Abstract
The notion of survivance is central to Derrida’s later thinking. Much of that thinking, for example in addressing the non–human in The Animal That Therefore I Am and The Beast and the Sovereign, is more precisely a thinking of the human in relation to the animal. Taking inspiration from the recent turn towards biodeconstruction, this essay works through the implications of survivance beyond the human-animal by considering the synergy between biological and textual survivance. And in so doing, this essay outlines a new way of conceptualizing the living self as a composite form made up of many non-human and even textual others.
Publisher
Edinburgh University Press
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Philosophy