Deconstruction

It is a movement that make dominance in 1960s and included great thinkers like Jacques Derrida and Paul De Man. Deconstruction is a way of understanding how something was created, usually things like art, books, poems and other writings. The deconstructionist were very much interested questioning the certain thing and structure of text. Deconstruction is breaking something down into smaller parts. Deconstruction looks at the smaller parts that were used to create an object. The smaller parts are usually ideas.
Sometimes deconstruction looks at how an author can imply things he does not mean. It says that because words are not precise, we can never know what an author meant. Sometimes deconstruction looks at the things the author did not say because he made assumptions.
One thing it pays attention to is how opposites work. It says that two opposites like "good" and "bad" are not really different things. "Good" only makes sense when someone compare it to "bad" and "bad" only makes sense when someone compare it to "good". And so even when someone talks about "good", they are still talking about "bad". But this is just one thing it does. If we deconstructed everything, we might never be able to write or talk at all.

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