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Wild thoughts: A Deconstructive environmental ethics?
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Wild thoughts: A Deconstructive environmental ethics?

R. Briggs
Environmental Ethics, Vol.23(2), pp.115-134
2001

Abstract

Although environmental ethics has become more familiar and comfortable with the work of postmodernism, "deconstruction" in particular continues to be depicted as "destructive" and "nihilistic." A close examination of some specific works of deconstruction, however, shows that, far from denying responsibilities to the environment, deconstruction seeks to affirm a radical obligation toward the "other." Because this possibility is habitually ruled out by denunciations of deconstruction's imputed relativism, I begin with a dramatized account of the possible reception of deconstruction within environmental ethics in order to stage the ethical implications of modes of criticism. I then discuss specific parallels between the work of deconstruction and that of environmental ethics, and suggest that adeconstructive spirit is at the heart of environmental philosophy's recent - and most important - work on the question of "universal consideration.".

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