Foucault, in addressing an approach to questions of political modernity, posed "problematization," that is, "…the development of a domain of acts, practices, and thoughts that seem to me to pose questions for politics." This acts to unpack and unveil underlying knowledge, assumptions and foundations, at its essence an act of deconstruction. Problematizing then a deconstructionist function, as it may be utilized to destabilize hierarchical systems from illuminating foundations of power and control, exposing their vulnerability, exposing them to change. The notion of biopower, articulated simultaneously with deconstructivism, encourages self-reflexivity and self-examination as liberation. A ceaseless, engaged process of self-definition by way of removing the structure of identity, seeing the production of self-knowledge in line with production environment, experience, sociality. Removing conceptions of selfhood function to affirm individual life and choice, making transparent former forms and functions of identity claiming in a biopolitical context.