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This essay seeks to establish the sense in which Derrida's stated indifference to questions of legitimate descent can function as an ethical or political principle, as he argues in "Marx and Sons." We track Derrida's response to accusations of a lack of fealty in texts such as "Marx and Sons," "Biodegradables: Seven Diary Fragments," and "Limited Inc a b c … " alongside his problematization of a certain sense of inheritance or heritage. We argue that Derrida reveals the necessity of troubling established legitimate inheritances as an ethical and political first principle. As such, we argue that Derrida's reading of Marx is not just one faithful reading among others, but an indifference to the paradigm of fealty in inheritance.
Michael Peterson (Sun,) studied this question.
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