Postmodernism
Postmodernism
Postmodernism
Postmodernism
preceded by Modernism
Postmodernity
Hypermodernity
Hypermodernism (art)
Post-anarchism
Posthumanism
Postmodernist anthropology
Post-processual archaeology
Postmodern architecture
Postmodern art
Postmodern Christianity
Postmodern dance
Postmodern feminism
Postmodernist film
Postmodern literature
Post-Marxism
Post-materialism
Postmodern music
Postmodern philosophy
Postpositivism
Post-postmodernism
Postmodernist school
Postmodern theatre
Post-structuralism
v·d·e
Postmodernism is a movement away from the viewpoint of modernism. More
specifically it is a tendency in contemporary culture characterized by the problem
ofobjective truth and inherent suspicion towards global cultural narrative or meta-
narrative. It involves the belief that many, if not all, apparent realities are only social
constructs, as they are subject to change inherent to time and place. It emphasizes the
role of language, power relations, and motivations; in particular it attacks the use of
sharp classifications such as male versus female, straight versus gay, white versus
black, and imperial versus colonial. Rather, it holds realities to be plural and relative, and
dependent on who the interested parties are and what their interests consist in. It
attempts to problematise modernist overconfidence, by drawing into sharp contrast the
difference between how confident speakers are of their positions versus how confident
they need to be to serve their supposed purposes. Postmodernism has influenced many
cultural fields, including literary criticism, sociology, linguistics, architecture, visual arts,
and music.
Literary critic Fredric Jameson describes postmodernism as the "dominant cultural logic
of late capitalism." "Late capitalism" refers to the phase of capitalism after World War II,
as described by economist Ernest Mandel; the term refers to the same period
sometimes described by "globalization", "multinational capitalism", or "consumer
capitalism". Jameson's work studies the postmodern in contexts of aesthetics, politics,
philosophy, and economics.[2]
Contents
[hide]
• 2 Contested definitions
o 3.1 Architecture
o 3.2 Literature
o 3.3 Music
o 4.1 Deconstruction
o 4.3 Post-postmodernism
• 5 Criticism
• 6 See also
• 7 References
• 8 Further reading
• 9 External links
One of Banksy's paintings in the Israeli wall in the West Bank (2005).
The term was first used around the 1870s in various areas. For example, John Watkins
Chapman avowed "a Postmodern style of painting" to get beyond French Impressionism.
[3]
Then, J. M. Thompson, in his 1914 article in The Hibbert Journal (a quarterly
philosophical review), used it to describe changes in attitudes and beliefs in the critique
of religion: "The raison d'etre of Post-Modernism is to escape from the double-
mindedness of Modernism by being thorough in its criticism by extending it to religion as
well as theology, to Catholic feeling as well as to Catholic tradition."[4]
In 1917 Rudolf Pannwitz used the term to describe a philosophically oriented culture. His
idea of post-modernism came from Friedrich Nietzsche's analysis of modernity and its
end results of decadence and nihilism. Overcoming the modern human would be the
post-human. Contrary to Nietzsche, Pannwitz also includes nationalist and mythical
elements.[5]
The term was used later in 1926 by B. I. Bell in his "Postmodernism & other Essays". In
1921 and 1925 it had been used to describe new forms of art and music. In 1942 H. R.
Hays used it for a new literary form, but as a general theory of an historical movement it
was first used in 1939 by the historian Arnold J. Toynbee: "Our own Post-Modern Age
has been inaugurated by the general war of 1914-1918."[6]
In 1949 the term was used to describe a dissatisfaction with modern architecture,
leading to the postmodern architecture movement.[7]Postmodernism in architecture is
marked by the re-emergence of surface ornament, reference to surrounding buildings in
urban architecture, historical reference in decorative forms, and non-orthogonal angles.
It may be a response to the modernist architectural movement known as theInternational
Style.
The term was then applied to a whole host of movements, many in art, music, and
literature, that reacted against a range of tendencies in the imperialist phase of
capitalism called "modernism," and are typically marked by revival of historical elements
and techniques.[8] Walter Truett Anderson identifies Postmodernism as one of four
typological world views. These four worldviews are the Postmodern-ironist, which sees
truth as socially constructed; the scientific-rational, in which truth is found through
methodical, disciplined inquiry; the social-traditional, in which truth is found in the
heritage of American and Western civilization; and the neo-romantic, in which truth is
found through attaining harmony with nature and/or spiritual exploration of the inner self.
[9]
Postmodernist ideas in philosophy and the analysis of culture and society expanded the
importance of critical theory and has been the point of departure for works
of literature, architecture, and design, as well as being visible in marketing/business and
the interpretation of history, law and culture, starting in the late 20th century. These
developments — re-evaluation of the entire Western value system
(love, marriage, popular culture, shift from industrial to service economy) that took place
since the 1950s and 1960s, with a peak in the Social Revolution of 1968 — are
described with the termPostmodernity,[10] as opposed to Postmodernism, a term referring
to an opinion or movement. Whereas something being "Postmodernist" would make it
part of the movement, its being "Postmodern" would place it in the period of time since
the 1950s, making it a part of contemporary history.
[edit]Overview of ideas (see also Postmodern philosophy)
Martin Heidegger (1889–1976)
rejected the philosophical basis of the concepts of "subjectivity" and "objectivity"
and asserted that similar grounding oppositions in logic ultimately refer to one
another. Instead of resisting the admission of this paradox in the search for
understanding, Heidegger requires that we embrace it through an active process
of elucidation he called the "Hermeneutic Circle". He stressed the historicity and
cultural construction of concepts while simultaneously advocating the necessity of
an atemporal and immanent apprehension of them. In this vein, he asserted that
it was the task of contemporary philosophy to recover the original question of (or
"openness to") Dasein (translated as Being or Being-in-the-World) present in
the Presocratic philosophers but normalized, neutered and standardized
since Plato. This was to be done, in part, by tracing the record
of Dasein's sublimation or forgetfulness through the history of philosophy which
meant that we were to ask again what constituted the grounding conditions in
ourselves and in the World for the affinity between beings and between the many
usages of the term "being" in philosophy. To do this, however, a non-historical
and, to a degree, self-referential engagement with whatever set of ideas, feelings
or practices would permit (both the non-fixed concept and reality of) such a
continuity was required - a continuity permitting the possible experience, possible
existence indeed not only of beings but of all differences as they appeared and
tended to develop. Such a conclusion led Heidegger to depart from
the Phenomenology of his teacher Husserl and prompt instead an (ironically
anachronistic) return to the yet-unasked questions of Ontology, a return that in
general did not acknowledge an intrinsic distinction
between phenomena and noumena or between things in themselves (de re) and
things as they appear (see qualia): Being-in-the-world, or rather, the openness to
the process ofDasein's/Being's becoming was to bridge the age-old gap between
these two. In this latter premise, Heidegger shares an affinity with the late
Romantic philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche, another principal forerunner of Post-
structuralist and Postmodernist thought. Influential to thinkers associated with
Postmodernism are Heidegger's critique of the subject-object or sense-
knowledge division implicit in Rationalism, Empiricism and Methodological
Naturalism, his repudiation of the idea that facts exist outside or separately from
the process of thinking and speaking them (however, Heidegger is not specifically
a Nominalist), his related admission that the possibilities of philosophical and
scientific discourse are wrapped up in the practices and expectations of a society
and that concepts and fundamental constructs are the expression of a lived,
historical exercise rather than simple derivations of external, apriori conditions
independent from historical mind and changing experience (see Johann Gottlieb
Fichte, Heinrich von Kleist, Weltanschauung and Social Constructionism), and
his Instrumentalist and Negativist notion that Being (and, by extension, reality) is
an action, method, tendency, possibility and question rather than a discreet,
positive, identifiable state, answer or entity (see also Process
Philosophy, Dynamism, Instrumentalism,Pragmatism and Vitalism).
Thomas Samuel Kuhn (1922–1996)
located the rapid change of the basis of scientific knowledge to a provisional
consensus among scientists; coined the term "paradigm shift" in The Structure of
Scientific Revolutions and in general contributed to the debate over the presumed
neutrality and objectivity of empirical methodology in the Natural Sciences from
disciplinarian or cultural bias.
Jacques Derrida (1930–2004)
re-examined the fundamentals of writing and its consequences on philosophy in
general; sought to undermine the language of 'presence' or metaphysics in an
analytical technique which, beginning as a point of departure from Heidegger's
notion of Destruktion, came to be known as Deconstruction. Derrida utilized, like
Heidegger, references to Greek philosophical notions associated with
theSkeptics and the Presocratics, such as Epoché and Aporia to articulate his
notion of implicit circularity between premises and conclusions, origins and
manifestations, but - in a manner analogous in certain respects to Gilles Deleuze
- presented a radical re-reading of canonical philosophical figures such
as Plato, Aristotle and Descartes as themselves being informed by such
"destabilizing" notions.
Michel Foucault (1926–1984)
introduced concepts such as 'discursive regime', or re-invoked those of older
philosophers like 'episteme' and 'genealogy' in order to explain the relationship
among meaning, power, and social behavior within social orders (see The Order
of Things, The Archaeology of Knowledge, Discipline and Punish and The
History of Sexuality). In direct contradiction to what have been typified as
Modernist perspectives on epistemology, Foucault asserted that rational
judgment, social practice and what he called 'biopower' are not only inseparable
but co-determinant. While Foucault himself was deeply involved in a number of
progressive political causes and maintained close personal ties with members of
the far-Left, he was also controversial with Leftist thinkers of his day, including
those associated with various strains of Marxism, proponents of Left
libertarianism (e.g. Noam Chomsky) and Humanism (e.g. Jürgen Habermas), for
his rejection of what he deemed to beEnlightenment-derived concepts of
freedom, liberation, self-determination and human nature. Instead, Foucault
focused on the ways in which such constructs can foster cultural hegemony,
violence and exclusion. In line with his rejection of such 'positive' tenets of
Enlightenment-era Humanism, he was active, with Gilles Deleuze and Félix
Guattari, in the Anti-Psychiatry Movement, considering much of institutionalized
psychiatry and, in particular, Freud's concept of repression central
to Psychoanalysis (which was still very influential in France during the 1960s and
70s), to be both harmful and misplaced. Foucault was known for his controversial
aphorisms, such as "language is oppression", meaning that language functions in
such a way as to render nonsensical, false or silent tendencies that might
otherwise threaten or undermine the distributions of power backing a society's
conventions - even when such distributions purport to celebrate liberation and
expression or value minority groups and perspectives. His writings have had a
major influence on the larger body of Postmodern academic literature.
Jean-François Lyotard (1924–1998)
identified in The Postmodern Condition a crisis in the 'discourses of the Human
Sciences' latent in Modernism but catapulted to the fore by the advent of the
"computerized" or "telematic" era (seeInformation Revolution). This crisis, insofar
as it pertains to academia, concerns both the motivations and justification
procedures for making research claims: unstated givens or values that have
validated the basic efforts of academic research since the late 18th Century might
no longer be valid (particularly, in Social Science & Humanities research, though
examples from Mathematics are given by Lyotard as well). As formal conjecture
about real-world issues becomes inextricably linked to automated calculation,
information storage and retrieval, such knowledge becomes increasingly
"exteriorised" from its knowers in the form of information. Knowledge is
materialized and made into a commodity exchanged between producers and
consumers; it ceases to be either an idealistic end-in-itself or a tool capable of
bringing about liberty or social benefit; it is stripped of its humanistic and spiritual
associations, its connection with education, teaching and human development,
being simply rendered as "data" - omnipresent, material, unending and without
any contexts or pre-requisites.[11] Furthermore, the 'diversity' of claims made by
various disciplines begins to lack any unifying principle or intuition as objects of
study become more and more specialized due to the emphasis on specificity,
precision and uniformity of reference that competitive, database-oriented
research implies. The value-premises upholding academic research have been
maintained by what Lyotard considers to be quasi-mythological beliefs about
human purpose, human reason and human progress - large, background
constructs he calls "Metanarratives". These Metanarratives still remain in
Western society but are now being undermined by rapidInformatization and the
commercialization of the University and its functions. The shift of authority from
the presence and intuition of knowers - from the good-faith of Reason to seek
diverse knowledge integrated for human benefit or truth fidelity - to the automated
database and the market had, in Lyotard's view, the power to unravel the very
idea of 'justification' or 'legitimation' and, with it, the rationale for research
altogether - esp. in disciplines pertaining to human life, society and meaning. We
are now controlled not by binding extra-linguistic value paradigms defining
notions of collective identity and ultimate purpose, but rather by our automatic
responses to different species of "language games" (a concept Lyotard imports
from JL Austin's theory of Speech Acts). In his vision of a solution to this
"vertigo," Lyotard opposes the assumptions of universality, consensus, and
generality that he identified within the thought of Humanistic, Neo-
Kantian philosophers likeJürgen Habermas and proposes a continuation of
experimentation and diversity to be assessed pragmatically in the context of
language games rather than via appeal to a resurrected series of transcendentals
and metaphysical unities.
Richard Rorty (1931–2007)
argues in Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature that contemporary Analytic
philosophy mistakenly imitates scientific methods. In addition, he denounces the
traditional epistemological perspectives
of Representationalism and Correspondence theory that rely upon the
independence of knowers and observers from phenomena and the passivity of
natural phenomena in relation to consciousness. As a proponent of anti-
foundationalism and anti-essentialism within a Pragmatist framework, he echoes
Postmodern strains of Conventionalism and Philosophical Relativism, but
opposes much Postmodern thinking with his commitment to Social Liberalism.
Jean Baudrillard (1929–2007),
in Simulacra and Simulation, introduced the concept that reality or the principle of
the "real" is short-circuited by the interchangeability of signs in an era whose
communicative and semantic acts are dominated by electronic media and digital
technologies. Baudrillard proposes the notion that, in such a state, where
subjects are detached from the outcomes of events (political, literary, artistic,
personal or otherwise), events no longer hold any particular sway on the subject
nor have any identifiable context; they therefore have the effect of producing
widespread indifference, detachment and passivity in industrialized populations.
He claimed that a constant stream of appearances and references without any
direct consequences to viewers or readers could eventually render the division
between appearance and object indiscernible, resulting, ironically, in the
"disappearance" of mankind in what is, in effect, a virtual or holographic state,
composed only of appearances.
Fredric Jameson (born 1934)
set forth one of the first expansive theoretical treatments of Postmodernism as a
historical period, intellectual trend and social phenomenon in a series of lectures
at the Whitney Museum, later expanded as Postmodernism, or The Cultural
Logic of Late Capitalism (1991). Eclectic in his methodology, Jameson has
continued a sustained examination of the role that Periodization continues to play
as a grounding assumption of critical methodologies in Humanities disciplines. He
has contributed extensive effort to explicating the importance of concepts
of Utopianism and Utopia as driving forces in the cultural and intellectual
movements of Modernity, and outlining the political and existential uncertainties
that may result from the decline or suspension of this trend in the theorized state
of Postmodernity. Like Susan Sontag, Jameson served to introduce a wide
audience of American readers to key figures of the 20th Century Continental
European intellectual Left, particularly those associated with the Frankfurt
School, Structuralism and Post-Structuralism. Thus, his importance as a
'translator' of their ideas to the common vocabularies of a variety of disciplines in
the Anglo-American academic complex is equally as important as his own critical
engagement with them.
[edit]Contested definitions
The term "Postmodernism" is often used to refer to
different, sometimes contradictory concepts.
Conventional definitions include:
[edit]Literature
Orhan Pamuk, winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Literature.
[edit]Music
[edit]Post-postmodernism
[edit]Criticism
[edit]See also
Theory
Law
Philosophy
Ontological pluralism
Physical ontology
Postmaterialism
Politics
Post-realism
Psychology
Postmodern psychology
Religion
Postmodern Religion
Opposed by
Altermodern
Remodernism
Remodernist film
Stuckism
[edit]References
Foucault).
Postmodernism Reader.
Computerised Societies.//
12. ^ Askoxford.com
13. ^ Merriam-Webster's definition of postmodernism
14. ^ Ruth Reichl, Cook's November 1989; American
Heritage Dictionary's definition of "postmodern"
15. ^ ’Postmodernism and “the other side”’, in
Cultural Theory and Popular Culture: A reader, edited
Press, 1976.
transmitting order-worlds."
[edit]Further reading
0-87477-801-8)
3 259-68.
London.
Publications.
978-0-7190-7308-3)
16294-1)
1-59247-646-5)
0-8166-2211-6)
3:391-413.
2).
[edit]
You are here: Philosophy >> Postmodernism
Postmodernism – A Description
Postmodernism is difficult to define, because to define it would violate the postmodernist's premise
that no definite terms, boundaries, or absolute truths exist. In this article, the term “postmodernism”
will remain vague, since those who claim to be postmodernists have varying beliefs and opinions on
issues.
Are nationalism, politics, religion, and war the result of a primitive human mentality? Is truth an
illusion? How can Christianity claim primacy or dictate morals? The list of concerns goes on and on
especially for those affected by a postmodern philosophy and lifestyle. For some, the questions stem
from lost confidence in a corrupt Western world. For others, freedom from traditional authority is the
issue. Their concern centers around the West’s continued reliance on ancient and traditional religious
morals, nationalism, capitalism, inept political systems, and unwise use and adverse impact of
promoting “trade offs” between energy resources and environment, for economic gain.
According to the Postmodern Worldview, the Western world society is an outdated lifestyle disguised
under impersonal and faceless bureaucracies. The postmodernist endlessly debates the modernist
about the Western society needing to move beyond their primitiveness of ancient traditional thought
and practices.
Their concerns, for example, often include building and using weapons of mass destruction,
encouraging an unlimited amount of consumerism thus fostering a wasteful throwaway society at the
sacrifice of the earth’s resources and environment, while at the same time not serving the fair and
equitable socioeconomic needs of the populace.
Postmodernists believe that the West’s claims of freedom and prosperity continue to be nothing more
than empty promises and have not met the needs of humanity. They believe that truth is relative and
truth is up to each individual to determine for himself. Most believe nationalism builds walls, makes
enemies, and destroys “Mother Earth," while capitalism creates a “have and have not” society, and
religion causes moral friction and division among people.
Postmodernism claims to be the successor to the 17th century Enlightenment. For over four centuries,
“postmodern thinkers” have promoted and defended a New Age way of conceptualizing and
rationalizing human life and progress. Postmodernists are typically atheistic or agnostic while some
prefer to follow eastern religion thoughts and practices. Many are naturalist including humanitarians,
environmentalists, and philosophers.
They challenge the core religious and capitalistic values of the Western world and seek change for a
new age of liberty within a global community. Many prefer to live under a global, non-political
government without tribal or national boundaries and one that is sensitive to the socioeconomic
equality for all people.
Their self-rationalization of the universe and world around them pits themselves against divine
revelation versus moral relativism. Many choose to believe in naturalism and evolution rather than
God and creationism.
Postmodernism – Politics
Postmodernists protest Western society’s suppression of equal rights. They believe that the
capitalistic economic system lacks equal distribution of goods and salary. While the few rich prosper,
the mass populace becomes impoverished. Postmodernists view democratic constitutions as flawed
in substance, impossible to uphold, and unfair in principle.