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27 Cardozo L. Rev. 719 (2005-2006)
Deconstruction's Legal Career

handle is hein.journals/cdozo27 and id is 739 raw text is: DECONSTRUCTION'S LEGAL CAREER

Jack M Balkin *
Deconstruction began as a series of techniques invented by Jacques
Derrida, Paul de Man, and others to analyze literary and philosophical
texts. These techniques, in turn, were connected to larger philosophical
claims about the nature of language and meaning. One such assertion is
that the repetition of a text in a new context often subtly changes its
meaning. There could be no better example of this principle than the
career of deconstruction itself. To be adapted to the needs and concerns
of the legal academy, deconstruction had to be translated and altered in
significant ways, making it more flexible, practical, and attentive to
questions of justice and injustice. This essay describes some of the
changes that deconstruction underwent as it moved from philosophy to
literature and then to law. Its transformation eventually produced a
deconstructive practice that emphasizes sensitivity to changes in
interpretive context, a pragmatic approach to conceptual distinctions,
and careful attention to the role of ideology and social construction in
legal thought.
Deconstruction was first imported from Continental philosophy to
American literature departments and later migrated to American law
schools. Deconstruction became fashionable in America at about the
same time as reader response theory, which held that the meaning of a
text is produced as the reader encounters it. As a result, deconstruction
became wrongly associated with the improbable claim that texts mean
whatever readers want them to mean. This notion is not only a
misinterpretation of deconstruction, but also of reader response theory.
This idea would have seemed especially silly in Europe, where
deconstruction arose out of an earlier philosophical movement called
structuralism. Because deconstruction was understood as a reaction to
structuralism, it is sometimes called a post-structuralist philosophy.
Both deconstruction and structuralism are antihumanist theories;
that is, they emphasize that people's thought is shaped by structures of
linguistic and cultural meaning. Both deconstruction and structuralism
asserted that people are culturally and socially constructed, and that they
* Knight Professor of Constitutional Law and the First Amendment, Yale Law School.

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