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The Life of the Characters in jacques derrida's Works
Derrida 1930 was born in a Jewish family in the suburb of Algeria, a French colony. About 20 years old, he was admitted to the "cradle of French philosophers"-Paris Teachers College, where he stayed for teaching and research. He studied under Merleau-Ponty, Althusser and Foucault, and also studied the phenomenology of Husserl and Heidegger, the psychoanalysis of French structuralism, Marxism, Freud and Lacan influenced by Saussure, and the literature of Sartre, Ba Taye and Blanchaud. Later, most of these people became the objects of his deconstruction.

1963, 33-year-old Derrida gave a famous lecture on Foucault, My Thinking and Crazy History, which showed its sharpness. 1966 10 at an international academic seminar, he delivered a speech entitled "Structure, Symbol, and Playfulness in Humanities", aiming at the most popular structuralist "structure" concept in French and even international academic circles at that time. In view of the structuralist holism, Derrida used another word "deconstruction", that is, "deconstruction", to express the dismantling and deconstruction of traditional cognitive patterns, habits and structures. Derrida's famous speech also marks the rise of a new school in French academic circles, which is called "post-structuralism" or "deconstruction". From 65438 to 0967, Derrida published three works that laid the academic foundation of his life: Writing and Differences, The Analects of Confucius Literature and Broadcasting.

From June 5438 to October 9, 2004/KLOC-0, Jacques, a famous French philosopher and thinker, was a great deconstructionist who had a decisive influence on humanities and literary theory criticism in the 20th century. Derrida died of pancreatic cancer in a hospital in Paris. When the news came, the ideological circles in Europe and North America had a great response, and people were saddened by the death of this theoretical master who had a far-reaching impact on human thought.