
Introduction “Jacques Derrida’s Deconstruction” occupies a seminal position in contemporary literary theory, philosophy, and cultural studies. Jacques Derrida, a pivotal figure in twentieth-century thought, irreversibly shaped academic discourse with his theory of deconstruction—a method for revealing the inherent instability in texts and the fundamental indeterminacy of meaning. In the intricate interplay between language, meaning, and interpretation, deconstruction actively interrogates foundational certainties, exposes internal contradictions, and challenges privileged hierarchies embedded in the Western...