Abstract

Arcades

Wiener, Jon | April 7, 1997 issue

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Just a few years ago, "deconstruction" was the most incomprehensible term in the English language. French philosopher Jacques Derrida refused to provide a definition. J. Hillis Miller, Derrida's leading American follower, said, "If you want to know what it is, read my book." But today the word has entered the lexicon of daily life. A Nexis database survey of newspapers and popular magazines shows that in the past two years, "deconstruction" or a variant appeared in almost 7,000 articles. These articles suggest just how right Derrida was when he argued that meaning is unstable.

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DECONSTRUCTION; CRITICISM; DERRIDA, Jacques; SEMIOTICS & literature; NEWSPAPERS; DATABASES; SURVEYS
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