Popular Culture Review Vol. 16, No. 2, Summer 2005 | Page 51

Jacques Derrida Visits Cicely 47 words. Derrida took the linguistic concept a step further, pointing to the fact that signifiers never signify a “signified,” an objective reality. Rather, they refer only to other signifiers, so meaning merely shifts along a web of language; it never directly signifies a “transcendental signified” (an objective reality not subject to the slipperiness of language). There is never any place at which the deferral of meaning stops, nor is there any uncontested authority regarding meaning. A number of critical theories appropriated this concept and took it a step further by applying the signifying capability of difference to ideologies and the value systems that support them. Differences that “signify,” i.e., distinguish the valued fi*om the not-valued and the superior fi-om the inferior, are not rooted in objective reality but in an ideology that valorizes these differences by equating difference with superiority—racial superiority, political superiority, economic superiority, spiritual superiority, intellectual superiority, and so on. Put another way, these differences structure a society’s value system and legitimate the ideology that apportions social power and privilege at the expense of people and ideas that are devalued by being judged inferior. To deconstruct a society’s value system is to expose the perceived differences that structure it to be socially constructed linchpins holding the power and privilege of a dominant group in place at the expense of “the other.” In the face of such a demonstration, holding on to power, privilege, and a sense of superiority becomes, at the very least, selfish. This concept poses no direct threat to American society: few encounter modem critical theory in the raw outside the college classroom. But the public is forced to confront a critique of American society based on these concepts indirectly through cultural discourses. Modem critical theory’s understanding of the role socially constmcted difference plays in the maintenance of privilege and power and the disenfi^chising of minorities has been appropriated by a variety of advocates who wish to “deconstmct” supposedly significant differences and reveal their functioning in the marginalization and disenfranchisement of minorities and ideas hostile to dominant groups. Proponents of women’s rights, for example, attack gender discrimination based on biological sex differences by arguing that the differences validating discriminatory attitudes and practices are insignificant in modem society and that it is the supposed significance of these differences that is holding male power in place. By the same token, supposedly significant racial and ethnic differences underpin disafiirmation against minority groups. Advocates for racial and ethnic equality make the same argument, that the racial differences which legitimate discriminatory practices are also insignificant and serve only to maintain white power. More recently gay advocates have taken up the same line of reasoning and argue that sexual orientation is not so significant a difference that it warrants depriving homosexuals of benefits commonly available to other citizens. While it is unlikely that many viewers of a quality series such as Northern Exposure would support discriminatory practices based on