Council of Elrond by is my fav of the hell of deconstructionists.

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I enjoyed Coates’ Black Panther run, it ended on a high for me.

But Ridley’s is really not to my liking. Why the deconstructionist take? Why all the internecine fighting? The political commentary feels very thin and so does the character work.

At least the covers are pretty.

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Oh it's I'm Christopher [AlphaCMT] Taylor. I'm a Illustrator and digital painter. When I'm not painting I'm a Pop Art Deconstructionist.

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I hadn't read it but looks like he did.

1963 and Supreme is proof that Alan Moore isn't just a superhero deconstructionist, I'm still pissed with Jim Lee for saying he'd illustrate the 1963 Annual and flaking out. We missed out.

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For the uninitiated Appropriation simply means to take something in existing pop culture and re-purpose it in a new and sometimes deconstructionist way. And for the record, the process fascinates me. To see a select few ascend while others of equal merit remain obscure.

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Time is running out... but there's still time to support Remember Andy Xenon?!

Kieron Gillen touts as a "beautiful and human post-deconstructionist superheroes in the mode of Astro City"

Don't miss this one! 1 hour to go!

https://t.co/xgIEqPe77a

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People’s mileage may vary, but I loved this deconstructionist moment in Batman: RIP, only for it to be undermined by the inevitable plot twist villain reveal. I’ve noticed Morrison does that a lot (Xorn in New X-Men being perhaps the worst example).

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Mainly because most deconstructionist writers always want to see an evil Superman. That's one reason why I enjoyed Jupiter's Legacy, their Superman's downfall wasn't because he was a terrible person, he ended up being one of the few who didn't unmask to become a celebrity. https://t.co/qSI9QiAyM6

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