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deconstruction
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deconstruction

In literary theory, a radical form of structuralism, pioneered by the French philosopher Jacques Derrida, which views text as a ‘decentred’ play of structures, lacking any ultimately determinable meaning.

Through analysis of the internal structure of a text, particularly its contradictions, deconstructionists demonstrate the existence of subtext meanings – often not those that the author intended – and hence illustrate the impossibility of attributing fixed meaning to a work. The French critic Roland Barthes originated deconstruction in his book Mythologies 1957 in which he studied the inherent instability between sign and referent in a range of cultural phenomena, including not only literary works but also advertising, cookery, wrestling, and so on.



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Martina Navratilova says many of the players pass the time by playing Scrabble but I doubt if Miss Williams or Miss Sharapova could come up with big-scoring words like Quixotry or Demythologizing.
Peter Quinn's essay dispelling the myth of Darwin's saintliness needs a bit of demythologizing itself.
The Nazis themselves were susceptible to the unmasking, demythologizing impulse as far as the great Jewish world conspiracy was concerned: "Nazi propagandists convinced themselves and their followers that commonsense explanations for developments were deceptive and illusory.
 
 
 
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