Post-Structuralism (Deconstruction)
Prof. Anil Awad
Simplified - Lecture Notes
As we have seen in the previous topic on Structuralism… ‘Things cannot 
be understood in isolation…they should be understood as the part of the 
larger structure they belong’…and also seen the examples…if we want to 
understand what is chair, we must know what is table, sofa-set, bed, 
show-case etc. It means simply that the meaning is ‘relational’…one 
object’s meaning is dependent upon the others. But have you noticed that
 the meaning is jumping from one object to another…from 
Chair>Table>Bed>Sofa>Show-case>Furniture and many more? 
Yes…it is transferring to other objects. If you want to understand 
Chair…you must know Table. Chair is chair because it is not table. Black
 is black because it is not white, green or orange. So the meaning is 
transferring, jumping, passing to the other objects. It’s a kind of 
‘binary opposition’…one is one because it is not two. Till it is oky. 
But here the post-structuralist tries to find out the fault…and it leads
 to the theory of ‘Deconstruction’. How? Let’s see.
As per ‘the 
theory of relativity’ by Einstein…the whole universe is moving. The 
Earth moving around sun, the sun moving with galaxies, million galaxies 
are moving and so the universe. What we understand about ‘time’ and 
‘space’ is ‘relative’. Time – we count it with seconds, minutes, hours, 
days, weeks, months, years, and ages and so on…but it is in relation. 
Space – from millimeter to light years…again in relation. Why in 
relation…because not a single thing in the universe is stable…everything
 is in motion…moving and moving and moving. There is no ‘fixed pole’ in 
the universe to measure the development…only to count in relation. The 
same thing is with structuralism - the meaning is jumping and jumping 
and jumping. There is no fixed pole to determine the true meaning of the
 objects. Chair is chair because we understand it is not Table, Table is
 table because it is not bed etc etc. This is how we are watching the 
things. It makes a kind of structure in our mind. But if we start to 
analyze minutely…this structure start to vanish…because we have no fixed
 pole that tells us the true meaning. We always have to depend on 
something else. Now move to language…Sign (word) and Signifier (sound) 
and the object (Signified) are not the same. The word ‘tree’ (t, r, e, 
e) doesn’t mean the same…we have associated the meaning externally. In 
different languages the ‘tree’ is called with different pronunciations 
(‘Ped’ in Hindi, ‘Zad’ in Marathi and many more). Pronunciations or 
utterances or say signifiers do not represents the objects 
(signified)…So no fixed pole to determine the meaning…and here the 
genuine problem begins. The meaning is started to soar or say float 
aimlessly…and pointing it or fixing it in a particular structure becomes
 impossible. It is called post-structuralism. Post-structuralism is a 
theory while deconstruction is practice. When you start to find of the 
relation between Sign, Signifier and Signified…it is not one-to-one…and 
still we try our best to fix everything in a structure…without a stable 
centre or say fixed pole. The result is inevitable – D E C O N S T R U C
 T I ON…!
Now see the example (or mis-example) of Deconstruction. 
Take the famous quots… ‘My luv is like a red red rose, that has sprung 
in June’. A structuralist finds it as a love poem and starts to 
structuralize it. But post-structuralist deconstructs the poem. How?
My luv is like a red red rose
Take any word/phrase/idea from it. Ok.. we take ‘rose’. Rose is a 
flower…so the sunflower, lily, lotus, and many more. Flower plants are 
different in their structure than the other plants. What are other 
plants…description starts..???????? Ok. It is red rose. There may be 
yellow, white, blue and lavender colored roses. Now colour and their 
description starts…???????? Then the word ‘red’ is used two times. Why? 
Poetic device…reinforcement of the objects…what are the other poetic 
devices…description starts…?????? So it is a poem…love poem. There are 
also other genres like novel, drama etc. description starts. Love 
poem….poem of war/person/incident….description starts. Now the 
grammatical structure of the line….description starts…??????? Now move 
to pronunciation…sign, signifier and signified…it is different in 
different languages…in Hindi gualb, roza in tamil…description 
starts…???? Again the word, its meaning and etymology (origini)…????
How can you analyze a poem? How can you structuralize the poem? The 
meaning is jumping and jumping and jumping and there is no fixed center 
or pole to determine the development. Its just like Nuclear Chain 
Reaction. So reading the poem becomes a chaos…it has been deconstructed.
 It is a kind of ‘reading the text against itself’. You lose the charm 
of the poem. There is none on the earth who has read a single piece of 
literature by using deconstruction method. Keep in mind…although 
deconstruction is a practice it has philosophical base too – in the 
writing of Foucault, Derrida, Barthes and many more post-structuralists.
 
ANALYZING POST-STRUCTURALISM 
(DECONSTRUCTION)
(DECONSTRUCTION)
Now read the following analysis...and clear your idead about the post-structuralism (DECONSTRUCTION)
What are the characteristics of post-structuralism as a critical method?
The post-structuralist is engaged in the task of “deconstructing” the 
text or a particular/accepted reading of the text. This process is given
 the name deconstruction, which can be roughly defined as applied 
post-structuralism or post-structuralism as a method of reading and 
analysis. It is often referred to as “reading against the grain” or 
“reading the text against itself” (Eagleton). Another way of describing 
this would be to say that deconstructive reading uncovers the 
unconscious rather than the conscious dimensions of the text, all of the
 things that an ordinary reading of it glosses over or fails to 
recognize.  According to Jacques Derrida, a deconstructive reading:
“must always aim at a certain relationship, unperceived by the writer 
[or readers], between what he commands and what he does not command of 
the patterns of language that he uses . . . [It] attempts to make the 
not-seen accessible to sight.” (Of Grammatology 158, 163)
So 
deconstruction practices what has been called oppositional reading, 
reading the text with the aim of unmasking internal contradictions or 
inconsistencies in the text, aiming to show the disunity which underlies
 its apparent unity. Notice that the aim of New Criticism by contrast 
had been precisely the opposite of this, to show the unity of the work 
beneath apparent disunity. Deconstruction aims to show the disunity of 
any text. This disunity is a product of language itself.
What Post-Structuralist Critics “Do”: 
They read the text against itself so as to expose what might be thought
 of as the textual subconscious, where meanings are expressed which may 
be directly contrary to the surface meaning.
They fix upon the 
surface features of words--similarities in sound, the root meanings of 
words, a dead or dying metaphor and bring these to the foreground, so 
that they become crucial to the overall meaning or even disrupt the 
overall meaning.
They seek to show that the text is characterized by disunity rather than unity.
They concentrate on a single passage and analyze it so intensively that
 it becomes impossible to sustain a “univocal” reading and the language 
explodes into “multiplicities of meaning.”
They look for shifts 
and breaks of various kinds in the text and see these as evidence of 
what is repressed or glossed over or passed over in silence by the text 
and bring these to the surface, analyzing how their “presence” affects 
the overall meaning of the work.
Another way to think about 
post-structuralist analysis is to focus on the following stages or 
processes. Please keep in mind that these are not necessarily separate 
but often can be interrelated:
The verbal stage is similar to 
that of more conventional forms of New Critical close reading that we 
studied earlier in the course. It involves looking in the text for 
paradoxes and contradictions at what might be called the purely verbal 
level. For example, the repressed unconsciousness within language is 
evident in a word like “guest” and it’s cognate (that is, it has the 
same original root as) the word “host.”  However, “host” comes from the 
original Latin word hostis, meaning an enemy. Think even further about 
the meaning of the word hos/tility or the relationship between a 
parasite and a host and you begin to see that even words where the 
meaning seems clear and “obvious” are filled with complications. This 
hints at the repressed double aspect of these words that a good critical
 reader can bring to our attention, complicating the meaning of the 
work.  In addition to looking at the etymology of specific words, you 
can look at the interrelationship between words, how they create 
contradictions or inconsistencies that cannot be resolved. To do this 
kind of analysis, all you really need to start is a copy of the work, a 
good dictionary, and the dedication to be a close, observant reader.
The textual stage focuses on the relationship between common binary 
oppositions in the work like male/female, day/night, light/dark, 
good/evil, nature/society, etc, in which one term seems to be 
"privileged" or more highly valued over the other. A post-structuralist 
reading might try to look closely at this hierarchy in order to show how
 it is not sustained throughout the work, or how the two terms are not 
oppositional at all but interrelated and interdependent.
The 
linguistic stage involves looking for moments when the adequacy of 
language itself as a medium of communication is called into question. 
Such moments occur when there is implicit or explicit reference to the 
unreliability or untrustworthiness of language, juxtapositions of speech
 and silence, or an awareness of the limitations of language. In other 
words, moments in the narrative where we are made consciously aware of 
the problems involved in using language to create meaning.
KEY TERMS
1. Deconstruction
Deconstruction is a strategy of critical questioning directed towards 
exposing unquestionable metaphysical assumptions and internal 
contradictions in philosophical and literary language. Deconstruction 
often involves a way of reading that concerns itself with 
decentering—with unmasking the problematic nature of all centers. 
Further deconstruction is a form of textual practice derived from 
Derrida, which aims to demonstrate the inherent insatiability of both 
language and meaning. It rejects the word “analysis” or “interpretation”
 as well as it rejects any assumption of texts.
2. Binary Oppositions
The binary opposition is the structuralist idea that acknowledges the 
human tendency to think in terms of opposition. For Saussure the binary 
opposition was the “means by which the units of language have value or 
meaning; each unit is defined against what it is not.” With this 
categorization, terms and concepts tend to be associated with a positive
 or negative. For example, Reason/Passion, Man/Woman, Inside/Outside, 
Presence/Absence, Speech/Writing, etc. Derrida argued that these 
oppositions were arbitrary and inherently unstable. The structures 
themselves begin to overlap and clash and ultimately these structures of
 the text dismantle themselves from within the text. In this sense 
deconstruction is regarded as a forum of anti-structuralism. 
Deconstruction rejects most of the assumptions of structuralism and more
 vehementaly “binary opposition” on the grounds that such oppositions 
always previlege one term over the other, that is, signified over the 
signifier.
3. Differance
Against the metaphysics of 
presence, deconstruction brings a (non)concept called differance. 
Derrida uses the term “difference” to describe the origin of presence 
and absence. Differance is indefinable, and cannot be explained by the 
“metaphysics of presence.” In French, the verb “deferrer” means both “to
 defer” and “to differ.” Thus, difference may refer not only to the 
state or quality of being deferred, but to the state or quality of being
 different. Differance may be the condition for that which is deferred, 
and may be the condition for that which is different. Differance may be 
the condition for difference.
Derrida explains that difference is
 the condition for the opposition of presence and absence. Differance is
 also the “hinge” between speech and writing, and between inner meaning 
and outer representation. As soon as there is meaning, there is 
difference.
4. Metaphysics of presence/ Logocentricism
According to Derrida, “logocentrism” is the attitude that logos (the 
Greek term for speech, thought, law, or reason) is the central principle
 of language and philosophy. Logocentrism is the view that speech, and 
not writing, is central to language. Thus, “Of Grammatology” (a term 
which Derrida uses to refer to the science of writing) can liberate our 
ideas of writing from being subordinated to our ideas of speech. Of 
Grammatology is a method of investigating the origin of language which 
enables our concepts of writing to become as comprehensive as our 
concepts of speech.
According to logocentrist theory, says 
Derrida, speech is the original signifier of meaning, and the written 
word is derived from the spoken word. The written word is thus a 
representation of the spoken word. Logocentrism maintains that language 
originates as a process of thought which produces speech, and that 
speech then produces writing. Logocentrism is that characteristic of 
texts, theories, modes of representation and signifying systems that 
generates a desire for a direct, unmediated, given hold on meaning, 
being and knowledge.
Derrida argues that logocentrism may be seen
 in the theory that a linguistic sign consists of a signifier which 
derives its meaning from a signified idea or concept. Logocentrism 
asserts the exteriority of the signifier to the signified. Writing is 
conceptualized as exterior to speech, and speech is conceptualized as 
exterior to thought. However, if writing is only a representation of 
speech, then writing is only a ‘signifier of a signifier.’ Thus, 
according to logocentrist theory, writing is merely a derivative form of
 language which draws its meaning from speech. The importance of speech 
as central to the development of language is emphasized by logocentrist 
theory, but the importance of writing is marginalized.
Derrida 
explains that, according to logocentrist theory, speech may be a kind of
 presence, because the speaker is simultaneously present for the 
listener, but writing may be a kind of absence, because the writer is 
not simultaneously present for the reader. Writing may be regarded by 
logocentrist theory as a substitute for the simultaneous presence of 
writer and reader. If the reader and the writer were simultaneously 
present, then the writer would communicate with the reader by speaking 
instead of by writing. Logocentrism thus asserts that writing is a 
substitute for speech and that writing is an attempt to restore the 
presence of speech.
Logocentrism is described by Derrida as a 
“metaphysics of presence,” which is motivated by a desire for a 
“transcendental signified.” A “transcendental signified” is a signified 
which transcends all signifiers, and is a meaning which transcends all 
signs. A “transcendental signified” is also a signified concept or 
thought which transcends any single signifier, but which is implied by 
all determinations of meaning.
Derrida argues that the 
“transcendental signified” may be deconstructed by an examination of the
 assumptions which underlie the “metaphysics of presence.” For example, 
if presence is assumed to be the essence of the signified, then the 
proximity of a signifier to the signified may imply that the signifier 
is able to reflect the presence of the signified. If presence is assumed
 to the essence of the signified, then the remoteness of a signifier 
from the signified may imply that the signifier is unable, or may only 
be barely able, to reflect the presence of the signified. This interplay
 between proximity and remoteness is also an interplay between presence 
and absence, and between interiority and exteriority.
5. Trace
The idea of difference also brings with it the idea of trace. A trace 
is what a sign differs/defers from. It is the absent part of the sign’s 
presence. In other words, We may now define trace as the sign left by 
the absent thing, after it has passed on the scene of its former 
presence. Every present, in order to know itself as present, bears the 
trace of an absent which defines it. It follows then that an originary 
present must bear an originary trace, the present trace of a past which 
never took place, an absolute past. In this way, Derrida believes, he 
achieves a position beyond absolute knowledge. According to Derrida, the
 trace itself does not exist because it is self-effacing. That is, in 
presenting itself, it becomes effaced. Because all signifiers viewed as 
present in Western thought will necessarily contain traces of other 
(absent) signifiers, the signifier can be neither wholly present nor 
wholly absent.
6. Arche-writing
The term ‘arche-writing’ 
is uded by Derrida to describe a form of language which cannot be 
conceptualized within the ‘metaphysics of presence.’ Arche-writing is an
 original form of language which is not derived from speech. 
Arche-writing is a form of language which is unhindered by the 
difference between speech and writing. ‘Arche-writing’ is also a 
condition for the play of difference between written and non-written 
forms of language.
Derrida contrasts the concept of 
“arche-writing” with the “vulgar” concept of writing. The “vulgar” 
concept of writing, which is proposed by the “metaphysics of presence,” 
is deconstructed by the concept of “arche-writing.”
7. Supplement
Derrida takes this term from Rousseau, who saw a supplement as “an 
inessential extra added to something complete in itself.” Derrida argues
 that what is complete in itself cannot be added to, and so a supplement
 can only occur where there is an originary lack. In any binary set of 
terms, the second can be argued to exist in order to fill in an 
originary lack in the first.
Thanks.
Anil S Awad
English Net Consultant
anilawad123@gmail.com
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Sir please simplified phrase structure rule linguistics
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