Slippage and Play: Interpretation, Decision, and the Ethical Turn of Poststructuralism
The Horizon of Play. AI image The Decentering of Structure In “Structure, Sign, and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences,” Jacques Derrida identifies a decisive shift in modern thought: the recognition that structure has no natural center. For centuries, Western metaphysics secured meaning by positing a stable origin — God, reason, consciousness, man — that organized the system while escaping its internal movement. The center limited what Derrida calls the “play” of the structure. It permitted substitutions among elements but was not itself subject to substitution. The rupture Derrida describes does not abolish structure. It reveals that the center is not an immutable presence but a function, a “non-locus” successively occupied by different names. Once this becomes thinkable, the consequences are profound. As Derrida writes, “in the absence of a center or origin, everything became discourse.” No transcendental signified stands outside the differential system of signs. Meanin...