DECONSTRUCTION.
The deconstructive method of criticism was born with Jaques Derrida and Paul de Man. The sense of this theory is the affirmation that every literary work, as in the same life, is ruked by acontradiction of two terms that fight constantly and lead humanity to a necessary choice, people must choose in which side they will be. A clear exampple of this theory is the real life, people are in constant fight to choose the positive or the negative way to do things, to believe in God or no to do it, the same contradiction leads the world. But in a literary work always rules one of two sides, right or wrong, cold or hot,... The author must be in one side but not in the other, he must relat the story from one point of view, he must have a clear way of thinking, some kind of ideology that makes him decline the story from one side to the other. That's to say that therre must be one idea, a central idea that creates the classical structural centre, speaking in structuralism terms. that centre governs all the actions, decisions, crisis of the story. All the story runs around this centre.
Derrida observed this fact, the rule of the centre, and he concluded that
if there's a centre, a ruling idea, then there must be the opposal idea
of that centre, the antagonist centre, it's in a secundary plane. But,
what would happen if we turned down the centre and we replaced it with
the antagonist idea? Then we would have the main idea of deconstructivism,
the structure would be the opposed one, we would have broken down the structure
and the government would be lead by the contrary idea. As Derrida says:
"the decostruction starts when we find the moment in which the text transgresses
the rules it stablishes for itself, this is the moment in which the text
breaks down."
The work I have choosed is THE BEAR written by James Oliver Curwood
in 1916.
The aim of the book is to reflect that the soul and the thoughts of an
animal can be similar to men's soul,it's to try to explain how animals
can think, act and feel just as men do. This is an aspect that Curwood
tries to rise through all the text.
Within a detailed study made through several years in places inhabited
by bears, just as those mentioned in THE BEAR , Curwood observed how animals,
and specially bears, can think and act as men do, not only because of their
way of acting but the fellings towards the other races, their trips, their
way of getting food or their way of educating their cubs. The basis of
his idea rests in the comparison of bear's acts and men's way of thinking.
It's obvious that Curwood didn't know nothing about the psichology of the
bears, all the text is an interpretation of a man who loves bears and tries
to compare them and to make alike their way of living as if they were like
men. As we can observe, there are several examples that can illustrate
this just as: why the bear had to feel that he was the manor of the mountain
where he lived? this is only because from a human point of view the domination
of a place where one lives is an aspect that only men can think and conclude,
but, what about bears? can they think and conclude that when they see other
bears in the land where they live (and not their land) they must fight
to clear who is the manor of that region? do they really know the meaning
of property or manor? can they really get to this conclussion? Maybe they
hate the rest of their race or they get pleasure of killing, who knows?
Have they commonsense? Curwood tries to say that bears have commonsense
in all the parts of the persecutions when he relates that the bear scaped
from the hands of the hunters making circles in the trajectory that it
makes around the muountain, thart's what I would call an strategy, have
the bears the faculty of being a strategist? I don't think so. And not
only this, Curwood goes beyond the facts and thoughts, he steads that
bears can feel the same that men do. He uses the word "engagement" to describe
some kind of meeting that bears, male and female, made in a part of the
story when the time of rut came. Did they know what was an engagement or
what it meant. Did they really know that the other bear would appear in
one place the same day twenty minutes later? couldn't it be a casuality.
We all know that the animals have a simple sense of time, day, night, seasons,...
but not as exact as these bears, they met twent minutes later. Thor, the
bear went to that place, only the human racecan do this, but as I have
said before these bears "have commonsense and an advanced way of acting."
These are some examples of how Curwood includes elements that takes me
to make that critic I am doing.
Following a chronological line to criticise the work we would have to start from the first time the bears behave as men. From the beginning of the text, Curwood relates the walkings of a bear in a mountain, describing its feelings towards it and towards all the bears that had visited it whenever. Nevertheless he does it always using comparissons with human feelings; who knows if the bears feel? and if they do, it's not necessary for them to feel the same way human race do. When Thor meets the little bear in a mountain , as the author says, "it seemed as if Thor adopted it", can the bears adopt little cub? the cub just followed Thor wherever it went and it`s not enough reason to conclude that Thor wanted to be with the cub or "to adopt it" as if it was a human child, feeding and keeping it as if it was its son, nevertheless it does it. These are the moments that Derrida found that were the ones in which the texts broke down, these are the critical moment in which the author begins to enter in a subjective line that just can take him to hardly increasing disastrous situations like this, and these are the moments in which the author must be more careful.
In order to present more examples of this criticism, in the hardest part of the story, just as in the first as in the second meeting of the bear and the man, the bear stands very near of the hunter, I wont discuse if it can be real that the bear didnt kill him, but the question I'm trying to clear is that the bear didn't kill him because of its piety, but, can a bear have the human ( and not much) characteristic of piety? Untill the point we know the animals kill or they don't, they are hungry or they are not, but they don't leave another animal alive just for piety, there can be thousands of reasons for an animal not to kill another, but please, not piety, there must have an exeptionally level of mind development to do things for piety. Nevertheless the bear does it.
Consequently, Curwood, with the best of his intentions, has tried to develope the very impossible idea of bringing near the bear's and men's soul leaving appart some logical questions that must be named and criticised.
As a conclussion, the deconstruction of the text takes to the point of the turning down of Curwood's idea of the feelings and thoughts of the bears noy only compared with men's ideas and thoughts but replaced by them. This deconstruction takes toa a more natural view of the actions of the animals in general, and specifically the bears.