
Deconstruction and Construction
Deconstruction is a way of analyzing texts and ideas that challenges the idea of fixed meanings, revealing how they’re shaped by language, assumptions, and cultural contexts. It questions traditional interpretations, showing that meanings can be fluid and open to different perspectives. Construction, on the other hand, focuses on how ideas, identities, and meanings are actively created and shaped through social processes, language, and relationships. While deconstruction explores how meanings are unstable, construction examines how they are built and maintained over time. Together, they highlight the dynamic and interpretive nature of meaning and knowledge in human experience.