1. reconstructed - Adjective
2. reconstructed - Verb
adapted to social or economic change
Source: WordNetWhat is false creates taste, and reinforces itself by knowingly eliminating any possible reference to the authentic. And what is genuine is reconstructed as quickly as possible, to resemble the false. Guy Debord
I want to give a picture of Dublin so complete that if the city suddenly disappeared from the earth it could be reconstructed out of my book. James Joyce
Smut is a target for reconstructed cricketing accidents -- he is the Cricket Saint Sebastian. Peter Greenaway
The whole damn universe has to be taken apart, brick by brick, and reconstructed. Henry Miller
Religion lives not by the force and aid of dogma, but because it is ingrained in the nature of man. ...the moulds have been broken and reconstructed over and over again, but the molten ore abides in the ladle of humanity. John Tyndall
One can never rely on the great keeping one's letters; and should those letters vanish, one is apt to be remembered only as the mysterious half of a dialogue to be reconstructed in the vaguest way from the surviving (and sometimes lesser!) half of the exchange. Gore Vidal