As Derrida suggests, there is a sense in which “an aborted interiorisation is at the same time a respect for the other as other. Hence the possibility of an impossible bereavement, where the only possible way to mourn, is to be unable to do so.
Borrowing from post-Freudian theories of mourning, dERRIDA posits a difference between introjection, which is love for the other in me, and incorporation, which involves retaining the other as a pocket, or a foreign body within one’s own body.
Derrida considers, successful mourning is primarily about the introjection of the other. The preservation of a discrete and separate other person inside the self (psychologically speaking), as is the case in incorporation, is considered to be where mourning ceases to be a ‘normal’ response and instead becomes pathological.
Abraham and Torok’s so-called ‘normal’ mourning can be accused of interiorising the other person to such a degree that they have become assimilated and even metaphorically cannibalised. Derrida considers this introjection to be an infidelity to the other.
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