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Why the Author Cannot Explain a Work

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Why the Author Cannot Explain a Work

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  1. “'What’s the difference?’ did not ask for difference but meant instead ‘I don’t give damn what the difference is.’ The same grammatical pattern engenders two different meanings that are mutually exclusive: the literal meaning asks for the concept difference whose existence is denied by the figurative meaning. . . . [G]rammar allows us to ask the question, but the sentence by means of which we ask it may deny the very possibility of asking. For what is the use of asking, I ask, when we cannot even authoritatively decide whether a question asks or doesn’t ask? . . . The point is as follows. A perfectly clear syntactical paradigm (the question) engenders a sentence that has at least two meanings, one which asserts and the other which denies its own illocutionary mode. It is not so that there are simply two meanings, one literal and the other figural, and that we have to decide which one of these meanings is the right one in this particular situation. The confusion can only be cleared up by the intervention of an extra-textual intervention, such as Archie Bunker putting his wife straight; but the very anger he displays is indicative of more than impatience; it reveals his despair when confronted with a structure of linguistic meaning that he cannot control and that holds the discouraging prospect of an infinity of similar future confusions.“ Paul de Man “Semiology and Rhetoric” (1973)

  2. Why the Author Cannot Explain a Work • Questions about who actually wrote a work: Shakespeare’s plays, for example • Intentions: Did an author want to make a point or merely provide sell a text for hire? • Does the author lie? • Has the author gone insane? • Has the author changed his or her mind?

  3. Aporia Rather than tear down prevailing views in order to replace it with new and improved versions, deconstruction expands observation into interstitial places. These methods replace simple binary oppositions with complex discussion of issues. For example, people can consider problems of a capitalist economy without having to decide that communism must be better. Obviously, the reverse holds true, as well.

  4. Step 1: Identify a Binary Opposition 1.A> Notice what a particular text or school of thought takes to be natural, normal, self-evident, originary, immediately apparent, or worthy of pursuit or emulation: • group x (whites, middle class, Americans, etc.) is “inherently virtuous” • group x (darker skinned people, youths, etc.) is “natural and spontaneous” • men are naturally x (rational, aggressive, desirous of women, etc.) • women are naturally x (nurturing, connected to the earth, etc.) • “everybody knows that” x is true • everybody wants x, it is natural to want x, x is an inherent trait of human nature

  5. Step 1 continued: Identify a Binary Opposition 1.B> Notice those places where a text is most insistent that there is a firm and fast distinction between two things: • men and women, black and white, straight and gay, subject and object • x precedes y (text: interpretation, Adam: Eve, heterosexuality: homosexuality) • x is more natural than y (female: male, heterosexuality: homosexuality) • y is derivative of x or a perversion of x (Milton’s Satan: Christ, “normal” sex: fetishes, criticism: fiction) • y has a parasitic relation to x (fiction: truth, criticism: fiction, interpretation: text) • x is original and y is imitative (the book: the movie, life: heaven) • y is a manifestation or effect of x (culture: economics, surface: deep structure, gender: anatomy, practice: theory). • y is an exception or special case and x is the rule

  6. Step 2: Deconstruct The Opposition 2.A > Show how something represented as primary, complete & originary is derived, composite, and/or an effect of something else. • Because writers always write in relation to prior writers they learn about in school, fiction is a result of criticism. It depends on criticism, and is derived from criticism. • Our sense of Winnie the Pooh when we read books about him is shaped by our memories of the movies. The voices we hear when we read are the movie voices, and the “original” text is partially an effect of the movie. • Because consciousness is actually “self-consciousness,” (i.e. a self and a consciousness) consciousness is always already divided, never simply present to itself.

  7. Step 2 continued: Deconstruct The Opposition and/or 2.B> Show how something represented as completely different from something else only exists by virtue of defining itself against that something else. In other words, show how it depends on that thing. For example: • Mulder and Scully do not so much pursue “the Truth” as uncover errors. If they ever find the whole truth, the show will end. • Heterosexual only makes sense when opposed to homosexual. Without homosexuals, there would be no heterosexuals. • Truth depends on error. Without the concept of error, truth does not exist.

  8. Step 2 continued: Deconstruct The Opposition and/or 2.C> Show how something represented as normal is a special case. • “Truth” is a story that people find especially convincing. • “Normal” sexual reproduction is the result of several components that, taken alone, would be called perversions. Thus normal sex is in fact a specialized perversion. • Whiteness is an ethnicity that disguises the fact it’s an ethnicity.

  9. The General Way It Works In general, as Jonathan Culler puts it, deconstruction works “within an opposition,” but “upsets [its] hierarchy by producing an exchange of properties.” This disrupts not only the hierarchy, but the opposition itself. Note how this is different than simply reversing an opposition. For example consider these reversals of a culturally prevalent opposition: • The Pooh movies are better than the books (reverses the usual assumption that the book is better & more original than the movie). • The Joker is cooler than Batman (reverses notion of the hero). • Women are smarter than men (reverses chauvinistic “common knowledge”). • Native Americans are more heroic than cowboys (reverses the Western).

  10. Reversal is a valuable move, but deconstruction is after bigger game, because it “deconstructs” the underlying hierarchy. For example: • Our sense of Pooh books is derived from the movies, • Batman is a special kind of villain called a vigilante • Men’s sense of their intelligence is dependent on a belief that women are bimbos • “Cowboy heroism” cannot exist without “bad Indians.” Notice how these statements cripple the underlying hierarchy by “deconstructing” the opposition that it depends on. Deconstruction doesn’t simply reverse the opposition, nor does it destroy it. Instead it demonstrates its inherent instability. It takes it apart from within, and without putting some new, more stable opposition in its place. If you want to really mess with something, deconstruct it.

  11. A Note On Practicalities In Stanley’s Fish’s words, we can deconstruct anything in theory, but not in everyday practice. The fact that in principle we can deconstruct anything doesn’t mean that we can deconstruct everything, all the time, and still communicate. We can, however, deconstruct things that annoy us, point out where a text already deconstructs an opposition, focus on oppositions authors and poets try (often with difficulty) to keep intact, and gain insight into how our own sense of ourselves (as well as the way the culture tries to interpret us) depends on oppositions that can be deconstructed. Stanley Fish Professor of Law Florida International University Text by Warren Hedges, Southern Oregon University, 1997

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