- Binary opposition
In
critical theory , a binary opposition (also binary system) is a pair of theoretical opposites. Instructuralism , it is seen as a fundamental organizer of human philosophy, culture, and language.In
post-structuralism , it is seen as one of several influential characteristics or tendencies of Western and Western-derived thought,Fact|date=July 2007 and that typically, one of the two opposites assumes a role of dominance over the other. The categorization of binary oppositions is "often value-laden and ethnocentric", with an illusoryorder and superficial meaning. [Jack Goody 1977, p.36]A classic example of a binary opposition is the presence-absence dichotomy. In much of Western thought, including
structuralism , distinguishing between presence and absence, viewed as polar opposites, is a fundamental element of thought in many cultures. In addition, according to post-structuralist criticisms, "presence" occupies a position of dominance in Western thought over "absence", because "absence" is traditionally seen as what you get when you take away "presence". (Had "absence" been dominant, "presence" might have most naturally been seen as what you get when you take away an "absence".)A more concrete example of a binary opposition is the male-female dichotomy. Some western thinkers, including structuralists, believe that the world is organized according to "male" and "female" constructs, roles, words, and ideas. A post-structuralist view is that "male" can be seen, according to traditional Western thought, as dominant over "female" because "male" is the presence of a phallus, while the vagina is an absence or loss. (Alternatively, Western thought could have viewed "female" as a presence, and "male", subordinately, as the absence, or loss, of an invagination or theoretical "hole" of some kind.) The correspondence between each of the dominant Western concepts such as "presence" and "male", as well as others such as "rational" (vs. "emotional"), "mind" (vs. "body"), "thoughts" and "speech" (vs. "writings") are thought to show a tendency of Western thought called
logocentrism orphallogocentrism . [See the work ofJacques Derrida ]The critique of binary oppositions is an important part of
post-feminism ,post-colonialism ,post-anarchism , andcritical race theory , which argue that the perceived binary dichotomy between man/woman, civilized/savage, and caucasian/non-caucasian have perpetuated and legitimized Western power structures favoring "civilized" white men.Post-structural criticism of binary oppositions is not simply the reversal of the opposition, but its
deconstruction , which is described as apolitical—that is, not intrinsically favoring one arm of a binary opposition over the other. Deconstruction is the "event" or "moment" at which a binary opposition is thought to contradict itself, and undermine its own authority. Although deconstruction can not explain how a rational basis for defending itself can then be maintained after it has removed any objective basis in structuralism it may have had.ee also
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Dichotomy Notes
References
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Jack Goody 1977 " [http://books.google.com/books?id=baQtOyscXUwC The Domestication of the Savage Mind] " (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1977); translated into Spanish, French, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Turkish.
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