WHAT IS DECONSTRUCTION, AND WHERE AND WHEN DOES IT TAKE PLACE - MAKING FACTS IN SCIENCE, BUILDING CASES IN LAW

Authors
Citation
S. Fuchs et S. Ward, WHAT IS DECONSTRUCTION, AND WHERE AND WHEN DOES IT TAKE PLACE - MAKING FACTS IN SCIENCE, BUILDING CASES IN LAW, American sociological review, 59(4), 1994, pp. 481-500
Citations number
123
Categorie Soggetti
Sociology
ISSN journal
00031224
Volume
59
Issue
4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
481 - 500
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-1224(1994)59:4<481:WIDAWA>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
There are two forms of deconstruction. Radical DECONSTRUCTION is rare. It is a sign of deep crisis and extraordinary skepticism among intell ectual workers facing high uncertainty. Moderate deconstruction, howev er occurs wherever conflicts over knowledge are built into the competi tive and adversarial structure of social fields. We illustrate the soc ial dynamics of moderate deconstruction for two specific cases: making facts in science and building cases in law. There are strategies of d econstruction common to both science and law which generalize untrustw orthiness and thus economize on deconstruction costs. These strategies are rhetoric, ideology, procedure (or method), and reputation. Under certain conditions, moderate deconstruction turns into radical DECONST RUCTION. This is most likely to happen in revolutionary science and in loosely coupled textual fields that have minimal hardware and social solidarity.