This Routledge Revival, first published in 1985, gives detailed
attention to the bearing of literary theory on questions of truth,
meaning and reference. On the one hand, deconstruction brings a
vigilant awareness of the figural and narrative tropes that make up
the discourse of philosophic reason. On the other it insists that
argumentative rigour cannot be divorced from the kind of close
reading that has come to characterize literary theory in its more
advanced or speculative forms. This present-day 'contest of
faculties' has large implications for philosophers and critics,
many of whom will welcome the reissue of such a clear-headed
statement of the impact of deconstruction.
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