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The Opposite of Everything is History - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
Description
The Opposite of Everything is History
What remains after structure collapses.
What begins as a system of oppositions—raw and cooked, myth and meaning, structure and freedom—unravels across nine recursive movements. This episode enters the elegant collapse of structuralism, tracing not a theory, but its residue. Through Claude Lévi-Strauss, Gregory Bateson, Jean-Paul Sartre, Gayle Rubin, Jacques Derrida, Emmanuel Levinas, Sylvia Wynter, and Édouard Glissant, we follow a shift from form to relation, from certainty to flicker.
This essay does not explain. It listens. It does not resolve. It disturbs. It follows structure until it can no longer hold—and then it asks what flickers after: silence, relation, and the right to opacity.
Why Listen?
- Learn how structuralism framed cognition through oppositions
- See how poststructuralism undoes clarity from within
- Feel the shift from pattern to residue, from system to echo
- Follow the drift from myth to opacity, from form to relation
Further Reading
- The Raw and the Cooked – Claude Lévi-Strauss
- The Sex/Gender System – Gayle Rubin
- Of Grammatology – Jacques Derrida
- Poetics of Relation – Édouard Glissant
- Unsettling the Coloniality of Being – Sylvia Wynter
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Bibliography
- Lévi-Strauss, Claude. The Raw and the Cooked. University of Chicago Press, 1969.
- Rubin, Gayle. The Traffic in Women: Notes on the 'Political Economy' of Sex. In Toward an Anthropology of Women, 1975.
- Derrida, Jacques. Of Grammatology. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1976.
- Glissant, Édouard. Poetics of Relation. University of Michigan