The examples I have in mind are Ecclesiastes, Job, and Richard III but I'm sure there are many such cases
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A Clockwork Orange with controversial final chapter
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You were asking for a name. Something like Unintentional Deconstruction?
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oh YES I had forgotten about Clockwork Orange Chpt 21. I hadn't read it that way but maybe I should have. RE your term . . .
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it's always seemed to me intentional? Like, the author is very good in the rest of the work, and with a discordant ending...
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of dubious quality they're trying to undermine the ending's conventional moral while retaining some plausible deniability.
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Hume ends Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion with the narrator awarding the "win" to what was clearly not the winning...
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...argument, and not what Hume actually believed. Definite plausible deniability here.
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Also reminds me of Christian scribes of Beowulf inserting jarring Christian elements, like Grendel is descendant of Cain.
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I can think of pieces of music like this
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