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Post-Structuralism: Deconstruction

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Post-Structuralism: Deconstruction Theory and Practice Outline -- Q & A -- Jacque Derrida: 1. Prologue: Instability of Meaning 2. Writing as Diff rance 3. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Post-Structuralism: Deconstruction


1
Post-Structuralism Deconstruction
  • Theory and Practice

2
Outline
  • -- Q A
  • -- Jacque Derrida
  • 1. Prologue Instability of Meaning
  • 2. Writing as Différance
  • 3. Transcendental Signified and Binarism
  • 4. Deconstruction Literary Practice
  • 5. Derrida in Context structuralism, Foucault,
    etc.

Assignments
3
Q A
  • What is Différance? What is Transcendental
    Signified?
  • How is Western Metaphysics challenged?
  • How do we do deconstruction in literary
    criticism? Is deconstruction similar to
    destruction?

4
Q A
  • Is deconstruction similar to destruction?
  • Literary Deconstruction
  • --show the hidden gaps in a texts meaning.
    Textual unity
  • -- Reverse the hierarchical binaries, and allow
    the latter to supplement the formers.
  • -- de-stabilize, de-center, but not destroy.

5
Which of the following statements are not
ambiguous?
  • I am 40 years old.
  • The Republic of China was born on Oct. 10, 1911.
  • I love you till the end of the world.
  • ??????????
  • ??????????
  • ????????????????
  • The experience of the earthquake yesterday was
    quite uncanny.

6
Which of the following statements are not
ambiguous?
  • I am 40 years old. ? Who is this I?
  • The Republic of China was born on Oct. 10, 1911.
    ? born?
  • I love you till the end of the world (Apocalypse
    Now?????)
  • ? love?
  • ??????????? insecticide? Vegi with blue cheese?
  • ??????????? ????

7
Language/Literature as an enclosed system with
two Axes
Paradigmatic/Selection
  • Syntagmatic/Combination
  • (narrative structure
  • roles actions)
  • metonymy

Thematic structure Motifs, mythemes, metaphors,
etc.
8
Language/Literature as an enclosed system with
two Axes
??????????
Paradigmatic/Selection
  • Syntagmatic/Combination

more stereotypical descriptions, or a fathers
advice to his son, etc.
-??????Chinaman -????/??/????/???????
9
Why is language ambiguous?
  • Why are meanings undecidable slippery?
  • 1. Polysemy Traces of other signs, other
    meanings. (e.g. national birthday ???? the
    uncanny)
  • 2. Multiple Context Reference Undecidable.
    (e.g. The end of the world )
  • 3. Meaning is not present in language it
    happens in between signifiers. (e.g. ?????)
  • 4. (intention and the unconscious)

10
??????
Male poet and Waiting woman.
  • ??? ???
  • ???,???????
  • ???????,??????
  • ??????,???????
  • ???????,??????
  • ??????????,?????????????,???????????????????????
    ,??????????
  • (http//203.198.70.29/subject/chlt/tangci.htm ?

11
??????(random samples from Internet?
  • ?????? ??????. ????? 0359
  • ???????????????, NAPSTER??????, ???.
  • ???,????,??????????,???????,???????? (source)

Traces of other usages
12
Freuds the Uncanny
  • unheimlich, both homely and unhomely or
    both familiar and strange.
  • According to Freud's description, the uncanny
    "derives its terror not from something externally
    alien or unknown but--on the contrary--from
    something strangely familiar which defeats our
    efforts to separate ourselves from it" (Morris
    source).
  • e.g. the Gothic tradition, nightmare, castration
    fear.

13
Spacing--
  • Movement from one Signifier to another
  • ????? by ????
  • -- polysemy cultural connotations of ?????,
    ????etc.
  • -- spacing Meaning changed when the context is
    further revealed.
  • Comic effects old traces vs. newly defined
    meanings.
  • The traces of the old meanings are both present
    and absent.

14
Writing and Différance
  • Language a system of difference ? of Différance.
  • While structualists had treated binary
    oppositions as stable terms in a formal
    structure, Derrida sees them as organized in
    unstable disequilibrium. ? because of the
    presence/absence of traces
  • Derrida sees the signifieds also in a relation
    of difference, and they are turned into
    signifiers? floating signifiers.

(Textbook p. 123 28)
15
Writing and Différance (2)
  • Différance
  • To differ
  • A sign is defined by its binary opposition to
    another sign.
  • 2. To defer.
  • The signifier (black) that is distinguished from
    the other one (white) is not completely erased
    it is only deferred, bracketed or merely put
    under erasure. It can subvert the fixed meaning
    of the sign.

16
Writing and Différance
  • The chain of signification
  • (1) symbolization or mythologizing

Signifier 1 (rose) Signified 1 (flower)
Signified 2 (love) Signified2(roselove)
Signified 3 (rosewoman in love) Signified 4 (rose weak, vain dependent woman in love)
17
Writing and Différance chain of signification (1)
  • Signifier Signified 2
    Signified 3

Asian People
Yellow
Exotic (Evil or Weak)
Other Racial Features What they did
Other Skin colors
Innocent, Strong and Civilized
White
White Americans
The other Americans
18
Writing and Différance Chain of Signification (2)
Re-contextualization traces kept. e.g. 1.
Pharmakon 1). poison,
2). Pharmacy 2. lt?????gt?????? 3. Creole
Madame Butterfly in M. Butterfly and in the
characters of Song first and then Gallimard the
other parodies.
19
Chain of Signification 3 floating Signifier
  • (??????????????????????????????????????????????
    ????
  • ? ?/???/?
  • ???? signs both present and absent, empty and
    variously defined.

20
Question
  • Do you agree that meaning is always uncertain and
    slippery? What does Derridas views of language
    shed light on our communication?

21
The Transcendental Signified and Binaries
  • The unmoved mover e.g.
  • God (transcendental signified)
  • The Bible (transcendental signifier)
  • (Textbook p. 124) source/closure of meaning and
    center of existence. e.g. being, unity, truth,
    the good, reason, progress, identity, continuity,
    meaning, subjectivity, authenticity, etc.
    foundations

22
The Transcendental Signified and Binaries
  • They are the upper terms in hierarchical
    binaries e.g.

Man Light Reason Culture The Public West, etc.
Woman Dark-ness Emotion Nature The Private East, etc.
23
Critique of Metaphysics logocentrism,
phallogocentrism
  • Traditional binaries are hierarchical. Should
    be reversed or questioned.
  • Logocentrism Logo as center, source, or founding
    presence of knowledge and human beings.
  • Phallogocentrism Man/Woman sun/moon,
    reason/emotion, Subject/Object, etc.

24
Ways of Questioning the Hierarchical Binaries
  • The two terms are actually mutually determinant.
    e.g. The West has to define itself by
    having/rejecting an Other which is different.
  • 2. The weak term is not really weak.
  • 3. Mutually implicated One term implies its
    opposite term. examples

25
Deconstruction practices
(textbook p. 131)
  • 1. Open texts ? A text that deconstructs its own
    unity or author. (examples also M. Butterfly,
    its ending)
  • 2. Reverse the texts binaries or expose its
    undecidability or multiple meanings (example M.
    Butterfly ? Madame Butterfly another)
  • 3. Study the process of signification of a sign
    or a text and find out what it tries to erase.
    (e.g. Scarlet Letter Barthesian studies of
    commercials)

26
Deconstruction practices (2)
  • 4. Find where the text differs from itself.
    (critical difference)? ambiguity and
    undecidability (example)
  • 5. Radical contextualization ? to find out its
    intertextual references and thus undecidability
    of meanings.

27
lt?????????gt
  • Reasons for the Disappearance of the river
  • -- My departure ?growth
  • -- The cartographer ?urban development
  • -- The river itself ? Nature is betrayed and
    then changes itself
  • -- Nobodys fault.
  • -- ???/????-- Why?

28
lt?????????gt
  • The original hierarchy subverted by the last line

River-Childhood-personified River- Mapped unchanged I?
My growth I Human error Urban development Childhoods memory?
wrong
29
Deconstruction of Binary Opposition Example
  • The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Society vs.
    Nature, with Huck in between

Nature (River) Jim HThen Ill go to hell. "light out for the Territory"
Society (towns) H doubt and practical jokes "born again" as Tom use Ts intricate plan to rescue Jim
30
Undecidability example 1
Billy Budd Billy Budd (a young sailor), Claggart
(master-at-arms), Vere (the captain).
  1. Billy Budd innocent) vs. Claggart (evil)
  • B. Claggart accuses B of planning mutiny. ? Bs
    blow
  • B killer vs.
  • C victim

Vere responsible and just ?
Allows an innocent man to be hanged.
31
Undecidability example 2
  • A slumber did my spirit seal
  • I had no human fears
  • She seemed a thing that could not feel
  • The touch of earthly years.
  •  ltGapgt
  • No motion has she now, no force
  • She neither hears nor sees
  • Rolled round in earth's diurnal course,
  • With rocks, and stones, and trees.
  • (William Wordsworth )

32
Undecidability example 2
A slumber did my spirit seal -- Contradictions
between
  • present
  • death
  • the cosmic
  • peacefulness and regularity
  • past
  • life
  • the human
  • fear

Gap What happened in between the present and
the past? Whose peacefulness is it? Whose
death and when?
33
Derridian Deconstruction in Context
  • 1. Anti-Foundationalist de-centering
  • 2. Like New Critics, deconstructionists read
    closely to find out the contradictions and gaps
    in a text, but without reconstructing them back
    to a unity.
  • 3. Like Foucault, D thinks that we are in
    language and are conditioned by its structure,
    polysemy and fluidity.

34
Derridian Deconstruction in Context (2)
  • 4. Other usages of différance desired object
    in unattainable, constantly deferred and
    replaced colonial mimicry disseminate/de-center
    colonial authority.
  • 5. différance and temporary closure.

35
Assignments
  • "The Blind Man"
  • 2. Review The Purloined Letter
  • 3. Review the whole unit and bring with you at
    least one question.
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