Adieu Derrida - Cornell
Adieu Derrida - Cornell
Adieu Derrida - Cornell
101
102 Adieu Derrida
And yet, this is not all Derrida tells us of his wager on the future.
If there is a future or, as he would have liked to put it, if there is
such a thing, there must be some opening that calls to us in the form
of an appeal. This appeal of the other demands that we respond now;
indeed, the mark we leave on the world we share will be inseparable
from those infinite appeals made to us and how we responded when
we were called) As Derrida tells us:
Derrida's very careful analysis of why and how 9/11 could be consid-
ered a major event. 4 Tragically, Derrida points out that the death of
thousands, tens of thousands, and even hundreds of thousand of
people is not enough to make an event. Nor was 9/11 'unforeseeable',
in his sense of the word event. Strangely enough it was foreseen even
in Hollywood movies like The Siege, where Annette Benning portrays
a bad Muslim who is coming to get us. Of course, I am echoing
Mahmood Mamdani's title here Good Muslim, Bad Muslim and the
fantasies about the Muslim religion that have so easily circulated in
the US media and even worse in the US academy. 5
What made 9/11 an event for Derrida was something scary indeed:
(the triggering of what he calls an auto-immunitary response, by
\which he means a quasi-suicidal process in which a person, a
society, and a culture works to destroy its own protectionJ 6 For
Derrida, there were tJue~ "d~ggerous auto-:-immunitary :r.esponses -
1
what he called the cold war in the head, the horizon of the
worst, and the vicious cycle of repression unleashed by the thought
that the even worse is yet to come) This fear of 'the even worse is yet
tQ ..come' from an elusive j:J::t~rn' is what Derrida foresaw.as.a true
threat to the future. Even if the future remains 'yet to come' we can
be shut away from it. By not exercising our responsibility, we can
politically and ethically foreclose what is philosophically impossible
to disavow.
Myself and Ann wanted to name this group faithfully, according
to a different timeliness that we hoped to be part in making. Derrida
insisted that we must somehow incorporate the word 'future' into
the name of the group. Inspired by the words of the wonderful poet
Alicia Ostriker and echoing the words of a certain feminist move-
ment, we also knew that the group must be named with the words
'take back'. The inspiration of the two merged and the group was
named 'Take Back the Future'. In all seriousness we saw in that name
an urgent call to action. It was a call to action that must work to help
revise the context in which we who live in New York City post 9/11
are surviving.
It is this sense of 'the future' I wish to emphasise in Derrida. It is
something that can be taken away and something we are responsible
for. As he reminds us, this call dictates a criticism of a 'religion of
capital that institutes its dogmatism under new guises, which we
must also learn to identify- for this is the future itself, and there will
104 Adieu Derrida
It tries to open up the eyes of the whites; it does not reproduce the
visible, it produces it here. This reflection makes visible a law that
in truth does more than reflect, because this law, in its phenome-
non, was invisible had become or continued to be invisible.
Transporting the invisible into the visible, this reflection does not
proceed from the visible, rather it passes through understanding.
More exactly, it reveals to understanding what goes past under-
standing and only relates to reason. It was a first reason, reason
itself. 10
106 Adieu Derrida
Qnly a mortal can speak of the future in this sense, a god could
never do so. So I know very well that all of this is a discourse an
experience, rather - that is made possible as a future by a certain
irnminence of death. 13
Notes
1. ]. Derrida, and M. Ferrari, A Taste for the Secret, trans. G. Donis
(Cambridge: Polity, 2001) 20.
2. Ibid., pp. 19-20.
3. Ibid., p. 16.
4. See generally, G. Borradori, Philosophy in a Time ofTerror: Dialogues with
Jiirgen Habermas and Jacques Den·ida (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 2003), Part 2.
5. See generally, M. Mandami, Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: America, the Cold
War, and the Roots of Terror (New York: Pantheon, 2004).
6. See generally, G. Borradqri, Philosophy in a Time o(Terror, Part 2.
7. ]. Derrida, Other Heading: Reflections on Today's Europe, trans. P-A Brault
and M. Naas (Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1992) 77.
8. I. Kant, The Critique o( Judgment, trans. ]. C. Meredith (Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1978).
9. ]. Derrida, 'The Laws of Reflection: Nelson Mandela, in Admiration',
trans. M.A. Caws and I. Lorenz, in]. Derrida and M. Tlili (eds) For Nelson
Mandela (New York: Henry Holt, 1987) 27.
10. Ibid., p. 23.
11. Ibid., p. 37.
12. Derrida, A Taste for the Secret, p. 16.
13. Ibid., p. 23.