释义 |
deconˈstruct, v. [Back-formation f. deconstruction b.] trans. a. To undo the construction of, to take to pieces. b. Philos. and Lit. Theory. To subject to deconstruction; to analyse and reinterpret in accordance with the ‘strategy’ associated with Jacques Derrida.
1973D. B. Allison tr. Derrida's Speech & Phenomena vi. 77 One cannot attempt to deconstruct this transcendence. 1976G. C. Spivak in J. Derrida Of Grammatology 322, Ricoeur delivers hermeneutic interpretations of several texts that Derrida deconstructs. 1977Dædalus II. 108 This second perspective deconstructs the first; it seems to bring about a reversal, explaining meaning not by prior conventions but by acts of imposition. 1979PN Rev. X. 38/1 Derrida sets out to uncover (or ‘deconstruct’) the manifold traps and illusions which philosophy has created for itself. 1980Times Lit. Suppl. 26 Dec. 1466/4 One ‘deconstructs’ the confused, erroneous picture of knowledge as representation, philosophy as foundational, the mind as a separate locus. 1984A. Brookner Hotel du Lac v. 76 If I were younger and more trendy I should probably say that I could deconstruct the signifiers of your discourse. |