Benoît Peeters
Born
in Paris, France
August 28, 1956
Website
Genre
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Tintin and the World of Hergé: An Illustrated History
16 editions
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published
1983
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The Theory of the Grain of Sand (Obscure Cities, #13)
by
14 editions
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published
2009
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Comme un chef
by
3 editions
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published
2018
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Derrida: A Biography
by
19 editions
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published
2010
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Revoir Paris
by
7 editions
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published
2014
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Le retour du Capitaine Nemo
by
6 editions
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published
2023
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Hergé, Son of Tintin
by
17 editions
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published
2002
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La théorie du grain de sable, tome #2 (Les Cités obscures, #11)
by
4 editions
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published
2008
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Les Cités obscures : Livre 1
by |
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Revoir Paris, la nuit des constellations (Revoir Paris, #2)
by
4 editions
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published
2016
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“The plane that had taken off from Baltimore was caught in bad weather, which meant the Derridas missed their connection at Boston. Derrida found this delay and the whole chaotic journey a real trial. On the flight the following day, he spent the whole time tense and hunched up, clenching his fists tightly. And when Marguerite coaxed him to relax, he replied, furiously: ‘Don’t you realize that I’m keeping the plane in the air by the sole force of my will?â€� He was traumatized for a long time, and for several years he refused to get back into a plane.”
― Derrida: A Biography
― Derrida: A Biography
“The review L’Arc, meanwhile, wished to devote a complete issue to Derrida. Catherine Clément submitted a list of contributors in which there were more writers than philosophers in the traditional sense: Hélène Cixous, François Laruelle, Claude Ollier, Roger Laporte, Edmond Jabès, and so on.”
― Derrida: A Biography
― Derrida: A Biography
“Avital Ronell â€� a committed vegetarian â€� relates that one day, at a dinner with Chantal and René Major, she let one dish go by without taking a helping, which caused a certain embarrassment. When she said she had perfectly decent philosophical reasons for not eating meat, Derrida turned to ask her what they were. So Avital told him what it meant to her to incorporate the body of the other. Shortly afterwards, Derrida, who was extraordinarily receptive to this kind of thing, started to speak of carnophallogocentrism rather than phallogocentrism. Later on, with me and in front of me, he said he was a vegetarian. But one day, someone told me he had eaten a steak tartare, as carnivorous a kind of food as you can get. For me, it was as if he had betrayed me. When I spoke to him about it, he initially said I was behaving like a cop. Then he said, neatly: ‘I’m a vegetarian who sometimes eats meat.”
― Derrida: A Biography
― Derrida: A Biography
Topics Mentioning This Author
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Around the Year i...: Group Reading Timeline (2017) | 479 | 386 | Dec 11, 2017 10:23AM | |
The History Book ...: AUTHOR ALPHABET | 1181 | 765 | Feb 09, 2019 05:03PM | |
bizim büyük chal...:
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45 | 166 | Dec 17, 2023 06:26AM | |
Reading with Style:
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768 | 42 | Dec 03, 2024 08:13AM |
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