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Against Deconstruction

John Martin Ellis

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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Allgemeine und Vergleichende Literaturwissenschaft

Beschreibung

"The focus of any genuinely new piece of criticism or interpretation must be on the creative act of finding the new, but deconstruction puts the matter the other way around: its emphasis is on debunking the old. But aside from the fact that this program is inherently uninteresting, it is, in fact, not at all clear that it is possible. . . . [T]he naïvetê of the crowd is deconstruction's very starting point, and its subsequent move is as much an emotional as an intellectual leap to a position that feels different as much in the one way as the other. . . ." --From the book

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Schlagwörter

Superiority (short story), Edmund Husserl, Criticism, Seriousness, Metaphorical language, Skepticism, Obscurantism, Semiotics, Ambiguity, Philosophical Investigations, Uniqueness, Antipathy, Theory, Vagueness, Wishful thinking, Terminology, Writing system, Essay, Antithesis, Exposition (narrative), Term logic, Reality, Solipsism, Language game, Good faith, Concept, Of Grammatology, Philosophy of language, Theory of Forms, Speech and Phenomena, Jargon, J. Hillis Miller, Prejudice, Jacques Derrida, Literary criticism, Literary theory, Geoffrey Hartman, Linguistic system, Rationalism, Fallacy, Writing, Opportunism, Logocentrism, Truth, Falsity, Critique, Deconstruction, The Death of the Author, Reader-response criticism, Ethnocentrism, Hostility, Sophistication, Ambivalence, Arbitrariness, Foolishness, Phraseology, Cognate, Ostensive definition, Thought, Originality, Eclecticism, Presupposition, Counterargument, Form of life (philosophy), Objectivity (philosophy), Zeno's paradoxes, Suggestion, Explanation, Intonation (linguistics), Irony