Lexington Books
Pages: 110
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7391-1622-7 • Hardback • September 2008 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-0-7391-1623-4 • Paperback • February 2010 • $53.99 • (£42.00)
978-0-7391-4584-5 • eBook • September 2008 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Thomas Deane Tucker is a professor in the Department of English and Humanities at Chadron State College.
Chapter 1 Chapter One. A Time for Deconstruction
Chapter 2 Chapter Two. Ashes to Dust, Dust to Ashes
Chapter 3 Chapter Three. Indifférance
Chapter 4 Chapter Four. Personas
This remarkable book is the first attempt to bring into dialogue two of the twentieth century's defining intellectual icons: the artist Marcel Duchamp and the philosopher Jacques Derrida. It not only shows how much these two very different thinkers had in common but manages to shed new light on their respective artistic and philosophical itineraries. In Derridada, Thomas Deane Tucker has constructed a wonderfully baroque textual machine that is worthy of Duchamp and Derrida themselves and he sends us back to their works with a fresh and engaged eye.
— Arthur Bradley, Professor of Comparative Literature, Lancaster University
Tucker's chiasmatic entwining of Derrida and Duchamp is a precise but accessible, cogent but playful double session: a marvelous and unique explication and demonstration of the principle strategies of two of the twentieth century's most influential oeuvres. An antidote to the myriad arid applications of Derrida's thought, this book is a pleasure to read both for its style and for its substance.
— Stuart Kendall, Eastern Kentucky University