Grange, Joseph.  "Deconstruction and the Philosophy of Culture."  Process Studies 17, no. 3 (Fall 1988): 141-51.

Abstract

This essay challenges deconstruction's attack on the self, God, history and the Book.  It employs George Allan's "importances of the past" to argue for the possibility of an open cultural system based on the importance of normative measures.  Using Whitehead's concept of civilization, it demonstrates that intensity of feeling based on harmonic contrasts of actuality and possibility is at the heart of cultural evolution.  The study concludes with a presentation of process philosophy's resources for constructing a novel philosophy of culture.  [Abstract from The Philosopher's Index]