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Deconstructing Deconstructionism
FrontPageMagazine.com ^ | 28 November 2001 | By Robert Locke

Posted on 11/28/2001 4:13:52 AM PST by shrinkermd

ONE OF THE GREAT ASSETS of the academic left is its ability to invent and teach a synthesis, a systematic distillation of leftism into a convenient package. Once mastered, this synthesis can be relied upon to give the adherent a left-wing analysis of anything from Strategic Missile Defense to poetry. Marxism once fulfilled this role for a great many, but for the past 15 years or so, the ascendant school of sophistry has been deconstructionism. So it’s worth getting a grip on how this philosophical con-game works and why it’s false.

Deconstructionism originally came from France in the ‘70s. It is also known as poststructuralism, but don’t ask what structuralism was, as it was no better. It is based on the proposition that the apparently real world is in fact a vast social construct and that the way to knowledge lies in taking apart in one’s mind this thing society has built. Taken to its logical conclusion, it supposes that there is at the end of the day no actual reality, just a series of appearances stitched together by social constructs into what we all agree to call reality. But not agree voluntarily, for society has (this is the leftist bit) an oppressive structure, so we are pressured to agree to that version of reality which pleases the people in charge. (If you specialize in studying this pressure, you are a member of the Michel Foucault school of deconstructionism.)

One of the clearest signs that deconstructionism is a con is that it is invariably expressed in the most complicated possible language, not the clearest, a sure sign that the writer is trying to sound clever rather than convey information. The summary I have just given would take months to extract from the average deconstructionist. The effort required to glean the actual meaning from their spaghetti tangles of run-on sentences, larded with a standard repertoire of tortured constructions and verbal tics, is a kind of hazing ritual required for initiation into the deconstructionist illuminati.

They have a number of these standard verbal tics by which they can be recognized. Gratuitous plurals are one, as in "homosexualities," a favorite term intended to convey the great insight that not all homosexuals are alike. But not even Jerry Falwell thinks this! When I saw the home decorating section of the New York Times Sunday Magazine headlined "domesticities" a few months ago, I knew for sure that some deconstructionist young pup had finally made it to the editorial chair.

The deconstructionist account differs from the Marxist one in that, while Marx believed that what we think is a product of our role in the economic system, deconstructionism prides itself on recognizing that there are lots of other systems besides economics forcing us to think this way and that. But in practice, it is very easy to write deconstructionist analysis that just harps on the economic angle, so much of deconstructionism is just cultural Marxism. Cultural Marxism (what Tom Wolfe calls Rococo Marxism) is to be distinguished from ordinary Marxism, which is about revolutions and socialism and boring things like that. Cultural Marxism is way too cool for that. It is popular with hip young academics who have read Solzhenitsyn, seen the Berlin Wall come down, like shopping at Crate & Barrel, but still want a philosophy that will distance them from bourgeois society and all those tasteless squares. (The sight of Marxists worrying about tastelessness would have reduced Lenin to a fit of giggles, but that’s another issue.) Cultural Marxism enables one to simultaneously sneer at popular culture, satisfying one’s elitist impulses, while taking a populist attitude towards it, because pop culture isn’t the fault of the populace but of the Big Bad Bourgeoisie, or in a more sophisticated formulation, of the system of which the BBB is the leading element. So Marxism tends to be a toy that deconstructionists pick up and put down at will. (If you emphasize the way in which the system has a mind of its own that is bigger than the BBB who run it, you are a member of the Hardt-Negri school, as epitomized by their wildly popular new book Empire.)

You may wonder how left-wing all this is, if these people are busy critiquing our consciousness of reality rather than trying to overthrow the state or achieve equality. In fact, some deconstructionists are apolitical, and serious leftists have been known to complain about this. They accuse the deconstructionists of playing abstract intellectual games while there is revolutionary work to be done. Intelligent leftists like Alan Sokal, a card-carrying Sandalista physicist at New York University, have belligerently attacked deconstructionism because it leads, if taken seriously, to the conclusion that leftism is just another social construct to be deconstructed. It seems leftist to start with, but it eventually devours itself. The deconstructionists ran afoul of him by straying into what can only be described as the literary criticism of physics, an endeavor which ended up making physics as much a rat’s nest of opinion as the most gaseous poetry criticism. He got a parody of deconstructionist analysis, "The Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity," published in a deconstructionist magazine, Social Text, without telling them it was a parody just to prove how stupid this all is.

Deconstructionism is obsessed with finding contradictions in our socially-constructed picture of reality. It takes these contradictions as proving that reality is a social construct, because if our picture were actually true, it wouldn’t contradict. (Marxists say that contradictions in the organization of our economic system produce these contradictions in our thinking and that the process of working out these economic contradictions will eventually work out the intellectual ones.) Deconstructionists who devote themselves to ferreting out how deeply these philosophical wrinkles are embedded in the structures of thought belong to the Jacques Derrida school. Martin Heidegger (a Nazi party member and author of books with titles like What is a Thing?) makes his appearance here as the grandmaster of ferreting out deep metaphysical contradictions in our structures of thought.

All this make you dizzy? It’s supposed to. Deconstructionists believe in something called the decentered subject, which is basically what you get when you treat the human self as just another social construct. Try thinking about yourself this way. See what I mean?

Deconstructionists think that they are the first people in the history of the world to see things correctly. But they aren’t even the first people to see things the way they see them. The Greek sophists that Plato jousted with 2,500 years ago held essentially their views; see Plato’s dialogue Gorgias. Michel Foucault (the bald Frenchman who died of AIDS) thought he was the first person to figure out that social order is maintained not just through "hard" coercion like the police but through an intricate web of "soft" coercions that make us behave through the pressures of conformity and culture. But does any precocious eighth grader not grasp this intuitively?

The central trick, the key sleight-of-hand, that makes deconstructionism plausible enough to fool people into believing it is this: gather up all the attributes of reality that are confusing, uncertain, controversial, or paradoxical, and claim that all of reality is this way. But the existence of gray areas does not refute the existence of black and white. Most of reality is very solid, even if there are margins that are not.

Deconstructionism’s love of social constructionism creates a disdain for nature. Deconstructionists have a notoriously nerdy (this is really what it is, sorry) view of sex because they are obliged to insist that all social differences are social conventions with no basis in nature. I have heard them come dangerously close, when verbally barreling on so fast they don’t have time to stop, to saying that physical sexual differences are a social construct.

Deconstructionism is notorious for lynching philosophical straw men. They love to pounce on other thinkers and say, "Aha! There you have an Enlightenment Assumption," meaning a dubious idea from the eighteenth century. But the Enlightenment was 200 years ago, and I have yet to see any dubious idea thus pilloried that people actually believe today, except for those that are baldly true.

One of the ironies of deconstructionism is that while it is obsessed with the idea of social constructs, it knows very little about actual construction of anything. I cannot help observing that the Empire State Building is manifestly a social construct, in that it was constructed by a society. This does not seem to result in its being any less real. Does it not follow, if the world is a social construct, that what we have constructed, exists?

One of the sad things about deconstructionism as a philosophy is that, to their credit, America’s actual philosophy departments in the universities aren’t very interested in it and tend not to teach it. Deconstructionism is big in English, anthropology, and anything else that studies culture, but not in philosophy itself. (You can verify this in the online course catalogue of your local college.) The reason, of course, is that if one is fully explicit about it as a philosophy, its problems very quickly come to the surface and it looks stupid. You have to expound it bit by bit, never getting down to brass tacks or showing the whole thing at once, for it to seem plausible. Only in the subjective thickets of the English department can it thrive, much as Marxism lives on there after having died in the Economics departments. Someone needs to tell the English departments of America to butt out of other people’s disciplines that they don’t understand.

One of the most comical things one can do with deconstructionism is apply it to itself. For example, one favorite deconstructionist idea is that, to put it bluntly, words have no meaning. (They call this the infinite play of the signifier.) I like to ask them whether they think this applies to tenure contracts, specifically theirs. Or to the writing on their paycheck. If you are in college or know someone who is, try asking this question, or try having it asked, to a professor who believes in this stuff. I am collecting responses to be published in a future article.

It has been said that Deconstructionism is the opiate of an obsolete intellectual class. Non-technical intellectuals, having deliberately rejected their natural role of inculcating our cultural heritage into the next generation, have nothing to do and are frustrated at seeing that all the rewards for intellectual activity in our society flow to the technical intelligentsia and the producers of mass culture. Since they don’t value our heritage as heritage, they have only two sources of satisfaction left: corrupting the young and feeling smarter than everyone else. Deconstructionism is perfect for corrupting the young because it is the ideal way to systematize the general cynicism and disrespect for authority that are the natural condition of contemporary college youth. It raises to the level of a philosophical system the intuition that everything grown-ups do is a fraud. It is the metaphysics of Holden Caulfield. It enables the practitioner to tell himself that he is among the privileged group of insiders who know that the Wizard of Oz is behind the curtain.

This is wonderful stuff to contemplate in a café in Berkeley or Cambridge with a cup of cappuccino in one hand. It suggests a whole philosophy of life, a certain attitude, even a lifestyle. It was once remarked that deconstructionist women all seem to wear no makeup and their hair tightly pulled back to embody the astringent zeal of deconstructionism and its refusal to be taken in by the surface prettiness of culture. I’m not sure this is true, but deconstructionists’ apartments tend to be decorated with a lot of ironically vulgar things, like corny advertisements, suggesting that this object could only be here because, although worthless in its own right, its owner enjoys knowing the secret mechanism that produces it and laughs at the peasants who fall for this stuff naively. It could be my imagination, but I think I perceive the biggest vogue for deconstructionism among people who have moved to the great centers of culture from the to them hopeless heartland and whose desire to be members of the culture club is greatest. The sort of people who actually find it thrilling, rather than oddly without point, to find concepts of nosebleed levels of esotericism littering ordinary comic novels like David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest. It’s a wonder they haven’t perfected a secret handshake.

Deconstructionism is essential to the Left because the proposition that there is no real world is the only remaining way to save the manifold absurdities of liberalism. Forests have been leveled and careers spent in mastering this cult; their investment in it is enormous and they can ill-afford its discrediting. Conservatives must become more philosophic and undertake deliberate acts of intellectual aggression on the abstract plane. We are being attacked there, for heaven’s sake, so it’s time to fight back, particularly since our own philosophic heritage is more than strong enough to beat it. We must constantly reiterate that the intellectually-advanced opposition does not believe in a real world and that they teach this nonsense to impressionable young people. We must deprive them of the intellectual prestige of being sophisticated and of the credibility with this public that this produces. We must deprive liberal academics of their status as privileged arbiters of our culture. This really is a battle we can win if we will but make it an issue.

Note: Click here for an article about the way deconstructionism has attracted the favorable attention of some evangelical Christians for the weak reason that it deconstructs a few modern shibboleths they despise. If this is a trend, it must stop right now. I can imagine no more certain way to guarantee the intellectual suicide of Christianity in this country than to infect it with this nonsense. Under deconstructionist assumptions, Christianity is just another social construct, not the revealed truth. No amount of intellectual squirming can evade this conclusion, which is entailed by the fundamental principles of this philosophy. If sin and salvation are social constructs, God has nothing to do with them. If God is a social construct, there is no reason to worship Him.

Robert Locke resides in New York City. You can e-mail him at lockerobert@hotmail.com. Others of his articles may be found on vdare.com and robertlocke.com.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Philosophy
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To: sonofliberty2
So why then is Marxism considered part of the rational movement?

Got me there, sonofliberty2. Maybe this is just standard doctrine of the so-called Popular Front? And is therefore to be considered false on its face by rational human beings?

But I feel pretty sure you're not falling for that paltry trick. best, bb.

101 posted on 11/28/2001 8:14:20 PM PST by betty boop
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To: beckett
Are you planning to read Empire? I almost feel forced into reading it since it's getting so much press.

My reading schedule is overrun right now. With any (bad?)luck, I may have to read it for class. I did wander across a small collection of essays by Phillip Augustine Lawler called Postmodernism Rightly Understood, which could be very relevant. I'll browse my notes before bedtime and see if anything merits posting.

102 posted on 11/28/2001 8:32:07 PM PST by Dumb_Ox
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To: beckett
Wonderful quotes.

I have already indicated my respect for the writing of M. Foucault. Regarding professor Derrida (renowned for producing passages such as the above), he is quoted as saying: "He is the kind of philosopher who gives bullshit a bad name." If anyone can give the quote in the original French, I would appreciate it very much.

103 posted on 11/28/2001 9:21:47 PM PST by Aurelius
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To: 911
Wonderful quote for this thread - I hope it evokes some thought. It certainly should.
104 posted on 11/28/2001 9:28:31 PM PST by Aurelius
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Comment #105 Removed by Moderator

To: cornelis
I love those old movies with the vampires, werewolves, etc., where some character says, about some really spooky phenomenon which has just occured. "But there must be a scientific explanation." Well of course there is a scientific explanation. Give us an occurence, and name your ideology, and we can provide an "explanation" in terms of your ideology. That is the purpose of ideologies, to explain everything in their terms. That is what an explanation is, an interpretation of what has occured in terms of the ideology of the explainer.
106 posted on 11/28/2001 9:39:13 PM PST by Aurelius
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To: laconas
I am too tired to think about your post as carefully as it might deserve. But I see a point which doesn't seem to be generally recognized. That is the profound difference in the perceived world of the believer in traditional Christianity and that of the atheist or agnostic. Just one, but by no means the only difference, regards language. Biblically, language is a commonality between God and man (John 1,1) thus,for the believer, truth which is expressible only in words, has sense. For the nonbeliever, language is a human creation, with no a priori special facility for accurately representing reality. Consequently, for that nonbeliever, it is not so easy to say what "truth" means, or it is simply meaningless.
107 posted on 11/28/2001 10:05:59 PM PST by Aurelius
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Comment #108 Removed by Moderator

To: laconas
Now they, the deconstructionists, have come to point where they themselves have to re-evaluate their values and goals. It's an opportune time to attack and take back the lost ground. Unfortunately, there there is nobody organized or strong enough to resist them even in their weak state.

Good point, about deconstructionism being about more than language, but since this thread was restricting itself to language, I played along. :)

I'm not so sure about your thought that there's no one organized or strong enough to resist, however. Organized, probably so. But I learned from the personal experience of sitting in the classrooms of various different deconstructionists less than ten years ago that if one is persistent enough, and logical enough, and stands up to every "point" they try to make, they will panic and scatter in disaray (sp?). Or at least, those on the front lines trying to rope in new converts will panic.

Of course, at the age of 50+ and having lived a "real life" before arriving, I wasn't what you might consider an "average" college student. Being more stubborn than Balaam's ass didn't hurt, either. :^)

109 posted on 11/29/2001 2:23:56 AM PST by logos
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To: dk88
(not to mention my love of America, guns and fine whiskey.)
These are high indicators that you are "A Bad American". Do not vocalize such sentiments around "non-bad" Americans. It'll attract unwanted criticism and strange glances, the strange glances being the most scathing they are able to muster.
110 posted on 11/29/2001 3:11:50 AM PST by philman_36
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To: Aurelius; D-fendr
truth which is expressible only in words, has sense. For the nonbeliever, language is a human creation

Here we go again. Did you know that the doctrine of the trinity was hammered out and solidified (i.e. the truth of it was got) by the slick work of a saint called Gregory of Nyssa who, because of his efforts at the council of Nicea, ended up writing 5 books against Eunomius as a heretic? Gregory of Nyssa was the believer that held language is a human creation and derivative.

I know that truth is not dependent on language. We use language to communicate, and it carries a lot of freight, but it has been overloaded (not quite like overused). The overload is to demand that it alone is what it is (that connection). Okay, so God gave us the ability to use language, but why slip in "expressible only"? Why this dramatic action of the incarnation?

111 posted on 11/29/2001 4:20:34 AM PST by cornelis
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To: dk88
English Literature in American colleges is dead due to this garbage

Perhaps they contributed to its mortification, but this is hard to imagine since they came on the scene and pronounced it dead to begin with.

112 posted on 11/29/2001 4:22:33 AM PST by cornelis
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Perhaps here the meaning of "beating on a dead horse" makes sense.
113 posted on 11/29/2001 4:34:03 AM PST by cornelis
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To: cornelis
To what can you apply the predicate "is true" other than something that has been said or written - in words.
114 posted on 11/29/2001 6:04:42 AM PST by Aurelius
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To: Aurelius
What does it mean to be a "living word?"
115 posted on 11/29/2001 6:08:13 AM PST by cornelis
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To: cornelis
"What does it mean to be a "living word"?"

I haven't a clue. Is that your answer to my question?

116 posted on 11/29/2001 6:32:59 AM PST by Aurelius
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To: Aurelius
Is that your answer to my question?

It certainly is a response, and a start. Do questions determine their own answer?

117 posted on 11/29/2001 6:52:20 AM PST by cornelis
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To: one_particular_harbour
Here ya go. Sorry it took so long - I forgot all about the 'u'...
118 posted on 11/29/2001 8:16:45 AM PST by logos
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Comment #119 Removed by Moderator

To: sonofliberty2
"See logos# 50."

Thanks, sol2; think I'll take a pass.

Besides, I don't smoke.

120 posted on 11/29/2001 8:20:13 AM PST by Landru
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