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Hello Oceanflynn! Welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you foryour contributions. If you decide that you need help, check out Getting Help below, ask me on my talk page, or place {{helpme}} on your talk page and someone will show up shortly to answer your questions. Please remember to sign your name on talk pages by clicking or using four tildes (~~~~); this will automatically produce your name and the date. Finally, please do your best to always fill in the edit summary field. Below are some useful links to facilitate your involvement. Happy Editing! Cheers, :) Dlohcierekim 03:35, 1 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
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How I learned to be more careful with referencing on wikipedia. One of my first articles posted in wikipedia was Memory Work:

'The very condition of a deconstruction may be at work in the work, within the system to be deconstructed. It may already be located there, already at work. Not at the center, but in an eccentric center, in a corner whose eccentricity assures the solid concentration of the system, participating in the construction of what it, at the same time, threatens to deconstruct. One might then be inclined to reach this conclusion: deconstruction is not an operation that supervenes afterwards, from the outside, one fine day. It is always already at work in the work. Since the destructive force of Deconstruction is always already contained within the very architecture of the work, all one would finally have to do to be able to deconstruct, given this always already, is to do memory work. Yet since I want neither to accept nor to reject a conclusion formulated in precisely these terms, let us leave this question suspended for the moment.' JACQUES DERRIDA MEMOIRES FOR PAUL DEMAN COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1986

As point of departure Gabriel examined Edgar Reitz's eleven-part West German television series entitled Heimat. Reitz' work was in response to a larger movement in Germany national memory work provoked in part by an American television series entitled the Holocaust followed viewed by millions. In her article entitled Barbara Gabriel (2004) provides a model for reading the complexities of memory and forgetting by situating unheimlich within the heimlich, in a Freudian 'one within the other structure'. She develops the concept of an impulse towards national memory work in Germany that stemmed from a haunted subject yearning for a lost, far away, nostalgic place, a utopic homeland. "How do we confront that which we have excluded in order to be, whether it is the return of the repressed or the return of the strangers?" (Kristeva 1982). In other words, that which we fear as 'other' is within ourselves through our shared humanity. Repressed memories haunt all of us. References:

Derrida, Jacques. (1986) Memoires for Paul de Man, Columbia University Press.

Gabriel, Barbara. 2004. "The Unbearable Strangeness of Being; Edgar Reitz's Heimat and the Ethics of the Unheimlich" in Postmodernism and the Ethical Subject, edited by B. Gabriel and S. Ilcan. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press.

I used 'quote' with the reference but using Duplication Detector it showed as a copy of a text on Derrida_(Film) (2002) [1].

Now I know I should have used a quote box or "" no 'quote' then (Derrida, 1989 & 73) or at least, [2][3]

After this notification I learned a lot about using reference and quotation templates, etc:

"The very condition of a deconstruction may be at work in the work, within the system to be deconstructed. It may already be located there, already at work. Not at the center, but in an eccentric center, in a corner whose eccentricity assures the solid concentration of the system, participating in the construction of what it, at the same time, threatens to deconstruct. One might then be inclined to reach this conclusion: deconstruction is not an operation that supervenes afterwards, from the outside, one fine day. It is always already at work in the work. Since the destructive force of Deconstruction is always already contained within the very architecture of the work, all one would finally have to do to be able to deconstruct, given this always already, is to do memory work. Yet since I want neither to accept nor to reject a conclusion formulated in precisely these terms, let us leave this question suspended for the moment."(Derrida, 1986 & 71)[3][1]

oceanflynn 20:50, 1 August 2013 (UTC)

Hello, and welcome to Wikipedia. We appreciate your contributions to the Memory workarticle, but for legal reasons, we cannot accept copyrighted text or images borrowed from other web sites or printed material, and as a consequence, your addition will most likely be deleted.

Feel free to re-submit a new version of the article. You may use external websites as a source of information, but not as a source of sentences. This part is crucial: say it in your own words.

If the external website belongs to you, and you want to allow Wikipedia to use the text — which means allowing other people to modify it — then you must include on the external site the statement "I, (name), am the author of this article, (article name), and I irrevocably release its content under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 and later, for use on Wikipedia and elsewhere."

You might want to look at Wikipedia's policies and guidelines for more details, or ask a question here. You can also leave a message on my talk page. Cheers, :) Dlohcierekim 03:40, 1 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

  1. ^ a b Derrida. January 2002. {{cite AV media}}: Unknown parameter |director1= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |director2= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |distributor= ignored (|publisher= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |studio= ignored (help)The paragraph, is a frequently-cited quote by Derrida from his 1986 book Memories:for Paul de Man. It was used in a voice over in one of its scenes in Derrida the film and was quoted on site about the film. Cite error: The named reference "Derridathemovie2002" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ Jacques Derrida (1989). Memories:for Paul de Man. Translated by Jonathan Culler. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  3. ^ a b Jacques Derrida (1986). Memories:for Paul de Man. Translated by Jonathan Culler; Jonathan Culler; Eduardo Cadava. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 153. {{cite book}}: More than one of |translator1= and |translator= specified (help) Cite error: The named reference "Derrida1986" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).