"For Anglophone readers who view deconstruction as a set of arguments about language and literature or see Derrida's early 1990s exploration of Marxism as weak and belated, Theory and Practice is enlightening."-- "Los Angeles Review of Books"
"Wills's nuanced, word-play-sensitive translation includes foreign terms for those with ears to hear the etymological associations so important to Derrida's arguments and presents a crisp, clear, elegant statement of the author's text. . . . Summing Up: Recommended."-- "CHOICE"
"Jacques Derrida's Theory and Practice, a seminar he taught at the École Normale Supérieure (ENS) over the academic year 1976-1977, has all the signs of being a highly provocative text. . . . Derrida's readings are always enlightening. And in David Wills's excellent translation, we are confronted with rigorous and probing investigations of the theory/practice opposition, which weave together Marx and Althusser with Kant, Heidegger, and Aristotle in surprising ways."--Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews