The Many Faces of Babel: Derrida on Identity and Dissemination
The Tower of Babel. AI image What Is Babel? The Tower of Babel is one of the best-known stories in the Hebrew Bible. It is commonly understood as an explanation for why humanity speaks many languages. According to Genesis, people once shared a single tongue and sought to build a city with a tower reaching toward heaven. God interrupted their project by confusing their speech and scattering them across the earth. Jacques Derrida begins somewhere unexpected. Before asking what Babel means, he asks a simpler question: What is Babel? His answer immediately unsettles the reader. "Babel: today we take it as a proper name. Indeed, but the proper name of what and of whom?" (Derrida, 1985, p. 223). At first, the question seems almost unnecessary. Surely Babel is the name of a tower. Yet as Derrida follows the biblical narrative, that certainty begins to dissolve. Is Babel the tower? Or the city? Does the name designate a place, an event, or the confusion of languages itself? T...