Of Grammatology by Jacques Derrida
The book is a foundational text in the field of deconstruction, challenging traditional assumptions about the relationship between speech and writing. The author argues that Western thought has consistently privileged speech over writing, mistakenly regarding speech as a more direct expression of thought. Through a detailed critique of Saussurean linguistics, as well as the works of philosophers such as Rousseau, Nietzsche, and Levi-Strauss, the text exposes and deconstructs this bias, proposing that writing actually precedes and structures speech. This radical reevaluation has profound implications for philosophy, linguistics, and critical theory, suggesting that all texts are inherently unstable and their meanings undecidable.