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{{Short description|British philosopher (born 1960)}} | |||
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|name = Simon Critchley | |||
|birth_date = February 27, 1960 | |||
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'''Simon Critchley''' (born February 27, 1960 in ]) is an English ] currently teaching at ]. He works in ], the history of philosophy, literature, ] and ]. | |||
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{{Infobox philosopher | |||
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|image = Dark Portrait of Simon Critchley.jpg | |||
|name = Simon Critchley | |||
|birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=yes|1960|2|27}} | |||
|birth_place = ],<ref> at guardian.co.uk (Wednesday 11 June 2008)</ref> England | |||
|alma_mater = ] (])<br />] (], ]) | |||
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'''Simon Critchley''' (born 27 February 1960) is an English philosopher and the Hans Jonas Professor of Philosophy at the ] in New York, USA.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.newschool.edu/nssr/faculty/Simon-Critchley/|title=Simon Critchley | the New School for Social Research}}</ref> | |||
Challenging the ancient tradition that philosophy begins in wonder, Critchley argues that philosophy begins in disappointment.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance |date=2008 |publisher=Verso |location=New York |page=1}}</ref> Two particular forms of disappointment inform Critchley's work: religious and political disappointment. While religious disappointment arises from a lack of faith and generates the problem of what is the meaning of life in the face of nihilism, political disappointment comes from the violent world we live in and raises the question of justice in a violently unjust world.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=Infinitely Demanding |date=2008 |publisher=Verso |location=New York |pages=2–3}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://timesensitive.fm/episode/simon-critchley-on-finding-clarity-in-philosophy-and-comedy/|title=Simon Critchley on Finding Clarity in Philosophy and Comedy|newspaper=Time Sensitive}}</ref> In addition, to these two regions of research, Critchley's recent works have engaged in more experimental forms of writing on ], ], ], ] and ]. | |||
Critchley argues that philosophy commences in ''disappointment'', either religious or political. These two axes may be said largely to inform his published work: ''religious'' disappointment raises the question of ] and has to, as he sees it, deal with the problem of ]; ''political'' disappointment provokes the question of ] and raises the need for a coherent ethics. | |||
== |
==Biography== | ||
Critchley studied philosophy at the ] (BA 1985, PhD 1988,) and at the ] (M.Phil. 1987). Among his teachers were ], ], ], ] and ]. His M.Phil. thesis dealt with the problem of the overcoming of metaphysics in ] and ]; his Ph.D. dissertation was on the ethics of deconstruction in ] and ]. | |||
Simon Critchley was born on 27 February 1960, in ], England, to a working-class family originally from ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström |date=2010 |publisher=Polity Press |location=Malden, MA |page=4}}</ref> He is a fan of ] and has said that, it ‘may be the governing passion of my life. My only religious commitment is to Liverpool Football Club.’<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström |page=5}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://timesensitive.fm/episode/simon-critchley-on-finding-clarity-in-philosophy-and-comedy/|title=Simon Critchley on Finding Clarity in Philosophy and Comedy|newspaper=Time Sensitive}}</ref> In grammar school, he studied history, sciences, languages (French and Russian) and English literature.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström |page=6}}</ref> During this time, he developed a lifelong interest in ancient history.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström |pages=6–7}}</ref> After intentionally failing his school exams, Critchley worked a number of odd jobs, including in a pharmaceutical factory in which he sustained a severe injury to his left hand.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://timesensitive.fm/episode/simon-critchley-on-finding-clarity-in-philosophy-and-comedy/|title=Simon Critchley on Finding Clarity in Philosophy and Comedy|newspaper=Time Sensitive}}</ref> During this time, he was a participant in the emerging ] scene in England, playing in numerous bands that all failed. While the music failed, there was a silver lining to the experience: a newfound love for Chinese food, inspired by Warren Zevon.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström |pages=7–13}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://academicinfluence.com/articles/people/most-influential-philosophers|title=Top Influential Philosophers Today | Academic Influence|date=6 March 2020 }}</ref> | |||
Following a period as a ] at ], Critchley was appointed a lecturer in philosophy at Essex in 1989, becoming reader in philosophy in 1995, and professor in 1999. He was director of the university's Centre for Theoretical Studies and collaborated closely with ]. | |||
After studying for remedial 'O' and 'A' level exams at a community college while doing other odd jobs, Critchley went to university aged 22. He went to the ] to study literature, but switched to philosophy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.whatisitliketobeaphilosopher.com/simon-critchley|title = Simon Critchley}}</ref> Amongst his teachers were ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström |page=14}}</ref> He also briefly participated in the Communist Students' Society (where he first read ], ], and ]) as well as the Poetry Society.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström |page=14}}</ref> After graduating with First Class Honours and winning the Kanani Prize in Philosophy in 1985, Critchley went to the ], where he wrote his M.Phil. on overcoming metaphysics in ] and ] with ]. His other teachers were ] and ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström |page=15}}</ref> In 1987, Critchley returned to the University of Essex to write his PhD, completed in 1988, which was to become the basis for ''The Ethics of Deconstruction''.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström |page=15}}</ref> | |||
Critchley was president of the British Society for Phenomenology from 1994-99. In 1997 and 2001 he held a Humboldt Research Fellowship in philosophy at ]. Between 1998-2004, he was a programme director of the ], Paris. In 2006-7 he was a scholar at the ] in ]. | |||
Critchley became a university fellow at ] in 1988.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström |pages=15–6}}</ref> In 1989, he returned to the University of Essex as lecturer and where he would become reader in 1995 and full professor in 1999. During this time he served first as deputy director (1990–96) and then as director (1997–2003) of the Centre for Theoretical Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences. From 1998 to 2004, he was Directeur de Programme at the ] in Paris.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ciph.org/spip.php?page=quisommesnousdetail&id_personne=441|title=Simon CRITCHLEY |}}</ref> He has held visiting appointments at ] (1997–98, 2001), ] (1997), ] (2000), ] (2002), ] (2005), ] (2006) and ] (2010). From 2009 to 2015, he ran a summer school at ]. He is also a professor of philosophy at the ]. Since 2004, Critchley has been professor of philosophy at the New School for Social Research in New York, at which he became the Hans Jonas Professor of Philosophy in 2011.<ref>{{cite web |title=Simon Critchley |url=https://www.newschool.edu/nssr/faculty/simon-critchley/ |website=The New School for Social Research |access-date=16 August 2022}}</ref> Since 2015, he has served on the board of the ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://academicinfluence.com/articles/people/most-influential-philosophers|title=Top Influential Philosophers Today | Academic Influence|date=6 March 2020 }}</ref> In 2021, Critchley was named by Academic Influence as one of the top 25 most influential philosophers of today.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://academicinfluence.com/articles/people/most-influential-philosophers|title=Top Influential Philosophers Today | Academic Influence|date=6 March 2020 }}</ref> He discusses his biography in a recent episode of ''Time Sensitive''.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://timesensitive.fm/episode/simon-critchley-on-finding-clarity-in-philosophy-and-comedy/|title=Simon Critchley on Finding Clarity in Philosophy and Comedy|newspaper=Time Sensitive}}</ref> | |||
Since 2004 Critchley has been professor of philosophy at the New School for Social Research. He was appointed chair of philosophy in 2008. He has held visiting professorships at the universities of ] (1997), ] (2000), ] (2002), New York's ] (2005) and at the ] (2006). In 2009 he was appointed a part-time professor of philosophy at ] in the ]. <ref></ref> | |||
==Overview of philosophical work== | |||
Critchley is also "chief philosopher" of the ], a semi-fictitious avant-garde network that surfaces through proclamations, "denunciations" and live events. He has collaborated closely with the novelist ] on projects including the society's ''Declaration on Inauthenticity'' <ref> November 20, 2008</ref> and their joint publication on ]. <ref> 2003</ref> At an event at the ] art gallery two lecturers purporting to be Critchley and McCarthy were, in mischievous keeping with the ''inauthentic'' theme, played by actors.<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref> The Declaration of Inauthenticity was presented at the opening of the ] by Greek actors in June 2009. | |||
'''''The Ethics of Deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas''''' (1st ed., Blackwell, 1992; 2nd ed., Edinburgh University Press 1999; 3rd ed., EUP 2014) | |||
<gallery> | |||
Image:INS_Tate1.jpg|"Critchley" & "McCarthy" | |||
Image:INS_Tate2.jpg|INS Logo | |||
Image:INS_Tate4.jpg|Critchley Podium | |||
Image:INS_Tate5.jpg|McCarthy Podium | |||
</gallery> | |||
Since its original publication in 1992, ''The Ethics of Deconstruction'' has been an acclaimed work. Against the received understanding of ] as either a metaphysician with his own ‘infrastructure’ or as a value-free nihilist, Critchley argues that central to Derrida's thinking is a conception of ethical experience. Specifically, this conception of ethical experience must be understood in ] terms in which the other calls into question one's ego, self-consciousness, and ordinary comprehension. Critchley argues that this Levinasian conception of ethical experience informs Derrida's deconstruction and develops the idea of ''clôtural'' reading.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=The Ethics of Deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas |date=1992 |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |location=Edinburgh |pages=1–4, 40–1, 88–9}}</ref> | |||
==Works== | |||
===The Ethics of Deconstruction (1992)=== | |||
Critchley’s first book was ''The Ethics of Deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas'' (Blackwell, 1992), which became an acclaimed source on deconstruction and was the first book to argue for an ethical dimension to ]. A second expanded edition was published in 1999 by Edinburgh University Press. Rather than being concerned with deconstruction in terms of the contradictions inherent in any text — an approach typical of the early Derrida and those in literary criticism aiming to extract a critical method for an application to literature — Critchley concerns himself with the philosophical context necessary for an understanding of the ethics of deconstructive reading. | |||
'''''Very Little ... Almost Nothing: Death, Philosophy, Literature''''' (Routledge, 1997/2nd expanded ed., Routledge 2004) | |||
Far from being some sort of value-free nihilism or textual free-play, Critchley showed the ethical impetus that was driving Derrida’s work. His claim was that Derrida’s understanding of ethics has to be understood in relation to his engagement with the work of Levinas and the book attempts to lay out the details of their philosophical confrontation. | |||
Critchley's second monograph begins from the problem of religious disappointment, which generates the question of the meaning of life. Through a long preamble on ], Critchley rejects the view that an affirmation of finitude can redeem the meaning of life. Instead, he argues that the ultimate mark of human finitude is that we cannot find meaning for the finite. Rather, for Critchley, an adequate response to nihilism consists in seeing meaninglessness as a task or achievement. Critchley then develops this thesis through discussions of ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=Very Little . . . Almost Nothing: Death, Philosophy, Literature |date=1997 |publisher=Routledge |location=London |pages=29–33}}</ref> | |||
===Very Little... Almost Nothing (1997)=== | |||
Critchley’s second book, ''Very Little... Almost Nothing'' (Routledge, 1997) develops in a very different direction and shows his concern with the relation between philosophy and literature and the problem of nihilism. A second edition with additional material and a new preface was published in 2004. | |||
At the centre of ''Very Little... Almost Nothing'' is the problem of the meaning of life and what sense can be made of this problem in the absence of any religious belief. By way of a series of ‘lectures’ on ], ], ] and romanticism, Critchley argues for a conception of meaninglessness understood as the achievement of the everyday, a view which, he thinks, redeems us from the need for religious redemption. | |||
'''''Ethics-Politics-Subjectivity: Essays on Derrida, Levinas, & Contemporary French Thought''''' (Verso, 1999) | |||
''Ethics-Politics-Subjectivity'' (Verso, 1999) is a collection of essays that includes his debate with ], as well as series of essays on ], ], ], ]. These essays also show a pronounced political and psychoanalytic turn to Critchley’s thinking. A new edition of the book appeared in Verso’s Radical Thinkers series in 2009. | |||
This collection brings together a number of previously published essays. Amongst these essays, Critchley discusses a variety of historical and contemporary figures (e.g., ], ], ], Derrida, Levinas, ], ], ], ], and Blanchot) as well as topics (e.g., ], ], ] in the ], ], ], ], and others).<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=Ethics-Politics-Subjectivity: Essays on Derrida, Levinas, & Contemporary French Thought |date=1999 |publisher=Verso |location=London}}</ref> | |||
===''Continental Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction'' (2001)=== | |||
''Continental Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction'' (Oxford University Press, 2001), is both an introduction to that tradition of thinking and an essay in meta-philosophy, which lays out the way in which Critchley sees the role of theory and reflection. It has been translated into nine languages. In the book, Critchley addresses the perennial question of the two major Western philosophical traditions, that of ] and ]. Critchley tries to avoid sectarianism, and argues that the professional opposition between analytic and Continental philosophy is something that needs to be transcended. Critchley accepts that there is risk within continental philosophy of obscurantism, just as there is a risk of scientism in much analytic philosophy. But the primary purpose of philosophy is to understand ourselves, our world and, as Hegel puts it, to comprehend one’s time in thought. Critchley offers the example of the ‘will of God’ as the prime example of obscurantism, but within continental philosophy also the ‘drives’ in ], ‘archetypes’ in ], the ‘real’ in ], ‘power’ in ], ] in ], the ‘trace of God’ in ], and the ‘epochal withdrawal of being in and as history’ in ]. | |||
'''''Continental Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction''''' (Oxford University Press, 2001) | |||
===On Humour (2002)=== | |||
Since 2000, Critchley has turned his attention to what he calls ‘impossible objects’: humour, poetry and music. His ''On Humour'' (Routledge, 2002) continues the meditation on nihilism begun in ''Very Little…Almost Nothing''; but he continues it in a very different key, analysing the meaning and importance of humour. Critchley argues that humour is an oblique phenomenology of ordinary bringing about a change of situation that exerts a powerful critical function. ''On Humour'' has been translated into 8 languages and has exerted considerable influence over debates around the role of humour in contemporary art practice. | |||
Critchley's ''Continental Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction'' sets out to establish three claims: (1) to demonstrate why ] is a contested concept by looking at the history and meaning of the term as well as its relationship to ]; (2) to show how it can be understood as a distinct set of philosophical traditions that cover a range of problems; and (3) to argue that a more promising future for philosophy is to talk about philosophy as such without such professional squabbles between Continental and Anglo-American philosophy.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=Continental Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction |date=2001 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford |page=xii}}</ref> Critchley defends these claims through discussions of such figures as ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and others as well as such topics as the relationship between ] and ], ], ], ], and ]. | |||
===Things Merely Are (2005)=== | |||
In ''Things Merely Are'' (Routledge, 2005), Critchley examines the relation between philosophy and poetry through an extended meditation on the poetry of ]. Critchley’s particular focus in Stevens’ very late poems, which attempt to describe what poetry can and cannot say about a subject-independent reality. The book also contains Critchley’s influential essay on Terence Malick’s ]. | |||
'''''On Humour''''' (Routledge, 2002) | |||
===Infinitely Demanding (2007)=== | |||
''Infinitely Demanding'' (Verso, 2007) is the most systematic overview of Critchley's philosophical position. It combines a meta-ethics based on the concepts of approval and demand with a ] of ethical experience and ethical subjectivity. At the centre of the book is a theory of ethical subjectivity based on the relation to an infinite demand. Critchley extends his analysis into discussions of aesthetics and sublimation and into political theory and practice. Critchley argues for an ethically committed political ]. German and Italian translations appeared in 2009 and it is being translated into 3 other languages. The book has led to some heated polemics, notably with ] (See below, the Critchley-Žižek Debate). “Infinitely Demanding” is the topic of a special issue of the journal Critical Horizons (August 2009). | |||
In ''On Humour'', Critchley explores the central yet peculiar role that ], ], ], and ] play in human life. Specifically, he defends the two-fold claim that humour both (1) engages our shared practices and mutual attunement with one another, while also (2) challenging those very social practices and sensibilities, showing how they might be transformed and become otherwise than they presently are.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=On Humour |date=2002 |publisher=Routledge |location=London |page=16}}</ref> | |||
===The Book of Dead Philosophers (2008)=== | |||
An extended defense of the idea that to philosophize is to learn how to die, ''The Book of Dead Philosophers'' was published by Granta in the UK (2008), Vintage in the US (2009) and Melbourne University Press in Australia (2008). Spanish (Santillana), Italian (Garzanti) and Greek (Patakis) translations appeared in 2009 and it is being translated into 7 other languages. “The Book of Dead Philosophers” was widely reviewed and discussed (see below). It was on the ''The New York Times'' Best-Seller List in March 2009 and was a top ten bestseller in Greece in Summer 2009. | |||
The aim of “The Book of Dead Philosophers” is to examine, defend and refine the ideal of the philosophical death in the context of a culture like ours that is defined by a denial of death. However, the deeper intention of the book is to challenge and revise the way we think about the history of philosophy. More specifically, the book tries to conceive of the history of philosophy as a history of philosophers and thereby rethink the way in which approach the relation between the activity of philosophy and an individual life, between conceptuality and biography. | |||
'''''Things Merely Are: Philosophy in the poetry of Wallace Stevens ''' ''(Routledge, 2005) | |||
===''On Heidegger’s Being and Time'' (2008)=== | |||
This volume (Routledge, 2008) combines ]'s lectures at the ] on Heidegger’s '']'' with Critchley’s New School lectures on the relation between Heidegger and Husserl and his own interpretation of ''Being and Time''. Where Critchley argues that we must see ''Being and Time'' as a radicalization of Husserlian phenomenology, Reiner Schürmann's proposal is to read Heidegger ‘backward’, arguing that Heidegger’s later work is the key to unraveling ''Being and Time''. Critchley concludes the volume with an extended critique of Heidegger’s concept of ]. | |||
In ''Things Merely'' Are, Critchley argues for two claims: (1) that ]'s poetry affords significant and illuminating philosophical insights and (2) that the best way to express such insights is poetically. Specifically, Critchley argues that Stevens's poetry offers readers a novel take on the relationship between mind, language and material things, which overcomes modern epistemology.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=Things Merely Are: Philosophy in the poetry of Wallace Stevens |url=https://archive.org/details/thingsmerelyarep00crit |url-access=registration |date=2005 |publisher=Routledge |location=London |page=}}</ref> The book also offers an extended engagement with the cinema of ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=Things Merely Are |pages=97–113}}</ref> | |||
===''Der Katechismus des Bürgers'' (2008)=== | |||
This small volume (Diaphanes, Berlin, 2008) on the problem of politics and religion in Rousseau was first published in German. | |||
'''''Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance ''' ''(Verso, 2007) | |||
===''The Faith of the Faithless'' (2010)=== | |||
Critchley is currently working on a book called ''The Faith of the Faithless'', to be published by Harvard University Press. | |||
Addressing the topic of political disappointment, Critchley argues for a conception of ethical experience and subjectivity. Challenging the modern ] association of ] and ], Critchley argues for a ‘hetero-affective’ conception of ethical experience in which the subject is split between herself and a moral demand, which she experiences and yet cannot entirely fulfill.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance |date=2008 |publisher=Verso |location=New York |pages=8–11}}</ref> From this picture, Critchley develops an account of the experience of ] before reflecting on the relationship between one's conscience and political action.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance |pages=12–3}}</ref> The book argues for an ethical informed ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance |pages=12–3}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
'''''The Book of Dead Philosophers ''' ''(Granta Books, 2008 and Vintage, 2009) | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
''The Book of Dead Philosophers'' begins from the assumption that contemporary human life is not defined by a fear of death, but a terror of annihilation and what awaits us after death. Rejecting any escape from our death in either mindless accumulation of wealth or a metaphysical sanctuary, Critchley follows ] in exploring the view that ‘to philosophize is to learn how to die’.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=The Book of Dead Philosophers |date=2008 |publisher=Vintage Books |location=New York |pages=xv–xvi}}</ref> To that end, Critchley discusses the ] ranging from ] and ] to ] and ] (Ibn Sina), from ] and ] to ] and ]. | |||
==Selected bibliography== | |||
* (1991) , ed. with Robert Bernasconi, Indiana University Press, Bloomington. | |||
* (1992) , Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, (2nd edition, 1999) | |||
* (1996) , ed. with Peter Dews, State University of New York Press, Ithaca, NY. | |||
* (1996) , ed. with Adriaan T. Peperzak and Robert Bernasconi, Indiana University Press, Bloomington. | |||
* (1997) , Routledge, London & New York (2nd Edition, 2004). | |||
* (1998) , ed. with William J. Schroeder, Blackwell Publishing, Oxford. | |||
* (1999) , Verso, London (Reissued, 2007). | |||
* (2001) , Oxford University Press. | |||
* (2002) , ed. with Robert Bernasconi, Cambridge University Press. | |||
* (2002) , Routledge, London. | |||
* (2004) , ed. with Oliver Marchart, Routledge, London. | |||
* (2005) , with Dominique Janicaud & Eileen Brennan, Routledge, London. | |||
* (2005) , Routledge, London. | |||
* (2007) , Verso, London & New York. | |||
* (2008) , Granta Books, London; Vintage, New York; Melbourne University Press, Melbourne. | |||
* (2008) , with Reiner Schürmann, edited by Steven Levine, Routledge, London and New York. | |||
* (2008) , Diaphanes Verlag, Berlin. | |||
* (2008) (DVD) - ] and Simon Critchley in Conversation, Slought Books, Philadelphia. | |||
'''''On Heidegger's Being and Time ''' ''(Routledge, 2008) | |||
===As editor=== | |||
Critchley has edited the following book series: | |||
* ''Thinking the Political'' (Routledge) | |||
* ''Blackwell Readings in Continental Philosophy'' (Blackwell) | |||
* ''Thinking in Action'' (Routledge) | |||
* ''How to Read...'' (Granta, London, and W.W. Norton, New York) | |||
''On Heidegger's Being and Time'' presents two ways of approaching Heidegger's text. ]’s contribution reads Heidegger ‘backward’ from the later work to the earlier '']''. Alternatively, Critchley reads Heidegger ‘forward’ through Heidegger's inheritance of ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |last2= Schürmann |first2=Reiner |editor1-last=Levine |editor1-first=Steven |title=On Heidegger's Being and Time |date=2008 |publisher=Routledge |location=New York |page=1}}</ref> In his contribution, Critchley goes on to question the Heidegger's conception of inauthentic/authentic.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |last2=Schürmann |first2=Reiner |title=On Heidegger's Being and Time |date=2008 |publisher=Routledge |location=New York |pages=132–151}}</ref> | |||
==Trivia== | |||
* Throughout October 2009 media types around the country will receive cardboard tombstones cutouts to celebrate the release of ''The Book of Dead Philosophers''. | |||
* The Dead Philosophers' Limbo is Susie Burpee's twelve-hour dance to the life of ideas and the death of philosophers as told by the living philosopher Simon Critchley in his book, ''The Book of Dead Philosophers.'' | |||
* How do you applaud the launch of Simon Critchley’s ''Book of Dead Philosophers?'' With a séance, of course! At least that’s how the ''Accompanied Literary Society'' chose to celebrate at an out-of-this-world party at Bobo. | |||
* Under the name of , Critchley has produced a CD called ''Humiliation'' (2004) and a series of short films. This project was launched in an event at the Sydney Opera House in August 2004. | |||
* Critchley gave the name ] to a ] based band previously known as ''The Fur Coughs''. | |||
* Critchley himself played guitar in a number of North Hertfordshire bands including ''The Good Blokes'' and ''Social Class 5''. | |||
* Critchley is a devotee of ], and has since a young child been a keen supporter of ]. He has taken this life-long love into his philosophical work, giving a lecture in ], ], in May 2009 on French football star ], ”A puppet or a god? On Zidane”, based on Douglas Gordon and Phillipe Parreno's film ] from 2006. | |||
'''''How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cederström ''' ''(Polity, 2010) | |||
==External links== | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* - A Halloween Sermon on Self-Deification, Cabinet Magazine & Slought Foundation, October 31, 2008 | |||
* | |||
* | |||
''How to Stop Living and Start Worrying'' consists of a series of interviews between Critchley and ] based on a Swedish TV series. Here Critchley discusses his life and work through the themes of ], ], ], ], ], and ]. | |||
==The Critchley-Žižek Debate== | |||
The time-line or chronology of the Critchley-Žižek debate is usefully outlined by Critchley in a footnote to his ] article "Violent Thoughts on Slavoj Žižek". | |||
'''''Impossible Objects ''' ''(Polity, 2012) | |||
* Žižek’s piece, ‘Resistance is Surrender’ (London Review of Books, 15th November 2007), which criticized the (at that time) recent appearance of Critchley's ''Infinitely Demanding''. | |||
* 'Resistance is Surrender' in turn occasioned some responses from readers including T.J. Clark and David Graeber, to which Žižek replied by accusing Graeber and Critchley of ‘the highest form of corruption’ (LRB, 24th January, 2008). | |||
* Žižek’s critique was then republished in ] (February 2008), to which Critchley replied in a later issue (May 2008). | |||
* An extended version of Žižek's critique of Critchley's position appeared in Žižek's book ''In Defense of Lost Causes'' (Verso, London and New York, 2008), pp.337-350. Critchley says he will "respond to Zizek’s criticisms of my ethical position and interpretation of Lacan on a separate occasion". | |||
''Impossible Objects'' is a series of interviews between Critchley conducted between 2000 and 2011. Critchley discusses his own work and development through a variety of topics (e.g., ], ], ], the ], ], ], and more). | |||
;Bibliography of the Critchley-Žižek debate | |||
# Critchley: ''Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance'' (Verso, London & New York, 2007; ISBN 1844671216). | |||
# Žižek: in the ''London Review of Books''. | |||
# and in the ''London Review of Books''. | |||
# a letter in the ''London Review of Books''. | |||
# Žižek's ''In Defense of Lost Causes'' (Verso, London & New York, 2008), pp. 337-350. | |||
# Critchley: in ''Naked Punch'' | |||
# Article by Robert Young on the Critchley-Žižek Debate in ''Naked Punch'' | |||
# This article by Simon Critchley, published in 2005, offers a useful preamble to Critchley's position{s} | |||
'''''The Faith of the Faithless: Experiments in Political Theology ''' ''(Verso, 2012) | |||
==The Guardian Series on Heidegger's ''Being and Time''== | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
In ''The Faith of the Faithless'', Critchley rethinks faith as a political concept without succumbing to the temptations of the atheistic dismissal of faith or the theistic embrace of faith.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=The Faith of the Faithless: Experiments in Political Theology |date=2012 |publisher=Verso |location=New York |pages=8–20}}</ref> To that end, Critchley discusses ], ], ], Heidegger, and others. He also defends his view of ] from ]’s criticism.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=The Faith of the Faithless: Experiments in Political Theology |pages=227–8, 232–6, 240–4}}</ref> | |||
==Uncanniness in Heidegger and Lacan, with William Richardson== | |||
* | |||
'''''Stay, Illusion! The Hamlet Doctrine ''' ''(Pantheon, 2013) | |||
==Critical Horizons Special Issue: Simon Critchley’s Neo-Anarchism== | |||
* | |||
Co-authored with ], ''Stay, Illusion!'' draws on various readings of ] (e.g., ], ], ], ], ], and ]) with the aim of using this collection of interpretations to offer a close and compelling reading of Hamlet.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |last2=Webster |first2=Jamieson |title=Stay, Illusion!: The Hamlet Doctrine |date=2013 |publisher=Pantheon |location=New York |page=3}}</ref> | |||
==The Diavlog of Dead Philosophers: Bloggingheads.tv Percontations== | |||
* | |||
'''''The Problem with Levinas ''' ''(Oxford University Press, 2015) | |||
==Free Thoughts: BBC Radio Series== | |||
* Simon Critchley talking about being 'The first Free Thinker'. | |||
Through four lectures, Critchley reflects on five questions concerning ]: (1) what method might we follow in reading Levinas?; (2) what is Levinas’ fundamental problem?; (3) what is the shape of that problem in his early writings?; (4) what is Levinas’ answer to that problem?; and (5) is Levinas’ answer the best available answer? The book attempts to give a heterodox reading of Levinas's work and a new understanding of its importance.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |editor1-last=Dianda |editor1-first=Alexis |title=The Problem with Levinas |date=2015 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford |page=vi}}</ref> | |||
==Frieze Art Fair Podcast== | |||
* A conversation with Simon Critchley, Robert Storr, Barbara Bloom, Jörg Heiser | |||
'''''ABC Of Impossibility ''' ''(Univocal, 2015) | |||
==To Philosophize is to Learn How to Die== | |||
* at Fora.tv | |||
''ABC of Impossibility'' consists of fragments from an allegedly abandoned work, which largely date from 2004 to 2006. The initial project was to develop a theory of impossible objects that would take the form of alphabetized entries. These entries would deal with various phenomena, concepts, qualities, places, sensations, persons and moods.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=ABC of Impossibility |date=2015 |publisher=Univocal Publishing |pages=3–6}}</ref> | |||
==The Enemy of All: Piracy and the Law of Nations== | |||
* Daniel Heller-Roazen and Simon Critchley discuss Heller-Roazen's latest book at Après-Coup Psychoanalytic Association. | |||
'''''Bowie ''' ''(OR Books, 2014; Expanded Edition – Serpent’s Tail, 2016) | |||
==Against the Grain== | |||
* Simon Critchley talks about neo-anarchism, Obama, and political mobilizations with guest host Andrej Grubacic on KPFA 94.1 FM. | |||
==Slought Foundation Award for Creative Thought== | |||
* Simon Critchley and filmmaker Astra Taylor will share the 2010 Slought Foundation Award for Creative Thought. The award ceremony will be followed by a screening of Taylor’s unreleased conversation with Critchley, as well as a public conversation between the recipients on the function of public intellectuals in American culture and politics. | |||
In ''Bowie'', Critchley discusses the influence ]’s music has had on him throughout his life as well as reflects on the philosophical depth of Bowie's work. It is very much a fan's book that attempts to confer the appropriate aesthetic dignity on Bowie's work through a careful analysis of his lyrics and the exploration of themes of ], ], ] and the longing for ]. | |||
==Barack Obama and the American Void== | |||
* Critchley's lecture "Barack Obama and the American Void" is Fora.TV's most-watched political program for 2009. | |||
'''''Memory Theatre ''' ''(Fitzcarraldo, 2014) | |||
==UTSA hosts workshop on writings of philosopher Simon Critchley== | |||
* On February 22nd, 2010 the Department of Philosophy and Classics at the University of Texas, San Antonio hosted a workshop to discuss the writings of philosopher Simon Critchley, the 2009-2010 Brackenridge Distinguished Visiting Professor in the College of Liberal and Fine Arts. | |||
''Memory Theatre'' is a semi-fictional autobiographical story about the art of memory inspired by the work of ] and ], but at its core is a concern with memory in relation to ]’s '']''. It is concerned with the building of a memory theatre, the delusive attempt to control one's relation to mortality and the progressive dismantling of the standard image of the philosopher. | |||
==The One True Philosophy of Clothes== | |||
Critchley's thoughts on fashion, concealment, and disclosure - presented by ''A Blog Curated by Proenza Schouler'' | |||
'''''Notes on Suicide ''' ''(Fitzcarraldo, 2015) | |||
==The Stone: A New Philosophy Column in The New York Times== | |||
* The Stone is a new opinion series, moderated by Simon Critchley, that will feature the writings of contemporary philosophers on issues both timely and timeless — art, war, ethics, gender, popular culture and more. | |||
Against the prevailing tendency to either moralize against suicide or glorified self-murder, Critchley defends ] as a phenomenon that should be thought about seriously and soberly. To that end, Critchley examines numerous suicides and reflects on the increase of suicide in our society. | |||
==Men With Balls: The Art of the 2010 World Cup== | |||
* An exhibition at ApexArt curated by Simon Critchley - including work by artists Miguel Calderon, Hellmuth Costard, Liam Gillick, Douglas Gordon and Philippe Parreno, Mark Leckey, Maria Marshall, Santo Tolone, and Uri Tzaig; with memorabilia contributed by Roger Bennett and Bill Shankly; and Mark E. Smith reading football results. | |||
* Review of the exhibition in ''Paper Magazine'' and ''The Huffington Post''. | |||
* | |||
* An Interview about the show for BreakThru Radio (BTR). | |||
* from ''The L Magazine''. | |||
* Review of the exhibit in ''The New Republic'' | |||
'''''What We Think When We Think About Football ''' ''(Profile Books/Penguin, 2017) | |||
==Online writings== | |||
* with Jamieson Webster for ''The Incongruous Quarterly'' | |||
* Op-Ed piece in ''The New York Times''' new column ''The Stone'' | |||
* for ''EstudiosVisuales.net'' | |||
* for ''EstudiosVisuales.net'' | |||
* for ''How to Live Blog'' | |||
* for ''Naked Punch Magazine'' | |||
* Op-Ed piece in ''The New York Times'' | |||
* Readers Respond to ''How to Make It in the Afterlife'' | |||
* Op-Ed piece in ''The New York Times'' | |||
* Op-Ed piece in ''The New York Times'' | |||
* Op-Ed piece in ''The New York Times'' | |||
* Op-Ed piece in ''The New York Times'' | |||
* Review of Quentin Meillassoux's ''After Finitude'' for ''The Times Literary Supplement'' | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* with Tom McCarthy | |||
* with Axel Honneth | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
Critchley argues that ] occupies a particular place in society in that it at once originates from sociality and solidarity (e.g., that many teams formed from local churches or various community groups; the relation between a team and fans), while also being completely consumed by money, capital, and the dissolution and alienation of social life. It is an attempt to write a poetics of football.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=What We Think About When We Think About Football |date=2017 |publisher=Profile Books |location=London}}</ref> | |||
==Interviews== | |||
* An Interview for Vagant Magazine, by Anders M. Gullestad (in Norwegian). | |||
* Interview for Truthout.org, by Anders M. Gullestad | |||
* | |||
* Interview with the ''Shambhala Sun'' | |||
* Interview with ''Vice Magazine'' | |||
* for ''Here on Earth: Radio Without Borders'' (Wisconsin Public Radio) | |||
* in ''3AM Magazine'' | |||
* in ''Ephemera: Theory and Politics in Organization'' | |||
* Interview with ''PaperCuts Blog'' for ''The New York Times'' | |||
* Video Interviews for ''Big Think'' | |||
* Audio Interview for NPR's ''All Things Considered'' | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* 'The state is a limitation on human existence' | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
'''''Tragedy, the Greeks, and Us ''' ''(Pantheon/Profile Books, 2019) | |||
==Reviews== | |||
In ''Tragedy, the Greeks, and Us'', Critchley argues that ] articulates a philosophical orientation that challenges the traditional authority of philosophy by giving voice to what is contradictory, constricting, and limiting about human beings. In developing tragedy's philosophy, he turns to the ancient sophist ] and the sophistical practice of ], which examines both sides of an issue so as to make the weaker argument appear stronger. In addition to Gorgias, Critchley discusses ], ], ], ], ], and others.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Critchley |first1=Simon |title=Tragedy, the Greeks, and Us |date=2019 |publisher=Pantheon |location=New York}}</ref> | |||
* in the ''British Medical Journal'' | |||
* for ''Revolving World'' | |||
'''''Apply-degger''''' (Onasis Foundation, 2020) | |||
* for ''January Magazine'' | |||
* in ''The Herald'' | |||
''Apply-degger'' is a long-form, deep dive into the most important philosophical book of the last 100 years. Each episode of this podcast series will present one of the key concepts in Heidegger's philosophy. Taken together, the episodes will lay out the entirety of Heidegger project for people who are curious, serious and interested, but who simply don't have the time to sit down and read the 437 densely-written pages of the book. It is our hope that this series will show how Heidegger's thinking might be applied to one's life in ways which are illuminating, elevating and beneficial. ''Apply-degger'' is available for free as an audiobook on the as well as , , and . | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''The Telegraph'' | |||
* in ''The Independent'' | |||
'''''Bald: 35 Philosophical Short Cuts''''' (Yale University Press, 2021) | |||
* in ''The Nation'' | |||
* in ''The Independent'' | |||
This volume brings together thirty-five essays, originally published in The New York Times, on a wide range of topics, from the dimensions of Plato's academy and the mysteries of Eleusis to Philip K. Dick, Mormonism, money, and the joy and pain of Liverpool Football Club fans.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300255966/bald|title = Bald | Yale University Press}}</ref> | |||
* in ''The Observer'' | |||
* in ''The Guardian'' | |||
==Other work== | |||
* | |||
'''''The Stone:''''' Since 2010, Critchley has moderated '']'' in '']'', writing many essays himself. Contributions have included such thinkers as ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and many others. The forum has been extremely popular and generated two collections of essays, co-edited by Critchley and Peter Catapano: ''The Stone Reader: Modern Philosophy in 133 Arguments'' (W.W. Norton & Co., 2015), ''The Stone Reader: Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments'' (W.W. Norton & Co., 2017), and ''Question Everything: A Stone Reader'' (W.W. Norton & Co., 2022). | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' for ''La Vanguardia.es'' | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' for ''Guide.Supereva.it'' | |||
'''International Necronautical Society (INS):''' Together with writer ], Critchley is a founding member of the INS and serves as Head Philosopher. In its founding manifesto (1999), the First Committee of the INS declared (1) that death is a space, which INS intends to explore and inhabit; (2) that there is no beauty without death; (3) that the task of INS is to bring death out into the world; and (4) that the chief aim is to construct a means of conveying us into death. The founding manifesto as well as a number of other documents can be found in ''The Mattering of Matter: Documents from the Archive of the International Necronautical Society'' (2013).<ref>{{cite web |title=The First Proclamation of the International Necronautical Society |url=http://necronauts.net/manifestos/1999_times_manifesto.html}}</ref> | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' (Greek Translation) | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' (Greek Translation) | |||
'''Critchley and Simmons:''' Critchley is a part of the band Critchley and Simmons with John Simmons. They have released four albums: Humiliation (2004); The Majesty of the Absurd (2014); Ponders End (2017); and Moderate or Good, Occasionally Poor (2017). Their music is available on Spotify, iTunes, and SoundCloud.<ref>{{cite web |title=Critchley and Simmons website |url=https://www.critchleyandsimmons.com}}</ref> | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' (Greek Translation) | |||
* - for ''Amazon.com's'' Best Books of the Year So Far 2009 | |||
'''Guardian Commentary on Heidegger's Being and Time:''' In 2009, Critchley wrote a series of articles for '']''. | |||
* for ''De Standaard.be'' | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' for ''il Giornale.it'' | |||
'''Debate with Slavoj Zizek:''' Critchley engaged in a public debate with ]. In response to ''Infinitely Demanding'' (2007), Zizek's review (], 2007) challenged Critchley's argument that a politics of resistance should not reproduce the violent sovereignty such a politics opposes. Critchley responded to Zizek's objection in '']'' and his own ''The Faith of the Faithless'' (2012). | |||
* for ''Christiantoday.com'' | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' for ''Medical Device Daily Perspectives.com'' | |||
==Bibliography== | |||
* for ''Christiantoday.com'' | |||
* (1992, 1999, 2014) ''The Ethics of Deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas'', Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. {{ISBN|978-0748689323}} | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' for ''The Washington Post'' | |||
* (1997) ''Very Little... Almost Nothing: Death, Philosophy, Literature'', Routledge, London & New York (2nd Edition, 2004). {{ISBN|978-0415340496}} | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' for ''TheSecondPass.com'' | |||
* (1999) ''Ethics-Politics-Subjectivity: Essays on Derrida, Levinas, and Contemporary French Thought'', Verso, London (Reissued, 2007). {{ISBN|978-1844673513}} | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' for ''TheDay.com'' | |||
* (2001) ''Continental Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction'', Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|978-0192853592}} | |||
* for ''The San Francisco Chronicle'' | |||
* (2002) ''On Humour'', Routledge, London {{ISBN|978-0415251211}}. | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' for ''Azcentral.com'' | |||
* (2005) ''On the Human Condition'', with ] & Eileen Brennan, Routledge, London. {{ISBN|978-0415327961}} | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' for ''Salon.com'' | |||
* (2005) ''Things Merely Are: Philosophy in the Poetry of Wallace Stevens'', Routledge, London. {{ISBN|978-0415356312}} | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''The New York Observer'' | |||
* (2007) ''Infinitely Demanding. Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance'', Verso, London & New York. {{ISBN|978-1781680179}} | |||
* for ''Blogcritics.com'' | |||
* |
* (2008) ''The Book of Dead Philosophers'', Granta Books, London; Vintage, New York; Melbourne University Press, Melbourne. {{ISBN|978-0307390431}} | ||
* (2008) ''On Heidegger’s ‘Being and Time’'', with Reiner Schürmann, edited by Steven Levine, Routledge, London and New York. {{ISBN|978-0415775960}} | |||
* - Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''The New York Times'' | |||
* (2008) ''Der Katechismus des Bürgers'', Diaphanes Verlag, Berlin. {{ISBN|978-3037340325}} | |||
* for ''Playbackstl.com'' | |||
* (2008) ''Democracy and Disappointment: On the Politics of Resistance'' (DVD) – Alain Badiou and Simon Critchley in Conversation, Slought Books, Philadelphia ASIN: B001AXTZIO | |||
* - Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' for ''Flavorwire.com'' | |||
* (2010) ''How to Stop Living and Start Worrying'', Polity Press {{ISBN|978-0745650395}}. | |||
* - Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' for ''Bookslut'' | |||
* (2011) ''Impossible Objects'', Polity Press {{ISBN|978-0745653211}}. | |||
* - Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''USA Today'' | |||
* (2011) ''International Necronautical Society'': Offizielle Mitteilungen | |||
* - Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''January Magazine'' | |||
* (2012) ''The Mattering of Matter''. Documents from the Archive of the International Necronautical Society, with Tom McCarthy, Sternberg Press, Berlin. {{ISBN|978-3943365344}} | |||
* - Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''The New York Times'' | |||
* (2012) ''The Faith of the Faithless,'' Verso. {{ISBN|978-1781681688}} | |||
* - Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''VeryShortList.com'' | |||
* (2013) ''Stay, Illusion! The Hamlet Doctrine'', Pantheon (North America); Verso (Europe). {{ISBN|978-0307950482}} | |||
* in ''Booklist'' | |||
* (2014) ''Memory Theatre'', Fitzcarraldo Editions (UK). {{ISBN|978-0992974718}} | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''Publisher's Weekly'' | |||
* (2014) ''Bowie'', OR Books. {{ISBN|978-1939293541}} | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''New Statesman'' | |||
* (2015) ''Suicide'', Thought Catalog/Kindle Single. ASIN: B00YB0UZDC | |||
* - Comments on Simon Critchley' in ''The Guardian'' | |||
* (2015) ''Notes on Suicide'', Fitzcarraldo Editions (UK). {{ISBN|978-1910695067}} | |||
* - Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''The Independent on Sunday'' | |||
* (2015) ''The Problem With Levinas'', Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|978-0198738763}} | |||
* - Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''The Daily Telegraph'' | |||
* (2015) ''ABC of Impossibility'', Univocal. {{ISBN|978-1937561499}} | |||
* - On 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''The Guardian'' | |||
* (2017) ''What We Think About When We Think About Football'', Profile Books. {{ISBN|978-1781259214}} | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''The Financial Times'' | |||
* (2019) ''Tragedy, the Greeks, and Us'', Pantheon Press (US), Profile Books (UK). {{ISBN|978-1524747947}} | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''The New Yorker'' | |||
* (2020) ''Apply-degger'' (Audio Book; available free , , , and ) | |||
* Review of 'The Book of Dead Philosophers' in ''The Age'' | |||
* (2021) ''Bald: 35 Philosophical Short Cuts'', Yale University Press ISBN 978-0300255966 | |||
* in ''M/C Reviews'' | |||
* (2024) ''On Mysticism'', Profile Books (UK). {{ISBN|978-1800816930}} | |||
* - in ''The Independent'' | |||
* - in ''New Humanist'' | |||
;As (co)editor | |||
* - in ''The Guardian'' | |||
* (1991) ''Re-Reading Levinas'', ed. with Robert Bernasconi, Indiana University Press, Bloomington. {{ISBN|978-0253206244}} | |||
* - in ''The Australian'' | |||
* (1996) ''Deconstructive Subjectivities'', ed. with Peter Dews, State University of New York Press, Ithaca, NY. {{ISBN|978-0791427248}} | |||
* - in ''The Philosopher's Magazine'' | |||
* (1996) ''Emmanuel Levinas: Basic Philosophical Writings'', ed. with Adriaan T. Peperzak and Robert Bernasconi, Indiana University Press, Bloomington. {{ISBN|978-0253210791}} | |||
* (1998) ''A Companion to Continental Philosophy'', ed. with ], Blackwell Publishing, Oxford. {{ISBN|978-0631190134}} | |||
* (2002) ''The Cambridge Companion to Levinas'', ed. with Robert Bernasconi, Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|978-0521665650}} | |||
* (2004) ''Laclau: A Critical Reader'', ed. with Oliver Marchart, Routledge, London. {{ISBN|978-0415238441}} | |||
* (2014) ''The Anarchist Turn'', eds. Jacob Blumenfeld and ], Pluto Books. {{ISBN|978-0745333427}} | |||
* (2017) ''The Stone Reader: Modern Philosophy in 133 Arguments'', ed. with Peter Catapano, W.W. Norton & Co. {{ISBN|978-1631490712}} | |||
* (2017) ''Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments'', ed. with Peter Catapano, W.W. Norton & Co. {{ISBN| 978-1631492983}} | |||
* (2022) ''Question Everything: A Stone Reader'', ed. with Peter Catapano, W.W. Norton & Co. {{ISBN| 978-1324091837}} | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
==External links== | |||
* – Website with interviews, reviews, bibliography of work etc. | |||
* {{cite web|url=http://www.nakedpunch.com/articles/39|title=Violent Thoughts About Slavoj Zizek|work=nakedpunch.com|access-date=10 April 2015|archive-date=20 August 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160820020144/http://www.nakedpunch.com/articles/39|url-status=dead}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 04:01, 16 January 2025
British philosopher (born 1960) "Memory Theatre" redirects here. For the mnemonic technique, see Method of loci.
Simon Critchley | |
---|---|
Portrait, 2009 | |
Born | (1960-02-27) 27 February 1960 (age 64) Hertfordshire, England |
Alma mater | University of Essex (BA) University of Nice (MPhil, PhD) |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Continental philosophy |
Institutions | New School for Social Research |
Main interests | Political philosophy, ethics, aesthetics |
Simon Critchley (born 27 February 1960) is an English philosopher and the Hans Jonas Professor of Philosophy at the New School for Social Research in New York, USA.
Challenging the ancient tradition that philosophy begins in wonder, Critchley argues that philosophy begins in disappointment. Two particular forms of disappointment inform Critchley's work: religious and political disappointment. While religious disappointment arises from a lack of faith and generates the problem of what is the meaning of life in the face of nihilism, political disappointment comes from the violent world we live in and raises the question of justice in a violently unjust world. In addition, to these two regions of research, Critchley's recent works have engaged in more experimental forms of writing on Shakespeare, David Bowie, suicide, Greek tragedy and association football.
Biography
Simon Critchley was born on 27 February 1960, in Letchworth Garden City, England, to a working-class family originally from Liverpool. He is a fan of Liverpool Football Club and has said that, it ‘may be the governing passion of my life. My only religious commitment is to Liverpool Football Club.’ In grammar school, he studied history, sciences, languages (French and Russian) and English literature. During this time, he developed a lifelong interest in ancient history. After intentionally failing his school exams, Critchley worked a number of odd jobs, including in a pharmaceutical factory in which he sustained a severe injury to his left hand. During this time, he was a participant in the emerging punk scene in England, playing in numerous bands that all failed. While the music failed, there was a silver lining to the experience: a newfound love for Chinese food, inspired by Warren Zevon.
After studying for remedial 'O' and 'A' level exams at a community college while doing other odd jobs, Critchley went to university aged 22. He went to the University of Essex to study literature, but switched to philosophy. Amongst his teachers were Jay Bernstein, Robert Bernasconi, Ludmilla Jordanova, Onora O’Neill, Frank Cioffi, Mike Weston, Roger Moss, and Gabriel Pearson. He also briefly participated in the Communist Students' Society (where he first read Althusser, Foucault, and Derrida) as well as the Poetry Society. After graduating with First Class Honours and winning the Kanani Prize in Philosophy in 1985, Critchley went to the University of Nice, where he wrote his M.Phil. on overcoming metaphysics in Heidegger and Carnap with Dominique Janicaud. His other teachers were Clement Rosset and André Tosel. In 1987, Critchley returned to the University of Essex to write his PhD, completed in 1988, which was to become the basis for The Ethics of Deconstruction.
Critchley became a university fellow at University College Cardiff in 1988. In 1989, he returned to the University of Essex as lecturer and where he would become reader in 1995 and full professor in 1999. During this time he served first as deputy director (1990–96) and then as director (1997–2003) of the Centre for Theoretical Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences. From 1998 to 2004, he was Directeur de Programme at the Collège international de philosophie in Paris. He has held visiting appointments at Johann Wolfgang Goethe Universität (1997–98, 2001), University of Nijmegen (1997), University of Sydney (2000), University of Notre Dame (2002), Cardozo Law School (2005), University of Oslo (2006) and University of Texas (2010). From 2009 to 2015, he ran a summer school at University of Tilburg. He is also a professor of philosophy at the European Graduate School. Since 2004, Critchley has been professor of philosophy at the New School for Social Research in New York, at which he became the Hans Jonas Professor of Philosophy in 2011. Since 2015, he has served on the board of the Onassis Foundation. In 2021, Critchley was named by Academic Influence as one of the top 25 most influential philosophers of today. He discusses his biography in a recent episode of Time Sensitive.
Overview of philosophical work
The Ethics of Deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas (1st ed., Blackwell, 1992; 2nd ed., Edinburgh University Press 1999; 3rd ed., EUP 2014)
Since its original publication in 1992, The Ethics of Deconstruction has been an acclaimed work. Against the received understanding of Derrida as either a metaphysician with his own ‘infrastructure’ or as a value-free nihilist, Critchley argues that central to Derrida's thinking is a conception of ethical experience. Specifically, this conception of ethical experience must be understood in Levinasian terms in which the other calls into question one's ego, self-consciousness, and ordinary comprehension. Critchley argues that this Levinasian conception of ethical experience informs Derrida's deconstruction and develops the idea of clôtural reading.
Very Little ... Almost Nothing: Death, Philosophy, Literature (Routledge, 1997/2nd expanded ed., Routledge 2004)
Critchley's second monograph begins from the problem of religious disappointment, which generates the question of the meaning of life. Through a long preamble on nihilism, Critchley rejects the view that an affirmation of finitude can redeem the meaning of life. Instead, he argues that the ultimate mark of human finitude is that we cannot find meaning for the finite. Rather, for Critchley, an adequate response to nihilism consists in seeing meaninglessness as a task or achievement. Critchley then develops this thesis through discussions of Blanchot, Levinas, Cavell, German Romanticism, Adorno, Derrida, Beckett, and Wallace Stevens.
Ethics-Politics-Subjectivity: Essays on Derrida, Levinas, & Contemporary French Thought (Verso, 1999)
This collection brings together a number of previously published essays. Amongst these essays, Critchley discusses a variety of historical and contemporary figures (e.g., Hegel, Heidegger, Jean Genet, Derrida, Levinas, Richard Rorty, Laclau, Lacan, Jean-Luc Nancy, and Blanchot) as well as topics (e.g., politics, subjectivity, race (human categorization) in the Western philosophical canon, psychoanalysis, comedy, friendship, and others).
Continental Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2001)
Critchley's Continental Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction sets out to establish three claims: (1) to demonstrate why Continental philosophy is a contested concept by looking at the history and meaning of the term as well as its relationship to analytic or Anglo-American philosophy; (2) to show how it can be understood as a distinct set of philosophical traditions that cover a range of problems; and (3) to argue that a more promising future for philosophy is to talk about philosophy as such without such professional squabbles between Continental and Anglo-American philosophy. Critchley defends these claims through discussions of such figures as Kant, Fichte, Hegel, Nietzsche, Husserl, Heidegger, Carnap, and others as well as such topics as the relationship between knowledge and wisdom, literature, science, politics, and nihilism.
On Humour (Routledge, 2002)
In On Humour, Critchley explores the central yet peculiar role that humour, jokes, laughter, and smiling play in human life. Specifically, he defends the two-fold claim that humour both (1) engages our shared practices and mutual attunement with one another, while also (2) challenging those very social practices and sensibilities, showing how they might be transformed and become otherwise than they presently are.
Things Merely Are: Philosophy in the poetry of Wallace Stevens (Routledge, 2005)
In Things Merely Are, Critchley argues for two claims: (1) that Wallace Stevens's poetry affords significant and illuminating philosophical insights and (2) that the best way to express such insights is poetically. Specifically, Critchley argues that Stevens's poetry offers readers a novel take on the relationship between mind, language and material things, which overcomes modern epistemology. The book also offers an extended engagement with the cinema of Terrence Malick.
Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance (Verso, 2007)
Addressing the topic of political disappointment, Critchley argues for a conception of ethical experience and subjectivity. Challenging the modern Kantian association of ethics and autonomy, Critchley argues for a ‘hetero-affective’ conception of ethical experience in which the subject is split between herself and a moral demand, which she experiences and yet cannot entirely fulfill. From this picture, Critchley develops an account of the experience of conscience before reflecting on the relationship between one's conscience and political action. The book argues for an ethical informed neo-anarchism.
The Book of Dead Philosophers (Granta Books, 2008 and Vintage, 2009)
The Book of Dead Philosophers begins from the assumption that contemporary human life is not defined by a fear of death, but a terror of annihilation and what awaits us after death. Rejecting any escape from our death in either mindless accumulation of wealth or a metaphysical sanctuary, Critchley follows Cicero in exploring the view that ‘to philosophize is to learn how to die’. To that end, Critchley discusses the deaths (and lives) of philosophers ranging from Thales and Plato to Confucius and Avicenna (Ibn Sina), from Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia and Hegel to Heidegger and Frantz Fanon.
On Heidegger's Being and Time (Routledge, 2008)
On Heidegger's Being and Time presents two ways of approaching Heidegger's text. Reiner Schürmann’s contribution reads Heidegger ‘backward’ from the later work to the earlier Being and Time. Alternatively, Critchley reads Heidegger ‘forward’ through Heidegger's inheritance of phenomenology. In his contribution, Critchley goes on to question the Heidegger's conception of inauthentic/authentic.
How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cederström (Polity, 2010)
How to Stop Living and Start Worrying consists of a series of interviews between Critchley and Carl Cederström based on a Swedish TV series. Here Critchley discusses his life and work through the themes of life, philosophy, death, love, humour, and authenticity.
Impossible Objects (Polity, 2012)
Impossible Objects is a series of interviews between Critchley conducted between 2000 and 2011. Critchley discusses his own work and development through a variety of topics (e.g., deconstruction, nihilism, politics, the literary, punk, tragedy, and more).
The Faith of the Faithless: Experiments in Political Theology (Verso, 2012)
In The Faith of the Faithless, Critchley rethinks faith as a political concept without succumbing to the temptations of the atheistic dismissal of faith or the theistic embrace of faith. To that end, Critchley discusses Rousseau, Badiou, St. Paul, Heidegger, and others. He also defends his view of nonviolence from Zizek’s criticism.
Stay, Illusion! The Hamlet Doctrine (Pantheon, 2013)
Co-authored with Jamieson Webster, Stay, Illusion! draws on various readings of Hamlet (e.g., Carl Schmitt, Walter Benjamin, Hegel, Freud, Lacan, and Nietzsche) with the aim of using this collection of interpretations to offer a close and compelling reading of Hamlet.
The Problem with Levinas (Oxford University Press, 2015)
Through four lectures, Critchley reflects on five questions concerning Levinas: (1) what method might we follow in reading Levinas?; (2) what is Levinas’ fundamental problem?; (3) what is the shape of that problem in his early writings?; (4) what is Levinas’ answer to that problem?; and (5) is Levinas’ answer the best available answer? The book attempts to give a heterodox reading of Levinas's work and a new understanding of its importance.
ABC Of Impossibility (Univocal, 2015)
ABC of Impossibility consists of fragments from an allegedly abandoned work, which largely date from 2004 to 2006. The initial project was to develop a theory of impossible objects that would take the form of alphabetized entries. These entries would deal with various phenomena, concepts, qualities, places, sensations, persons and moods.
Bowie (OR Books, 2014; Expanded Edition – Serpent’s Tail, 2016)
In Bowie, Critchley discusses the influence David Bowie’s music has had on him throughout his life as well as reflects on the philosophical depth of Bowie's work. It is very much a fan's book that attempts to confer the appropriate aesthetic dignity on Bowie's work through a careful analysis of his lyrics and the exploration of themes of inauthenticity, isolation, truth and the longing for love.
Memory Theatre (Fitzcarraldo, 2014)
Memory Theatre is a semi-fictional autobiographical story about the art of memory inspired by the work of Frances Yates and Adolfo Bioy Casares, but at its core is a concern with memory in relation to Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. It is concerned with the building of a memory theatre, the delusive attempt to control one's relation to mortality and the progressive dismantling of the standard image of the philosopher.
Notes on Suicide (Fitzcarraldo, 2015)
Against the prevailing tendency to either moralize against suicide or glorified self-murder, Critchley defends suicide as a phenomenon that should be thought about seriously and soberly. To that end, Critchley examines numerous suicides and reflects on the increase of suicide in our society.
What We Think When We Think About Football (Profile Books/Penguin, 2017)
Critchley argues that football occupies a particular place in society in that it at once originates from sociality and solidarity (e.g., that many teams formed from local churches or various community groups; the relation between a team and fans), while also being completely consumed by money, capital, and the dissolution and alienation of social life. It is an attempt to write a poetics of football.
Tragedy, the Greeks, and Us (Pantheon/Profile Books, 2019)
In Tragedy, the Greeks, and Us, Critchley argues that tragedy articulates a philosophical orientation that challenges the traditional authority of philosophy by giving voice to what is contradictory, constricting, and limiting about human beings. In developing tragedy's philosophy, he turns to the ancient sophist Gorgias and the sophistical practice of antilogia, which examines both sides of an issue so as to make the weaker argument appear stronger. In addition to Gorgias, Critchley discusses Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Plato, Aristotle, and others.
Apply-degger (Onasis Foundation, 2020)
Apply-degger is a long-form, deep dive into the most important philosophical book of the last 100 years. Each episode of this podcast series will present one of the key concepts in Heidegger's philosophy. Taken together, the episodes will lay out the entirety of Heidegger project for people who are curious, serious and interested, but who simply don't have the time to sit down and read the 437 densely-written pages of the book. It is our hope that this series will show how Heidegger's thinking might be applied to one's life in ways which are illuminating, elevating and beneficial. Apply-degger is available for free as an audiobook on the Onasis Youtube channel as well as iTunes, Stitcher, and Spotify.
Bald: 35 Philosophical Short Cuts (Yale University Press, 2021)
This volume brings together thirty-five essays, originally published in The New York Times, on a wide range of topics, from the dimensions of Plato's academy and the mysteries of Eleusis to Philip K. Dick, Mormonism, money, and the joy and pain of Liverpool Football Club fans.
Other work
The Stone: Since 2010, Critchley has moderated The Stone in The New York Times, writing many essays himself. Contributions have included such thinkers as Linda Martín Alcoff, Seyla Benhabib, Gary Gutting, Philip Kitcher, Chris Lebron, Todd May, Jason Stanley, Peter Singer, and many others. The forum has been extremely popular and generated two collections of essays, co-edited by Critchley and Peter Catapano: The Stone Reader: Modern Philosophy in 133 Arguments (W.W. Norton & Co., 2015), The Stone Reader: Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments (W.W. Norton & Co., 2017), and Question Everything: A Stone Reader (W.W. Norton & Co., 2022).
International Necronautical Society (INS): Together with writer Tom McCarthy, Critchley is a founding member of the INS and serves as Head Philosopher. In its founding manifesto (1999), the First Committee of the INS declared (1) that death is a space, which INS intends to explore and inhabit; (2) that there is no beauty without death; (3) that the task of INS is to bring death out into the world; and (4) that the chief aim is to construct a means of conveying us into death. The founding manifesto as well as a number of other documents can be found in The Mattering of Matter: Documents from the Archive of the International Necronautical Society (2013).
Critchley and Simmons: Critchley is a part of the band Critchley and Simmons with John Simmons. They have released four albums: Humiliation (2004); The Majesty of the Absurd (2014); Ponders End (2017); and Moderate or Good, Occasionally Poor (2017). Their music is available on Spotify, iTunes, and SoundCloud.
Guardian Commentary on Heidegger's Being and Time: In 2009, Critchley wrote a series of articles for The Guardian.
Debate with Slavoj Zizek: Critchley engaged in a public debate with Zizek. In response to Infinitely Demanding (2007), Zizek's review (London Review of Books, 2007) challenged Critchley's argument that a politics of resistance should not reproduce the violent sovereignty such a politics opposes. Critchley responded to Zizek's objection in Naked Punch and his own The Faith of the Faithless (2012).
Bibliography
- (1992, 1999, 2014) The Ethics of Deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0748689323
- (1997) Very Little... Almost Nothing: Death, Philosophy, Literature, Routledge, London & New York (2nd Edition, 2004). ISBN 978-0415340496
- (1999) Ethics-Politics-Subjectivity: Essays on Derrida, Levinas, and Contemporary French Thought, Verso, London (Reissued, 2007). ISBN 978-1844673513
- (2001) Continental Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0192853592
- (2002) On Humour, Routledge, London ISBN 978-0415251211.
- (2005) On the Human Condition, with Dominique Janicaud & Eileen Brennan, Routledge, London. ISBN 978-0415327961
- (2005) Things Merely Are: Philosophy in the Poetry of Wallace Stevens, Routledge, London. ISBN 978-0415356312
- (2007) Infinitely Demanding. Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance, Verso, London & New York. ISBN 978-1781680179
- (2008) The Book of Dead Philosophers, Granta Books, London; Vintage, New York; Melbourne University Press, Melbourne. ISBN 978-0307390431
- (2008) On Heidegger’s ‘Being and Time’, with Reiner Schürmann, edited by Steven Levine, Routledge, London and New York. ISBN 978-0415775960
- (2008) Der Katechismus des Bürgers, Diaphanes Verlag, Berlin. ISBN 978-3037340325
- (2008) Democracy and Disappointment: On the Politics of Resistance (DVD) – Alain Badiou and Simon Critchley in Conversation, Slought Books, Philadelphia ASIN: B001AXTZIO
- (2010) How to Stop Living and Start Worrying, Polity Press ISBN 978-0745650395.
- (2011) Impossible Objects, Polity Press ISBN 978-0745653211.
- (2011) International Necronautical Society: Offizielle Mitteilungen
- (2012) The Mattering of Matter. Documents from the Archive of the International Necronautical Society, with Tom McCarthy, Sternberg Press, Berlin. ISBN 978-3943365344
- (2012) The Faith of the Faithless, Verso. ISBN 978-1781681688
- (2013) Stay, Illusion! The Hamlet Doctrine, Pantheon (North America); Verso (Europe). ISBN 978-0307950482
- (2014) Memory Theatre, Fitzcarraldo Editions (UK). ISBN 978-0992974718
- (2014) Bowie, OR Books. ISBN 978-1939293541
- (2015) Suicide, Thought Catalog/Kindle Single. ASIN: B00YB0UZDC
- (2015) Notes on Suicide, Fitzcarraldo Editions (UK). ISBN 978-1910695067
- (2015) The Problem With Levinas, Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198738763
- (2015) ABC of Impossibility, Univocal. ISBN 978-1937561499
- (2017) What We Think About When We Think About Football, Profile Books. ISBN 978-1781259214
- (2019) Tragedy, the Greeks, and Us, Pantheon Press (US), Profile Books (UK). ISBN 978-1524747947
- (2020) Apply-degger (Audio Book; available free Onasis Youtube channel, iTunes, Stitcher, and Spotify)
- (2021) Bald: 35 Philosophical Short Cuts, Yale University Press ISBN 978-0300255966
- (2024) On Mysticism, Profile Books (UK). ISBN 978-1800816930
- As (co)editor
- (1991) Re-Reading Levinas, ed. with Robert Bernasconi, Indiana University Press, Bloomington. ISBN 978-0253206244
- (1996) Deconstructive Subjectivities, ed. with Peter Dews, State University of New York Press, Ithaca, NY. ISBN 978-0791427248
- (1996) Emmanuel Levinas: Basic Philosophical Writings, ed. with Adriaan T. Peperzak and Robert Bernasconi, Indiana University Press, Bloomington. ISBN 978-0253210791
- (1998) A Companion to Continental Philosophy, ed. with William R. Schroeder, Blackwell Publishing, Oxford. ISBN 978-0631190134
- (2002) The Cambridge Companion to Levinas, ed. with Robert Bernasconi, Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521665650
- (2004) Laclau: A Critical Reader, ed. with Oliver Marchart, Routledge, London. ISBN 978-0415238441
- (2014) The Anarchist Turn, eds. Jacob Blumenfeld and Chiara Bottici, Pluto Books. ISBN 978-0745333427
- (2017) The Stone Reader: Modern Philosophy in 133 Arguments, ed. with Peter Catapano, W.W. Norton & Co. ISBN 978-1631490712
- (2017) Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments, ed. with Peter Catapano, W.W. Norton & Co. ISBN 978-1631492983
- (2022) Question Everything: A Stone Reader, ed. with Peter Catapano, W.W. Norton & Co. ISBN 978-1324091837
References
- "Simon Critchley's top 10 philosophers' deaths" at guardian.co.uk (Wednesday 11 June 2008)
- "Simon Critchley | the New School for Social Research".
- Critchley, Simon (2008). Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance. New York: Verso. p. 1.
- Critchley, Simon (2008). Infinitely Demanding. New York: Verso. pp. 2–3.
- "Simon Critchley on Finding Clarity in Philosophy and Comedy". Time Sensitive.
- Critchley, Simon (2010). How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström. Malden, MA: Polity Press. p. 4.
- Critchley, Simon. How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström. p. 5.
- "Simon Critchley on Finding Clarity in Philosophy and Comedy". Time Sensitive.
- Critchley, Simon. How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström. p. 6.
- Critchley, Simon. How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström. pp. 6–7.
- "Simon Critchley on Finding Clarity in Philosophy and Comedy". Time Sensitive.
- Critchley, Simon. How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström. pp. 7–13.
- "Top Influential Philosophers Today | Academic Influence". 6 March 2020.
- "Simon Critchley".
- Critchley, Simon. How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström. p. 14.
- Critchley, Simon. How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström. p. 14.
- Critchley, Simon. How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström. p. 15.
- Critchley, Simon. How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström. p. 15.
- Critchley, Simon. How to Stop Living and Start Worrying: Conversations with Carl Cedström. pp. 15–6.
- "Simon CRITCHLEY |".
- "Simon Critchley". The New School for Social Research. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
- "Top Influential Philosophers Today | Academic Influence". 6 March 2020.
- "Top Influential Philosophers Today | Academic Influence". 6 March 2020.
- "Simon Critchley on Finding Clarity in Philosophy and Comedy". Time Sensitive.
- Critchley, Simon (1992). The Ethics of Deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 1–4, 40–1, 88–9.
- Critchley, Simon (1997). Very Little . . . Almost Nothing: Death, Philosophy, Literature. London: Routledge. pp. 29–33.
- Critchley, Simon (1999). Ethics-Politics-Subjectivity: Essays on Derrida, Levinas, & Contemporary French Thought. London: Verso.
- Critchley, Simon (2001). Continental Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. xii.
- Critchley, Simon (2002). On Humour. London: Routledge. p. 16.
- Critchley, Simon (2005). Things Merely Are: Philosophy in the poetry of Wallace Stevens. London: Routledge. p. 4.
- Critchley, Simon. Things Merely Are. pp. 97–113.
- Critchley, Simon (2008). Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance. New York: Verso. pp. 8–11.
- Critchley, Simon. Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance. pp. 12–3.
- Critchley, Simon. Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance. pp. 12–3.
- Critchley, Simon (2008). The Book of Dead Philosophers. New York: Vintage Books. pp. xv–xvi.
- Critchley, Simon; Schürmann, Reiner (2008). Levine, Steven (ed.). On Heidegger's Being and Time. New York: Routledge. p. 1.
- Critchley, Simon; Schürmann, Reiner (2008). On Heidegger's Being and Time. New York: Routledge. pp. 132–151.
- Critchley, Simon (2012). The Faith of the Faithless: Experiments in Political Theology. New York: Verso. pp. 8–20.
- Critchley, Simon. The Faith of the Faithless: Experiments in Political Theology. pp. 227–8, 232–6, 240–4.
- Critchley, Simon; Webster, Jamieson (2013). Stay, Illusion!: The Hamlet Doctrine. New York: Pantheon. p. 3.
- Critchley, Simon (2015). Dianda, Alexis (ed.). The Problem with Levinas. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. vi.
- Critchley, Simon (2015). ABC of Impossibility. Univocal Publishing. pp. 3–6.
- Critchley, Simon (2017). What We Think About When We Think About Football. London: Profile Books.
- Critchley, Simon (2019). Tragedy, the Greeks, and Us. New York: Pantheon.
- "Bald | Yale University Press".
- "The First Proclamation of the International Necronautical Society".
- "Critchley and Simmons website".
External links
- simon-critchley.com – Website with interviews, reviews, bibliography of work etc.
- "Violent Thoughts About Slavoj Zizek". nakedpunch.com. Archived from the original on 20 August 2016. Retrieved 10 April 2015.
- 1960 births
- Living people
- English anarchists
- English atheists
- 21st-century English philosophers
- Academics of the University of Essex
- The New School faculty
- Academic staff of European Graduate School
- Continental philosophers
- British philosophers of religion
- British political philosophers
- Philosophers of nihilism
- Levinas scholars
- 20th-century English philosophers
- Alumni of the University of Essex