationship between Marxism and deconstruction.

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Contents

The Specters Smile
5
Marx Dematerialized or the Spirit of Derrida
17
Marxs Purloined Letter
26
Derridas Specters of Marx
68
Marxism without Marxism
83
Through the Fogs of the 18th Brumaire
110
The Politics of Hauntology in Derridas Specters of Marx
134
The Messianism of CommodityLanguage
168
Marx Sons
213
Index
270
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About the author (1999)

Michael Sprinker was Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. His "Imaginary Relations: Aesthetics and Ideology in the History of Historical Materialism "and" History and Ideology in Proust" are also published by Verso. Together with Mike Davis, he founded Verso's Haymarket Series and guided it until his death in 1999.

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