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Derrida & Deconstruction: Key Points |
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1 |
I think Deconstruction is best understood as
a textual strategy. Considering how to translate the term, Jacques
Derrida notes that "it is to ... use value that I am now going to
try to give some precision and not some primitive meaning or etymology
sheltered from or outside of any contextual strategy" ("Letter to a
Japanese Friend," emphasis mine). |
2 |
Although I'm hardly a Derridean, his work
intrigues me because of how it can account for the resilience of
literary and other texts--their ability to adapt to new readers and
contexts. As someone who did undergraduate work in creative writing, I
also appreciate the way his writing refuses to accept a distinction
between "literature" and "criticism." |
3 |
Although Derrida is specific that
deconstruction is not reducible to a method, at least in literary studies,
critics influenced by Derrida's work tend to focus on recurring
concerns: |
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- Exploring (and excavating) specific tensions and instabilities
within a text (including social and cultural "texts"). Deconstruction is
not something critics do to a text, but a way of highlighting things
that texts do to themselves and each other.
- Questioning the priority of things which are set up as original,
natural, and/or self-evident.
- Charting how key terms, motifs, and characters are defined by binary
oppositions within a text, how the oppositions are hierarchical (one
term is prioritized and the other treated as derivative or subordinate),
and demonstrating that these oppositions are unstable, reversible, and
mutually dependent on one another. (The verb "deconstruct" most often
refers to this kind of reading, as in "Frank Miller's work deconstructs
the opposition between hero and villain by treating Batman as a specific
type of villain --a vigilante.")
- Attending to how texts subvert, exceed, or even overturn their
author's stated purposes.
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4 |
In current literary studies, deconstructive
readings are usually part of a larger interpretive strategy (feminist, new
historicist, queer theory, etc.), and often put in the service of
destabilizing hierarchical oppositions (between male and female, elite and
popular culture, straight and gay, etc.). |
6 |
Deconstruction is not the centerpiece
of Derrida's work, and he has been somewhat dismayed by attempts to
formalize it into a system, movement, or school. (For example, nobody I've
ever met "in the know" refers to "deconstructionism.") Furthermore, he is
a living, evolving thinker, whose work does not end with those texts which
literary critics most often read (Of Grammatology, Dissemination,
and a couple of others). Making blanket statements about his thought or
influence is not something I'm willing to venture. |
7 |
I think it's a mistake to treat
deconstruction as synonymous with post-structuralism (and, while, I'm
drawing distinctions, to conflate post-structuralism with Postmodernism).
Post-Structuralism is a philosophical development which Derrida's work is
associated with, and deconstruction is a term within his work |
8 |
In the past, many debates about
Derrida have been intense, but also juvenile, with detractors not
bothering to read Derrida's (admittedly difficult and time-consuming)
work, and those influenced by Derrida (admittedly, often impatient with
responding to the same tired objections) snootily dismissing questions as
cloddishly naive. |
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