Participation, mystery, and metaxy in the texts of Plato and Derrida

<p> This thesis explores Derrida&rsquo;s engagement with Plato, primarily in the texts &ldquo;How to Avoid Speaking: Denials&rdquo; and <i>On the Name.</i> The themes of participation and performance are focused on through an analysis of the concepts of <i>mystery...

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Main Author: DiRuzza, Travis Michael
Language:EN
Published: California Institute of Integral Studies 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1600990
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-16009902015-11-19T15:58:56Z Participation, mystery, and metaxy in the texts of Plato and Derrida DiRuzza, Travis Michael Comparative literature|Philosophy of Religion|Philosophy <p> This thesis explores Derrida&rsquo;s engagement with Plato, primarily in the texts &ldquo;How to Avoid Speaking: Denials&rdquo; and <i>On the Name.</i> The themes of participation and performance are focused on through an analysis of the concepts of <i>mystery</i> and <i> metaxy</i> (&mu;&epsi;&tau;&alpha;&xi;&nu;). The crucial performative aspects of Plato and Derrida&rsquo;s texts are often under appreciated. Neither author simply <i>says</i> what he means; rather their texts are meant to <i>do</i> something to the reader that surpasses what could be accomplished through straightforward reading comprehension. This enacted dimension of the text underscores a participatory worldview that is not just intellectually formulated, but performed by the text in a way that draws the reader into an event of participation&mdash;instead of its mere contemplation. On this basis, I propose a closer alliance between these authors&rsquo; projects than has been traditionally considered.</p> California Institute of Integral Studies 2015-11-18 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1600990 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Comparative literature|Philosophy of Religion|Philosophy
spellingShingle Comparative literature|Philosophy of Religion|Philosophy
DiRuzza, Travis Michael
Participation, mystery, and metaxy in the texts of Plato and Derrida
description <p> This thesis explores Derrida&rsquo;s engagement with Plato, primarily in the texts &ldquo;How to Avoid Speaking: Denials&rdquo; and <i>On the Name.</i> The themes of participation and performance are focused on through an analysis of the concepts of <i>mystery</i> and <i> metaxy</i> (&mu;&epsi;&tau;&alpha;&xi;&nu;). The crucial performative aspects of Plato and Derrida&rsquo;s texts are often under appreciated. Neither author simply <i>says</i> what he means; rather their texts are meant to <i>do</i> something to the reader that surpasses what could be accomplished through straightforward reading comprehension. This enacted dimension of the text underscores a participatory worldview that is not just intellectually formulated, but performed by the text in a way that draws the reader into an event of participation&mdash;instead of its mere contemplation. On this basis, I propose a closer alliance between these authors&rsquo; projects than has been traditionally considered.</p>
author DiRuzza, Travis Michael
author_facet DiRuzza, Travis Michael
author_sort DiRuzza, Travis Michael
title Participation, mystery, and metaxy in the texts of Plato and Derrida
title_short Participation, mystery, and metaxy in the texts of Plato and Derrida
title_full Participation, mystery, and metaxy in the texts of Plato and Derrida
title_fullStr Participation, mystery, and metaxy in the texts of Plato and Derrida
title_full_unstemmed Participation, mystery, and metaxy in the texts of Plato and Derrida
title_sort participation, mystery, and metaxy in the texts of plato and derrida
publisher California Institute of Integral Studies
publishDate 2015
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1600990
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