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'''Postmodernism''' (sometimes abbreviated as '''Po-Mo''') is a term applied to a wide-ranging set of developments in [[critical theory]], [[philosophy]], [[architecture]], [[art]], [[literature]], and [[culture]], which are considered to have emerged from, or superseded, [[modernism]], in reaction to it, soon after the end of [[World War II]], which caused people much disillusionment.
Postmodernism series
 
  
Previous: Modernism
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Many theorists agree that we can distinguish between two senses of postmodernism: 1) postmodernism as a reaction to the [[aesthetics|aesthetic]] "modernism" of the first half of the twentieth century in architecture, art, and literature; and 2) postmodernism as a reaction to the long-standing "[[modernity]]" tradition of the [[Enlightenment]] from the eighteenth century. To be distinguished from the former which is more aesthetic, the latter is quite often called "postmodernity," referring to more [[history|historical]] and social aspects of postmodernism. The latter is closely linked with [[post-structuralism]] (cf. [[Jacques Derrida]]'s [[deconstruction]]), insinuating a rejection of the bourgeois, elitist culture of the Enlightenment. Without this distinction, postmodernism may lack a clear central hierarchy or organizing principle, embodying extreme complexity, contradiction, ambiguity, diversity, and interconnectedness or interreferentiality. But, its general features are usually considered to include: a rejection of grand narratives; a rejection of absolute and universal [[truth]]; non-existence of signified; disorientation; a use of [[parody]]; [[simulation]] without the original; late [[capitalism]]; and [[globalization]].
Postmodernity
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{{toc}}
Postmodern philosophy
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Postmodernism has invited a wide spectrum of criticisms, from conservatives who feel threatened by its rejection of absolute truth, from [[Marxism|Marxists]] who may tend to be allied with the Enlightenment, and from [[intellectuals]] who cannot make sense of it. It, however, is welcomed by schools such as [[feminism]]. It is even accommodated by Christian [[theology|theologians]] as a good opportunity to develop a more convincing, new theology, and some of the examples include [[Jean-Luc Marion]]'s [[postmetaphysical theology]] and [[John D. Caputo]]'s [[deconstructive theology]] in search of a true [[God]].
Postmodern architecture
 
Postmodern literature
 
Postmodern music
 
Critical theory
 
Globalization
 
Minimalism in Art
 
Minimalism in Music
 
Consumerism
 
  
Postmodernism is a term describing a wide-ranging change in thinking beginning in the early 20th century. It is generally characterized as either emerging from, in reaction to, or superseding modernism. Although a difficult term to pin down, "postmodern" generally refers to the criticism of absolute truths or identities and "grand narratives," prevalent in modernist systems of thought. Postmodernism has had large implications in critical theory, philosophy, architecture, art, literature, history, and culture. The adjective postmodern (in slang abbreviated to pomo) can refer to aspects of either postmodernism or postmodernity.
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==A Brief History of the Term "Postmodernism"==
  
Postmodernism can apply to movements in the arts, to mean stylistic developments such as collage, the return of ornament and historical reference, and often includes appropriation of popular media. In sociology postmodernism is said to be an economic and cultural change coming from the ubiquity of mass production and mass media. In philosophy it refers to movements surrounding post-structuralism and other critiques of positivism. Postmodernism can also be used as a pejorative term to attack changes in society seen as undesirable as they relate to questioning of absolute value systems and other forms of foundationalism.
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The question of what postmodernism means is problematic because the notion is complex. [[Ihab Hassan]], one of the first to discuss about postmodernism in the 1960s and 1970s, writes in 2001: "I know less about postmodernism today than I did thirty years ago, when I began to write about it… No consensus obtains on what postmodernism really means."<ref>Ihab Hassan, "From Postmodernism to Postmodernism," ''Philosophy and Literature'' 25:1 (2001).</ref>
  
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The [[history|historical]] origins of the term lead back at least to English painter John Watkins Chapman, who was probably the first to use the term "postmodernism." He used it in the 1870s to simply mean what is today understood to be [[Post-Impressionism|post-impressionism]]. In 1934, Spaniard [[Federico de Onis]] used the word ''postmodernismo'' as a reaction against modernist [[poetry]]. In 1939, British historian [[Arnold Toynbee]] adopted the term with an entirely different meaning: the end of the "modern" Western bourgeois order of the last two- or three-hundred-year period. In 1945, Australian art historian Bernard Smith took up the term to suggest a movement of [[social realism]] in painting beyond [[abstraction]]. In the 1950s in America, [[Charles Olson]] used the term in poetry. Only in the 1960s and 1970s was the term more popularized through theorists such as Leslie Fielder and [[Ihab Hassan]].
  
Contents
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==Two Facets of Modernism==
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Since postmodernism emerged from [[modernism]], it is essential to have some understanding of modernism first, but modernism itself is not a single entity. If we carefully look at modernism, we realize that it has two different facets, or two different definitions: 1) twentieth-century [[aesthetics|aesthetic]] modernism, which emerged during the first half of the twentieth century as a reaction to nineteenth-century traditions such as the [[Victorian Age|Victorian]] tradition; and 2) the much longer [[history|historical]] tradition of "[[modernity]]," which started from the [[humanism|humanistic]] [[rationalism]] of the [[Enlightenment]] of the eighteenth century, and which was still continuously influential till the twentieth century. Theorists such as David Lyon and Mary Klages have made this distinction between the two facets of modernism, and also a resultant distinction between two senses of postmodernism as well.<ref>David Lyon. ''Postmodernity.'' (Buckingham: Open University Press, 1994)</ref><ref>Mary Klages, [http://www.colorado.edu/English/courses/ENGL2012Klages/pomo.html "Postmodernism."] ''English Department, University of Colorado''. Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref>
  
    * 1 Uses of the term
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===Twentieth-century aesthetic modernism===
          o 1.1 Art
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{{main|Modernism}}
          o 1.2 Sociology
 
          o 1.3 Lifestyle
 
          o 1.4 Philosophy
 
          o 1.5 A general definition
 
    * 2 The development of postmodernism
 
          o 2.1 Early usage of the term
 
    * 3 Deconstruction
 
    * 4 Postmodernism's manifestations
 
          o 4.1 Postmodernism in language
 
          o 4.2 Postmodernism in art
 
          o 4.3 Postmodernism in architecture
 
          o 4.4 Postmodernism, Planning & Urban Design
 
          o 4.5 Postmodernism in graphic design
 
          o 4.6 Postmodernism in literature
 
          o 4.7 Postmodernism in music
 
          o 4.8 Postmodernism in political science
 
    * 5 Postmodernism in philosophy
 
          o 5.1 Postmodernism and post-structuralism
 
          o 5.2 Postmodernity and digital communications
 
    * 6 Postmodernism and its critics
 
    * 7 Relationship between modernism and postmodernism
 
    * 8 Further reading
 
    * 9 See also
 
          o 9.1 Theoretical postmodernism
 
          o 9.2 Cultural and political postmodernism
 
    * 10 External links
 
    * 11 Notes
 
  
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Modernism was a series of aesthetic movements of wild experimentation in visual arts, [[music]], [[literature]], [[drama]], and [[architecture]] in the first half of the twentieth century. It flourished especially between 1910 to 1930, the period of "high modernism."
  
Uses of the term
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Modernism in this sense was rooted in the changes in Western society at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth century. It was a trend of [[thought]] that affirmed the power of [[human beings]] to create, improve, and reshape their environment, with the aid of [[science|scientific]] [[knowledge]], [[technology]], and practical experimentation. Embracing change and the present, it encompassed the works of thinkers who rebelled against nineteenth-century academic and [[historicism|historicist]] traditions, believing that the traditional forms of [[art]], [[architecture]], literature, [[religion|religious]] [[faith]], social organization, and daily life were becoming "outdated." They directly confronted the new economic, social, and [[politics|political]] aspects of an emerging fully [[industrialization|industrialized]] world.
  
The term derives from postmodernity, which postmodern theorist Jean-François Lyotard understood to represent the culmination of the process of modernity and Enlightenment thought, towards an accelerating pace of cultural change, to a point where constant change has in fact become the status quo, leaving the notion of progress obsolete.
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The older ideas that history and [[civilization]] are inherently [[progressive]], and that [[progress]] is always good, came under increasing attack. Arguments arose that not merely were the values of the artist and those of [[society]] different, but that society was antithetical to progress, and could not move forward in its present form. [[Philosopher]]s called into question the previous [[optimism]].  
  
As with many other divisions, the use of the term is subject to the lumpers and splitters problem. There are those who use very small and exact definitions, and there are those who deny that there is a postmodernism at all distinct from the modern period, preferring instead to use terms such as "late modernism".
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Two of the most disruptive thinkers of the period were, in [[biology]], [[Charles Darwin]] and, in [[political science]], [[Karl Marx]]. Darwin's theory of [[evolution]] by [[natural selection]] undermined religious certainty of the general public, and the sense of human uniqueness among the [[intelligentsia]]. The notion that human beings were driven by the same impulses as "lower animals" proved to be difficult to reconcile with the idea of an ennobling spirituality. Marx seemed to present a political version of the same proposition: that problems with the economic order were not transient, the result of specific wrongdoers or temporary conditions, but were fundamentally contradictions within the "capitalist" system. Both thinkers would spawn defenders and schools of thought that would become decisive in establishing [[modernism]].
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Art
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Of course, there actually were a few reforming spiritual and [[theology|theological]] movements around the same time which also reacted against the nineteenth-century traditions. They include [[Neo-orthodoxy]] by [[Karl Barth]] in Europe, and [[pentecostalism]] and [[fundamentalism]] in America. But, they seem to have been less visible and less prevalent than activities of radical aesthetic modernism.
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Twentieth-century aesthetic modernism took diverse forms such as [[surrealism]], [[dadaism]], [[cubism]], [[expressionism]], and [[primitivism]]. These forms were apparently immediate reactions to the [[Victorian Era|Victorian]] values such as bourgeois domesticity, duty, work, decorum, referentiality, [[utilitarianism]], industry, and [[realism]]. Some of the forms of aesthetic modernism naturally resemble [[Romanticism]], which was rejected in the Victorian period. According to Dino Felluga, the features of modernist aesthetic work include:<ref>Dino Felluga, [http://www.cla.purdue.edu/English/theory/postmodernism/ "Introduction to Postmodernism."] Retrieved March 5, 2008.</ref>
  
In architecture, art, music and literature, postmodernism is a name for many stylistic reactions to, and developments from, modernism. Postmodern style is often characterized by eclecticism, digression, collage, pastiche, and irony. Some artistic movements commonly called postmodern are pop art, architectural deconstructivism, magical realism in literature, maximalism, and neo-romanticism. Postmodern theorists see postmodern art as a conflation or reversal of well-established modernist systems, such as the roles of artist versus audience, seriousness versus play, or high culture versus kitsch.
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# Self-reflexivity (as in [[Pablo Picasso|Picasso]]'s painting "Women in the Studio").
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# An exploration of [[psychology|psychological]] and subjective states (as in [[expressionism]] or stream-of-consciousness writings such as [[Virginia Woolf]]'s ''To the Lighthouse'').
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# Alternative ways of thinking about representation (as in [[cubism]]).
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# A breakdown in generic distinction (as in between poetry and prose).
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# [[Fragmentation]] in form and representation (as in [[T. S. Eliot]]'s poem "The Waste Land").
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# Extreme ambiguity and simultaneity in structure (as in [[William Faulkner]]'s multiply-narrated stories such as ''The Sound and the Fury'').
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# Some experimentation in the breakdown between high and low forms (as in [[dadaism]] or [[T.S. Eliot]]'s and [[James Joyce]]'s inclusion of folk and pop-cultural material).
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# The use of [[parody]] and [[irony]] (as in [[surrealism]], [[dadaism]], or James Joyce's ''Ulysses'').
  
Sociology
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==="Modernity" since the Enlightenment===
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{{main|Modernity}}
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In order to grasp an idea of what the "postmodernism" movement (in all its variations) is reacting against, one must first have an understanding of the definitive elements of "modernism."
  
In sociology, postmodernism is described as being the result of economic, cultural and demographic changes (related terms in this context include post-industrial society and late capitalism) and it is attributed to factors such as the rise of the service economy, the importance of the mass media and the rise of an increasingly interdependent world economy. See also postmodern, information age, globalization, global village, media theory.
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Modernism in the second definition can be traced back to the Enlightenment, which was a humanistic reaction in the eighteenth century to the premodern, medieval type of religious [[dogmatism]] which could still be found in [[Lutheranism|Lutheran]] and [[Calvinism|Calvinist]] scholasticism, [[Society of Jesus|Jesuit]] scholasticism, and the theory of the [[divine right of kings]] in the [[Church of England]] in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Of course, against this premodern type of religious dogmatism, there was another, religiously more profound, reaction in the eighteenth century, expressing itself in [[Pietism]] and [[John Wesley]]'s [[Methodism]]. But the humanistic tradition of the Enlightenment was more influential than that.
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Lifestyle
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Since its beginning, this Enlightenment tradition has a long history of [[philosophy|philosophical]], cultural, social and [[politics|political]] development until most of the twentieth century, much longer and older than twentieth-century aesthetic modernism, and it is quite often called "modernity."<ref>Lyon, 1994</ref> <ref>Klages, [http://www.colorado.edu/English/courses/ENGL2012Klages/pomo.html "Postmodernism."] Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref> This "modernity" tradition of the Enlightenment stressed the importance of the rational human self, objective [[truth]] or [[law]], order, progress, etc., and it was behind most of the nineteenth century traditions. So, when the limitations of the nineteenth century were felt, "modernity" served as an indirect background against which twentieth-century aesthetic modernism sprang. When the limitations of "modernity" were more directly felt later in the twentieth century, it issued in a reaction called postmodernism, which, as will be explained below, is of a second kind, i.e., "postmodernity."
  
As a cultural movement, postmodernism is an aspect of postmodernity, which is broadly defined as the condition of Western society after modernity. The features of culture that have contributed to postmodernity include globalization, consumerism, the fragmentation of authority, and the commoditization of knowledge. According to Lyotard, postmodernity is characterized as an "incredulity toward metanarratives", meaning that in the era of postmodern culture, people have rejected the grand, supposedly universal stories and paradigms such as religion, conventional philosophy, capitalism and gender that have defined culture and behavior in the past, and have instead begun to organize their cultural life around a variety of more local and subcultural ideologies, myths and stories. Furthermore, it promotes the idea that all such metanarratives and paradigms are stable only while they fit the available evidence, and can potentially be overturned when phenomena occur that the paradigm cannot account for, and a better explanatory model (itself subject to the same fate) is found. See La Condition postmoderne: Rapport sur le savoir (The Post Modern Condition: A Report on Knowledge[1984]) in [Lyotard [1979]], and the results of acceptance of postmodernism is the view that different realms of discourse are incommensurable and incapable of judging the results of other discourse, a conclusion he drew in Le Différend (1984).
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Clear thinking professor [[Mary Klages]], author of ''Literary Theory: A Guide for the Perplexed,'' lists basic features of "modernity" since the Enlightenment as follows:<ref>Mary Klages [http://www.colorado.edu/English/courses/ENGL2012Klages/pomo.html "Postmodernism."] Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref>
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Philosophy
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# There is a stable, coherent, knowable self. This self is conscious, rational, [[autonomy|autonomous]], and universal—no physical conditions or differences substantially affect how this self operates.
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# This self knows itself and the world through [[reason]], or rationality, posited as the highest form of mental functioning, and the only objective form.
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# The mode of knowing produced by the objective rational self is "[[science]]," which can provide universal truths about the world, regardless of the individual status of the knower.
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# The knowledge produced by science is "truth," and is eternal.
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# The knowledge/truth produced by science (by the rational objective knowing self) will always lead toward progress and perfection. All human institutions and practices can be analyzed by science (reason/objectivity) and improved.
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# Reason is the ultimate judge of what is true, and therefore of what is right, and what is good (what is legal and what is ethical). [[Freedom]] consists of obedience to the laws that conform to the knowledge discovered by reason.
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# In a world governed by reason, the true will always be the same as the good and the right (and the beautiful); there can be no conflict between what is true and what is right (etc.).
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# Science thus stands as the paradigm for any and all socially useful forms of [[knowledge]]. Science is neutral and objective; scientists, those who produce scientific knowledge through their unbiased rational capacities, must be free to follow the laws of reason, and not be motivated by other concerns (such as money or power).
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# [[Language]], or the mode of expression used in producing and disseminating knowledge, must be rational also. To be rational, language must be transparent; it must function only to represent the real/perceivable world which the rational mind observes. There must be a firm and objective connection between the objects of perception and the words used to name them (between signifier and signified).
  
In philosophy, where the term is extensively used, it applies to movements that include post-structuralism, deconstruction, multiculturalism, neo-relativism, neo-marxism, gender studies and literary theory, sometimes called simply "theory". It emerged beginning in the 1950s as a critique of doctrines such as positivism and emphasizes the importance of power relationships, personalization and discourse in the "construction" of truth and world views. In this context it has been used by many critical theorists to assert that postmodernism is a break with the artistic and philosophical tradition of the Enlightenment, which they characterize as a quest for an ever-grander and more universal system of aesthetics, ethics, and knowledge. They present postmodernism as a radical criticism of Western philosophy. Postmodern philosophy draws on a number of approaches to criticize Western thought, including historicism, and psychoanalytic theory.
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==Two Senses of Postmodernism==
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Corresponding to the two different facets of modernism, there are two distinguishable senses of postmodernism: 1) postmodernism as a reaction to twentieth-century [[aesthetics|aesthetic]] [[modernism]]; and 2) postmodernism as a reaction to the "[[modernity]]" tradition of the [[Enlightenment]]. In order to be distinguished from the former, the latter is quite often called "postmodernity."<ref>Klages, [http://www.colorado.edu/English/courses/ENGL2012Klages/pomo.html "Postmodernism."] Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref>
  
A general definition
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===A reaction to aesthetic modernism===
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Postmodernism as a reaction to twentieth-century aesthetic modernism emerged soon after [[World War II]]. It still carried most of the features of twentieth-century aesthetic modernism. So, some have argued that it is essentially just an outgrowth of modernism, and not a separate movement. But, there is a fundamental difference. It is that while aesthetic modernism had presented fragmentation, for example, as something tragic to be lamented (as in Eliots' "The Waste Land"), postmodernism no longer laments it but rather celebrates it. Thus, postmodernism is inclined to stay with meaninglessness, playing with nonsense. Dino Felluga sees this difference and lists some of the things "that distinguish postmodern aesthetic work from modernist work" as follows:<ref>Felluga, [http://www.cla.purdue.edu/English/theory/postmodernism/ "Introduction to Postmodernism."] Retrieved March 5, 2008.</ref>
  
The term postmodernism is also used in a broader pejorative sense to describe attitudes, sometimes part of the general culture, and sometimes specifically aimed at critical theories perceived as relativist, nihilist, counter-Enlightenment or antimodern, particularly in relationship to critiques of rationalism, universalism, or science. It is also sometimes used to describe social changes which are held to be antithetical to traditional systems of philosophy, religion, and morality.
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# Extreme self-reflexivity, more playful and even irrelevant (as in pop artist Roy Lichtenstein's "Masterpiece" or architect Frank Gehry's Nationale-Nederlanden Building in [[Prague]]).
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# Irony and parody (many examples in pop culture and media advertising). Regarding how to assess it, postmodern theorists are divided. While Linda Hutcheon, for example, values parody as a postmodern way to resist all ideological positions,<ref>Linda Hutcheon. ''The Politics of Postmodernism.'' (New York: Routledge, 1989).</ref> [[Marxism|Marxist]] critic Fredric Jameson characterizes it as "blank parody" or "pastiche" without any motive or impulse in the dystopic postmodern age in which we have lost our connection to history.<ref>Fredric Jameson. ''Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism.'' {Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1991).</ref> 
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# A breakdown between high and low [[culture|cultural]] forms in more immediately understandable ways (as in [[Andy Warhol]]'s painting for Campbell's Tomato Soup cans).
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# Retro. It is to use styles and fashions from the past with fascination but completely out of their original context (as in postmodern [[architecture]] in which medieval, [[baroque]], and modern elements are often juxtaposed). Fredric Jameson and [[Jean Baudrillard]] tend to regard it as a symptom of our loss of connection to [[history]] in which the history of aesthetic styles and fashions displaces real history.
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# A further questioning of grand narratives (as in Madonna videos such as "Like a Prayer" and "Material Girl," which question the grand narratives of traditional [[Christianity]], [[capitalism]], etc.).
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# Visuality and the simulacrum vs. temporality. The predominance of visual [[media]] (tv, film, media advertising, the [[computer]]) has lead to the use of visual forms (as in Art Spiegelman's graphic novel ''Maus: A Surviver's Tale'' through the medium of comics). Visuality also explains some other related features of aesthetic postmodernism: a more breakdown between high and low cultural forms, and a retro. Baudrillard and others have argued that a retro involves copies ("simulacra") of the past without any connection to real past history, blurring the distinction between representation and temporal reality.<ref>Jean Baudrillard. ''Simulacra and Simulation,'' trans. Sheila Faria Glaser (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1994).</ref>
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# Late capitalism whose dominance is generally feared (as in the predominance of [[paranoia]] narratives in [[movie]]s such as "Blade Runner" and "the Matrix"). This fear is aided by advancements in technology, especially surveillance technology, which creates the sense that we are always being watched.
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# Disorientation (as in MTV or those films that seek to disorient the viewer completely through the revelation of a truth that changes everything that came before).
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# Return of orality (based on an influx of oral media sources such as tv, film, and radio).
  
The role, proper usage, and meaning of postmodernism remain matters of intense debate and vary widely with context.
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Postmodernism in this sense was much discussed in the 1960s and 1970s by theorists such as Leslie Fielder and [[Ihab Hassan]],<ref>See, for example, Leslie Fiedler, "The New Mutants," ''Partisan Review'' 32 (4) (Fall 1965); Ihab Hassan, "The Literature of Silence," ''Encounter'' 28 (1) (January 1967).</ref> although Hassan gradually extended his discussion to a general critique of Western [[culture]], somewhat dealing with postmodernism in the other sense as well. Many other theorists such as Baudrillard, Jameson, and Hutcheson later joined the discussion on postmodernism in the first sense, perhaps having in mind postmodernism in the other sense as well.
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The development of postmodernism
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==="Postmodernity": a reaction to modernity===
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Up until the 1970s the discussion on postmodernism was generally confined to postmodernism in its first sense. In 1980, however, [[Jürgen Habermas]]'s lecture on "Modernity: An Unfinished Project"<ref>Jürgen Habermas, "Modernity: An Unfinished Project," in ''Habermas and the Unfinished Project of Modernity: Critical Essays on The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity,'' ed. Maurizio Passerin d'Entrèves and Seyla Benhabib. (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997).</ref> helped bring a shift in the discussion from postmodernism in its first sense (i.e., a reaction to twentieth-century aesthetic modernism) to postmodernism in the second sense (i.e., postmodernity), ironically because of its strong defense of modernity against postmodernity. Of course, the debate on modernity versus postmodernity had already started with the involvement of critics such as [[Martin Heidegger]], [[Michel Foucault]], [[Jean-François Lyotard]], [[Richard Rorty]], and [[Jacques Derrida]] in favor of postmodernity, as they felt that the modernity tradition of the [[Enlightenment]] was in crisis because of the emergence of problems such as [[alienation]] and exploitation within that tradition in spite of its original promise of positive cultural and social development. But, when Habermas was trying to defend modernity as an "unfinished project" we should not abandon yet, it prompted those who were in favor of postmodernity to react. Since then, a large volume of [[literature]] has continued to snowball, focusing on postmodernity as the more important facet of postmodernism.
  
Features of postmodern culture begin to arise in the 1920s with the emergence of the Dada movement, which featured collage and a focus on the framing of objects and discourse as being as important, or more important, than the work itself. Another strand which would have tremendous impact on post-modernism would be the existentialists, who placed the centrality of the individual narrative as being the source of morals and understanding. However, it is with the end of the Second World War that recognizably post-modernist attitudes begin to emerge.
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Habermas now became the target of criticism especially from Lyotard, who published ''The Postmodern Condition'' in English in 1984, his best-known and most influential work.<ref>Jean-François Lyotard. ''The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge,'' trans. Geoff Bennington and Brian Massumi (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1984).</ref> Lyotard declared the end of the Enlightenment and rejected its tradition of "grand narrative," a totalistic, universal theory which promises to explain and solve all problems by one set of ideas.
  
Central to these is the focusing on the problems of any knowledge which is founded on anything external to an individual. Post-modernism, while widely diverse in its forms, almost invariably begins from the problem of knowledge which is broadly disseminated in its form, but not limited in its interpretation. Post-modernism rapidly developed a vocabulary of anti-enlightenment rhetoric, used to argue that rationality was neither as sure nor as clear as rationalists supposed, and that knowledge was inherently linked to time, place, social position and other factors from which an individual constructs their view of knowledge. To escape from constructed knowledge, it then becomes necessary to critique it, and thus deconstruct the asserted knowledge. Jacques Derrida argued that to defend against the inevitable self-deconstruction, or breaking down, of knowledge, systems of power (called hegemony) would have to postulate an original utterance, the logos. This "privileging" of an original utterance is called "logocentrism".
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After summarizing modernity in terms of order and rationality, Mary Klages lists some of the basic characteristics of postmodernity over against it, as follows:<ref>Klages [http://www.colorado.edu/English/courses/ENGL2012Klages/pomo.html "Postmodernism."] Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref>
  
Instead of rooting knowledge in particular utterances, or "texts", the basis of knowledge was seen to be in the free play of discourse itself, an idea rooted in Wittgenstein's idea of a language game. This emphasis on the allowability of free play within the context of conversation and discourse leads postmodernism to adopt the stance of irony, paradox, textual manipulation, reference and tropes.
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# Postmodernity is, as is expressed especially by Lyotard, the critique of grand narratives, the awareness that such narratives in favor of "order" serve to mask the contradictions and instabilities that are inherent in any social organization or practice even including Marxist society. It rejects grand narratives about large-scale or global universal concepts in favor of more situational and provisional "mini-narratives" about small practices and local events.
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# There are only signifiers. Signifieds do not exist.
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# This means that there are only copies, i.e., what [[Baudrillard]] calls "simulacra," and that there are no originals. For example, cds and music recordings have no original. Related to this is the concept of [[virtual reality]], a reality created by a computer [[simulation]] game, for which there is no original.
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# [[Knowledge]] is not good for its own sake. Its functionality or utility is more important.
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# Knowledge is also distributed, stored, and arranged differently thought the emergence of computer technology, without which it ceases to be knowledge. The important thing about knowledge is not to assess it as [[truth]] (its technical quality), as goodness or [[justice]] (its ethical quality), or as [[beauty]] (its aesthetic quality), but rather to see who decides what knowledge is, and who knows what needs to be decided. In other words, says Lyotard, knowledge follows the paradigm of a [[language]] game, as laid out by [[Wittgenstein]].
  
Armed with this process of questioning the social basis of assertions, postmodernist philosophers began to attack unities of modernism, and particularly unities seen as being rooted in the Enlightenment. Since Modernism had made the Enlightenment a central source of its superiority over the Victorian and Romantic periods, this attack amounted to an indirect attack on the establishment of modernism itself. Perhaps the most striking examples of this skepticism are to be found in the works of French cultural theorist, Jean Baudrillard. In his book Simulacra and Simulation(1981), he contends that social "reality" no longer exists in the conventional sense, but has been supplanted by an endless procession of simulacra. The mass media, and other forms of mass cultural production, generate constant re-appropriation and re-contextualisation of familiar cultural symbols and images, fundamentally shifting our experience away from "reality", to "hyperreality".
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'''Deconstruction:'''
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{{Main|Deconstruction}}
  
Postmodernism therefore has an obvious distrust toward claims about truth, ethics, or beauty being rooted in anything other than individual perception and group construction. Utopian ideals of universally applicable truths or aesthetics give way to provisional, decentered, local petit récits which, rather than referencing an underlying universal truth or aesthetic, point only to other ideas and cultural artifacts, themselves subject to interpretation and re-interpretation. The "truth", since it can only be understood by all of its connections is perpetually "deferred", never reaching a point of fixed knowledge which can be called "the truth." This emphasis on construction and consensus often breeds antagonism with scientific thinking, as the Sokal Affair shows.
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What should be added to the list as an important aspect of postmodernity is [[Jacques Derrida]]'s project of [[deconstruction]] as an attempt to criticize what is called logocentrism beyond text.
  
Postmodernism is often used in a larger sense, meaning the entire trend of thought in the late 20th century, and the social and philosophical realities of that period. Marxist critics argue that post-modernism is symptomatic of "late capitalism" and the decline of institutions, particularly the nation-state. Other thinkers assert that post-modernity is the natural reaction to mass broadcasting and a society conditioned to mass production and mass political decision making. The ability of knowledge to be endlessly copied, defeats attempts to constrain interpretation, or to set "originality" by simple means such as the production of a work. From this perspective, the schools of thought labelled "postmodern" are not as widely at odds with their time period as the polemics and arguments appear to point, for example, to the shift of the basis of scientific knowledge to a provisional consensus of scientists, as posited by Thomas Kuhn. Post-modernism is seen, in this view, as being conscious of the nature of the discontinuity between modern and post-modern periods which is generally present.
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The term "deconstruction," coined by Derrida, came from [[Heidegger]], who called for the destruction or deconstruction (the German "Destruktion" connotes both English words) of the history of [[ontology]]. In later usage, "deconstruction" became an important textual "occurrence." According to Derrida, the project of deconstruction implies that there is no intrinsic essence to a text, merely the "play" of difference (which he dubbed ''différance'' to capture the French sense of the term meaning both "to differ" and "to defer").  
  
Postmodernism has manifestations in many modern academic and non-academic disciplines: philosophy, theology, art, architecture, film, television, music, theatre, sociology, fashion, technology, literature, and communications are all heavily influenced by postmodern trends and ideas, and are thoroughly scrutinised from postmodern perspectives. Crucial to these are the denial of customary expectations, the use of non-orthogonal angles in buildings such as the work of Frank Gehry, and the shift in arts exemplified by the rise of minimalism in art and music. Post-modern philosophy often labels itself as critical theory and grounds the construction of identity in the mass media.
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A deconstruction is created when the "deeper" substance of text opposes the text's more "superficial" form. This idea is not unique to Derrida but is related to the idea of [[hermeneutics]] in literature; intellectuals as early as [[Plato]] asserted it and so did modern thinkers such as [[Leo Strauss]]. Derrida's argument is that deconstruction proves that texts have multiple meanings, and that the "violence" between the different meanings of text may be elucidated by close textual analysis. According to Derrida, deconstruction is not a method or a tool but an occurrence within the text itself. Writings ''about'' deconstruction are therefore referred to in academic circles as ''deconstructive readings.''
  
Postmodernism was first identified as a theoretical discipline in the 1970s, but as a cultural movement it predates them by many years. Exactly when modernism began to give way to postmodernism depends on the observer and the theoretical framework. Some theorists reject that such a distinction even exists, viewing postmodernism, for all its claims of fragmentation and plurality, as still existing within a larger "modernist" framework. The philosopher Jürgen Habermas is a strong proponent of this view, which has aspects of a lumpers/splitters problem: is the entire 20th century one period, or two distinct periods?
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Deconstruction is far more important to postmodernism than its seemingly narrow focus on ''text'' might imply. According to Derrida, therefore, one consequence of deconstruction is that the text may be defined so broadly as to encompass not just written words but the entire spectrum of [[symbol]]s and [[phenomenon|phenomena]] within Western thought. To Derrida, a result of deconstruction is that no [[Western philosophy|Western philosophers]] have been able to escape successfully from this large web of text and reach that which is "signified," which they have imagined to exist "just beyond" the text.
  
The theory gained some of its strongest ground early on in French academia. In 1979 Jean-François Lyotard wrote a short but influential work The Postmodern Condition : a report on knowledge. Jean Baudrillard, Michel Foucault, and Roland Barthes (in his more post-structural work) are also strongly influential in postmodern theory. Postmodernism is closely allied with several contemporary academic disciplines, most notably those connected with sociology. Many of its assumptions are integral to feminist and post-colonial theory.
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===Relationship of the two: the same postmodern pie===
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The two different senses of postmodernism are reactions to the two different facets of modernism, respectively. One can observe that the reaction of postmodernity to modernity seems to be more radical than that of aesthetic postmodernism to twentieth-century aesthetic modernism, for whereas postmodernity is a big leap from modernity, aesthetic postmodernism still resembles twentieth-century aesthetic modernism at least in some external ways. Aesthetic modernism was already a very progressive movement in the first half of the twentieth century; so, aesthetic postmodernism, reacting to it, does not have to be a very big leap.  
  
Some identify the burgeoning anti-establishment movements of the 1960s as the earliest trend out of cultural modernity toward postmodernism.
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However, it is safe to say that the two different senses of postmodernism cohere and are not separate, even though they are originally two different reactions to the two different facets of modernism, respectively. Timewise, they both started soon after [[World War II]]. In terms of content as well, they concur in many respects. They interact, and "the postmodern turn can result from the interaction between" the two "in the postmodern pie."<ref>Craig Bartholomew, [http://www.biblicalstudies.org.uk/pdf/scholarship_bartholomew.pdf "Post/Late? Modernity as the Context for Christian Scholarship Today."] Retrieved March 10, 2008.</ref> One good example of this interaction is references made by Foucault and Derrida to Belgian artist [[René Magritte]]'s experiments with signification, with their appreciative understanding of Magritte's suggestion that no matter how realistically the artist can depict an item, verisimilitude is still an artistic strategy, a mere representation of the thing, not the thing itself.<ref>For example, Michel Foucault, ''This Is Not a Pipe,'' trans. James Harkness (University of California Press, 1983); and Jacques Derrida, ''The Truth in Painting,'' trans. Geoffrey Bennington and Ian McLeod (Chicago: University Of Chicago Press, 1987).</ref>
  
Tracing it further back, some identify its roots in the breakdown of Hegelian idealism, and the impact of both World Wars (perhaps even the concept of a World War). Heidegger and Derrida were influential in re-examining the fundamentals of knowledge, together with the work of Ludwig Wittgenstein and his philosophy of language, Søren Kierkegaard's and Karl Barth's important fideist approach to theology, and even the nihilism of Nietzsche's philosophy. Michel Foucault's application of Hegel to thinking about the body is also identified as an important landmark. While it is rare to pin down the specific origins of any large cultural shift, writers such as John Ralston Saul among others have argued that postmodernism represents an accumulated disillusionment with the promises of the Enlightenment project and its progress of science, so central to modern thinking.
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The interaction of the two has resulted in a convergence of them also. Today, as some of the general characteristics of postmodernism as a whole, the following points in more popular terms are mentioned:
  
The movement has had diverse political ramifications: its anti-ideological ideas appear conducive to, and strongly associated with, the feminist movement, racial equality movements, gay rights movements, most forms of late 20th century anarchism, even the peace movement and various hybrids of these in the current anti-globalization movement. Unsurprisingly, none of these institutions entirely embraces all aspects of the postmodern movement in its most concentrated definition, but reflect, or in true postmodern style, borrow from some of its core ideas.
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# No absolute truth.
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# No absolute [[ethics|ethical]] standard. Hence the cause of [[feminism|feminists]] and [[homosexuality|homosexuals]] should also be tolerated.
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# No absolute [[religion]]. This means to promote religious inclusivism. It usually leans toward the [[New Age]] religion.
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# Globalization. There is no absolute nation. National boundaries hinder human communication.
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# Pro-environmentalism. Western society is blamed for the destruction of the environment.
  
Early usage of the term
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==Criticizing Postmodernism==
  
In an essay From Postmodernism to Postmodernity: the Local/Global Context, [1], Ihab Hassan points out a number of instances in which the term postmodernism was used before the term became popular:
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Interestingly, postmodernism has invited a wide spectrum of criticisms, not only from conservatives but also from [[Marxism|Marxist]] scholars and other intellectuals.
  
    * John Watkins Chapman, an English salon painter, in the 1870s, to mean Post-Impressionism;
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===Conservative criticisms===
    * Federico de Onís, 1934, (postmodernismo) to mean a reaction against the difficulty and experimentalism of modernist poetry;
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The term "postmodernism" is sometimes used to describe tendencies in society that are held to be antithetical to traditional systems of [[morality]]. Elements of the [[Christian Right]], in particular, have interpreted postmodern society to be synonymous with moral [[relativism]] and contributing to deviant behavior. Conservative [[Christianity|Christians]] also criticize postmodernism of being a serious challenge to scripture, [[creed]]s and confessions, and ecclesiastical tradition, which they regard as foundations of their [[faith]]. [[Islam|Muslim]] [[fundamentalism]], too, dislikes postmodernity in much the same way, even banning postmodern books such as [[Salman Rushdie]]'s ''The Satanic Verses.''
    * Arnold J. Toynbee, in 1939, to mean the end of the "modern," Western bourgeois order dating back to the seventeenth century;
 
    * Bernard Smith, in 1945, to mean the movement of socialist realism in painting.
 
    * Charles Olson, during the 1950s;
 
    * Irving Howe and Harry Levin, in 1959 and 1960, respectively, to mean a decline in high modernist culture.
 
  
Also, many cite Charles Jencks' 1977 "The Language of Postmodern Architecture" among the earliest works which shaped the use of the term today.
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===Marxist criticisms===
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[[Jürgen Habermas]], a member of the [[Frankfurt School]] who is somewhat connected to Marxism, has an interesting criticism of postmodernity, saying that it is "[[neoconservatism|neo-conservative]]."<ref>Jürgen Habermas, "Modernity: An Unfinished Project," in ''Habermas and the Unfinished Project of Modernity: Critical Essays on The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity,'' ed. Maurizio Passerin d'Entrèves and Seyla Benhabib (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997).</ref> According to him, postmodernity is neo-conservative because it is irrational and potentially [[Fascism|fascist]] in its abandonment of the [[reason|rational]] program of the modernity tradition of the [[Enlightenment]]. Postmodernity, says Habermas, comes from the problematic tradition of what is called the "Counter-Enlightenment," which belittles autonomous rationality of the individual, scientific objectivity, rationalistic universalism, and public [[law]] in favor of [[will]], [[spirit]], and [[imagination]]. He argues that even though the Enlightenment may not have been perfect, we have to rehabilitate it.
  
For a thorough historical overview distinguishing the threads of development in different decades, cultural realms, and academic disciplines, see Hans Bertens' The Idea of the Postmodern: A History, (New York: Routledge, 1995).
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Frederic Jameson, a Marxist, has offered an influential criticism of postmodernism.<ref>Frederic Jameson. ''Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism.''</ref> According to him, what lies behind postmodernism is the [[logic]] of "late [[capitalism]]," i.e., [[consumer capitalism]], with its emphasis on marketing and consuming commodities, and not on producing them. One serious symptom of postmodernism today, therefore, is that the [[history|historical]] past has been shallowly transformed into a series of emptied-out stylizations, which are then consumed as commodities easily. Jameson relates this symptom to what he calls "pastiche" as contrasted from "parody." While parody can still make a strong [[politics|political]] critique to the establishment based on its norms of [[judgment]], pastiche as a juxtaposition of emptied-out stylizations without a normative grounding is "amputated of the satiric impulse, devoid of laughter." This also means a loss of our connection to real history. His criticism of postmodernism resembles [[Jean Baudrillard]]'s based on his notion of "simulacra" (copies) of the past without any connection to real past history.
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Deconstruction
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Alex Callinicos, not quite satisfied with the criticisms by Habermas and Jameson, has presented a stronger criticism.<ref>Alex Callinicos. ''Against Postmodernism: A Marxist Critique.'' (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1990).</ref> Callinicos blames the irrationalism and tepid relativism of [[Derrida]] and others, saying that it is simply constituted by a [[nihilism|nihilistic]] reaction of those disillusioned bourgeois academics who experienced the failure of the [[student insurrection of Paris 1968]] which ruled out any chance of a "people's revolution." Thus, it carries no sense of political resistance at all. Callinicos also attacks the theory of "post-industrial" society, which claims that "post-industrial" society with its mystified structures of global or disorganized capital in the postmodern age is beyond the ken of Marxism. For him, there is no such thing as post-industrial society, and worldwide revolution is still necessary. Still another criticism from him is directed toward the alleged existence of aesthetic postmodernism; according to him, it actually does not exist as it is nothing more than a refinement of aesthetic modernism.
  
    Main article: Deconstruction
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===Meaningless and disingenuous===
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The [[linguistics|linguist]] [[Noam Chomsky]] has suggested that postmodernism is meaningless because it adds nothing to analytical or [[empiricism|empirical]] knowledge. He asks why postmodernist intellectuals won't respond as "people in physics, math, biology, linguistics, and other fields are happy to do when someone asks them, seriously, what are the principles of their theories, on what evidence are they based, what do they explain that wasn't already obvious, etc. These are fair requests for anyone to make. If they can't be met, then I'd suggest recourse to Hume's advice in similar circumstances: to the flames."<ref>Noam Chomsky, [http://www.cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/chomsky-on-postmodernism.html "On Postmodernism."] Retrieved December 18, 2007.</ref>
  
Deconstruction is a term which is used to denote the application of post-modern ideas of criticism, or theory, to a "text" or "artifact". A deconstruction is meant to undermine the frame of reference and assumptions that underpin the text or the artifact.  
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<blockquote>There are lots of things I don't understand—say, the latest debates over whether neutrinos have mass or the way that Fermat's last theorem was (apparently) proven recently. But from 50 years in this game, I have learned two things: (1) I can ask friends who work in these areas to explain it to me at a level that I can understand, and they can do so, without particular difficulty; (2) if I'm interested, I can proceed to learn more so that I will come to understand it. Now Derrida, Lacan, Lyotard, Kristeva, etc.—even Foucault, whom I knew and liked, and who was somewhat different from the rest—write things that I also don't understand, but (1) and (2) don't hold: no one who says they do understand can explain it to me and I haven't a clue as to how to proceed to overcome my failures. That leaves one of two possibilities: (a) some new advance in intellectual life has been made, perhaps some sudden genetic mutation, which has created a form of "theory" that is beyond quantum theory, topology, etc., in depth and profundity; or (b) … I won't spell it out. Noam Chomsky </blockquote>
  
In its original use, a "deconstruction" is an important textual "occurrence" described and analyzed by many postmodern authors and philosophers. They argued that aspects in the text itself would undermine its own authority or assumptions, that internal contradictions would erase boundaries or categories which the work relied on or asserted. Post-structuralists beginning with Jacques Derrida, who coined the term, argued that the existence of deconstructions implied that there was no intrinsic essence to a text, merely the contrast of difference. This is analogous to the scientific idea that only the variations are real, that there is no established norm to a genetic population, or the idea that the difference in perception between black and white is the context. A deconstruction is created when the "deeper" substance of text opposes the text's more "superficial" form. This too is not an idea isolated to post-structuralists, but is related to the idea of hermeneutics in literature, and was asserted as early as Plato, and by modern thinkers such as Leo Strauss. Derrida's argument is that deconstruction proves that texts have multiple meanings, and the "violence" between the different meanings of text may be elucidated by close textual analysis.
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The criticism of postmodernism as ultimately meaningless [[rhetoric|rhetorical]] gymnastics was demonstrated in the [[Sokal Affair]], where physicist [[Alan Sokal]] proposed and delivered for publication an article purportedly about interpreting [[physics]] and [[mathematics]] in terms of postmodern theory, which he had deliberately distorted to make it nonsensical. It was nevertheless published by ''Social Text'' a postmodernist [[culture|cultural]] studies journal published by Duke University. Interestingly, editors at ''Social Text'' never acknowledged that the article's publication had been a mistake but supported a counter-argument defending the "interpretative validity" of Sokal's article, despite the author's later rebuttal of his own article.
  
Popularly, close textual analyses describing deconstruction within a text are often themselves called deconstructions. Derrida argued, however, that deconstruction is not a method or a tool, but an occurrence within the text itself. Writings about deconstruction perhaps are referred to in academic circles as deconstructive readings, in conformance with this view of the word.
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==Beyond the End of the Postmodern Era==
  
Deconstruction is far more important to postmodernism than its seemingly narrow focus on text might imply. According to Derrida, one consequence of deconstruction is that the text may be defined so broadly as to encompass not just written words, but the entire spectrum of symbols and phenomena within Western thought. To Derrida, a result of deconstruction is that no Western philosopher has been able to successfully escape from this large web of text and reach the purely text-free "signified" which they imagined to exist "just beyond" the text.
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Among the many criticisms, strictly speaking, there are some who have actually stated against postmodernism that the postmodern era has already ended, suggesting the coming of a new age of "post-postmodernism," which is a return of many of the features of modernity. British photographer David Bate observes that postmodernism has been replaced with what he calls "neo-realism" in which the postmodern type of representation no longer exists and instead "descriptive" works as in the [[photography]] exhibition in 2003 at the [[Tate Modern]] in [[London]] called ''Cruel and Tender: The Real in the Twentieth Century'' have emerged "to produce a reality as though this is 'as it really is', to make reality certain through realism and without interrogating it."<ref>David Bate[http://www.lensculture.com/bate1.html "After Modernism?"] ''www.lensculture.com''. Retrieved March 12, 2008.</ref> In his essay "The Death of Postmodernism and Beyond," literary critic [[Alan Kirby]] argues that we now inhabit an entirely new cultural landscape, which he calls "pseudo-modernism": "Postmodernism conceived of contemporary culture as a spectacle before which the individual sat powerless, and within which questions of the real were problematised. It therefore emphasised the television or the cinema screen. Its successor, which I will call ''pseudo-modernism,'' makes the individual's action the necessary condition of the cultural product."<ref>Alan Kirby, 2006.[http://www.philosophynow.org/issue58/58kirby.htm "The Death of Postmodernism and Beyond."].''Philosophy Now- A magazine of Ideas''. Retrieved March 12, 2008.</ref>
  
The more common use of the term is the more general process of pointing to contradictions between the intent and surface of a work, and the assumptions about it. A work then "deconstructs" assumptions when it places them in context. For example, someone who can pass as the opposite sex is said to "deconstruct" gender roles, because there is a conflict between the superficial appearance, and the reality of the person's gender.
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==Accommodating Postmodernism==
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Postmodernism's manifestations
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Postmodernism has also been appreciated by various schools leaning toward [[liberalism]] such as [[feminism]] and accommodated even by [[religion|religious]] and [[theology|theological]] people especially in [[Christianity]].
[edit]
 
  
Postmodernism in language
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===Feminist appreciation===
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Some feminists such as [[Julia Kristeva]], Jane Flax, and Judith Butler have found postmodernism to be in support of their cause. According to them, the categorization of the male/female binary in society came from the modernity tradition of the [[Enlightenment]], and therefore it must be deconstructed. The gender difference is not naturally given. This position has built on the ideas of not only [[Simone de Beauvoir]] but also [[Michel Foucault]], [[Jacques Derrida]], etc., and it can be called "postmodern feminism" to be distinguished from other branches of [[feminism]].
  
Important to postmodernism's role in language is the focus on the implied meaning of words and forms the power structures that are accepted as part of the way words are used, from the use of the word "Man" with a capital "M" to refer to the collective humanity, to the default of the word "he" in English as a pronoun for a person of gender unknown to the speaker, or as a casual replacement for the word "one". This, however, is merely the most obvious example of the changing relationship between diction and discourse which postmodernism presents.
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===Religious and theological accommodations===
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Some religious people welcome the [[relativism|relativist]] stance of postmodernism that says that there is no universal religious [[truth]] or [[law]], for they believe that it provides an opportunity for interreligious dialogue with a spirit of [[pluralism]]. For a completely different reason, conservative believers, who are otherwise far from appreciative of postmodernism, welcome the condition of postmodern vacuum as a good context for evangelism: "A growing number of these Christians are embracing some postmodern ideas—- not uncritically, but believing they offer an authentic context for Christian living and fresh avenues of evangelism."<ref>Six postmodern Christians discuss the possibilities and limits of postmodernism. A forum with Carlos Aguilar, Vincent Bacote, Andy Crouch, Catherine Crouch, Sherri King, and Chris Simmons [http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2000/november13/7.74.html "The Antimoderns: Six Postmodern Christians Discuss the Possibilities and Limits of Postmodernism."]. November 13, 2000. ''Christianity Today''. Retrieved March 13, 2008.</ref>
  
An important concept in postmodernism's view of language is the idea of "play" text. In the context of postmodernism, play means changing the framework which connects ideas, and thus allows the troping, or turning, of a metaphor or word from one context to another, or from one frame of reference to another. Since, in postmodern thought, the "text" is a series of "markings" whose meaning is imputed by the reader, and not by the author, this play is the means by which the reader constructs or interprets the text, and the means by which the author gains a presence in the reader's mind. Play then involves invoking words in a manner which undermines their authority, by mocking their assumptions or style, or by layers of misdirection as to the intention of the author.
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There are also theologically ambitious Christians who accommodate the challenge of postmodernism in such a creative way as to come up with a more understandable and even convincing, new theology in the midst of postmodern uncertainty. ''The Cambridge Companion to Postmodern Theology'' lists seven types of such theologians:<ref>Kevin J. Vanhoozer, ed., ''The Cambridge Companion to Postmodern Theology.'' (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003).</ref>
  
Another key concept is the view that people are, essentially, blank slated linguistically, and that social acclimation, cultural factors, habituation and images are the primary ways of shaping the structure of how people view the outside world. For this reason Postmodernism in language is associated with post-structuralism and associated theories of nurture-driven intellectual development.
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# Theology of communal practice, which enables us to see the patterns of [[God]] in communities not through any theoretical foundations of modernism (John Howard Yoder, Nicholas Lash, etc.).
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# Postliberal theology, which involves [[Bible|biblical]] narratives to make the characters in the stories come alive, avoiding reaching any timeless core doctrine (George Lindbeck, etc.).
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# Postmetaphysical theology, which expresses God not in terms of being but rather in terms of goodness or [[love]] (Jean-Luc Marion, etc.).
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# Deconstructive theology, which goes through [[Derrida]]'s deconstruction, but which ends up being a way of longing for God after deconstruction (John D. Caputo, etc.)
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# Reconstructive theology, which is [[Alfred North Whitehead|Whiteheadian]] postmodernism, pursuing a non-dogmatic theological reconstruction after deconstruction (David Ray Griffin, John B. Cobb, Jr., etc.).
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# Feminist theology (Judith Butler, etc.).
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# Radical orthodoxy, which presents classical Christianity as a genuine alternative not only to modernity but also to postmodernity (John Milbank, Catherine Pickstock, Graham Ward, etc.).  
  
This view of writing is not without harsh detractors, who regard it as needlessly difficult and obscure, and a violation of the implicit contract of lucidity between author and reader: that an author has something to communicate, and shall choose words which transmit the idea as transparently as possible to the reader. Thus postmodernism in language has often been identified with poor writing and communication skills. The term pomobabble came to be within pop culture to illustrate this trend.
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From above, it seems that postmodernism that may have brought a lot of challenges to many people is not necessarily an unpleasant thing but rather a good thing from which something new, truthful, and reliable can be expected to come.
  
Postmodern philosophers are often regarded as difficult to read, and the critical theory that has sprung up in the wake of postmodernism has often been ridiculed for its stilted syntax and attempts to combine polemical tone and a vast array of new coinages. However, similar charges could be levelled at the works of previous eras, such as the works of Immanuel Kant, as well as at the entire tradition of Greek thought in antiquity.
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==Notes==
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<div class="references-small">
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<references/>
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</div>
  
Postmodernism in art
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==References==
  
    Main article: Postmodern art
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* Baudrillard, Jean. ''Simulacra and Simulation,'' Translated by Sheila Faria Glaser. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1994. ISBN 0472065211
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* Bauman, Zygmunt. ''Liquid Modernity.'' Cambridge: Polity Press. 2000. ISBN 9780745624105
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* Beck, Ulrich. ''Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity.'' London; Newbury Park, Calif.: Sage Publications, 1992. ISBN 9780803983465
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* Benhabib, Seyla, et al. ''Feminism Contentions: A Philosophical Exchange.'' New York: Routledge. 1995. ISBN 9780415910866
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* Berman, Marshall. ''All That Is Solid Melts Into Air: The Experience of Modernity.'' New York: Simon and Schuster, 1982. ISBN 0140109625.
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* Bertens, Hans. ''The Idea of the Postmodern: A History.'' London: Routledge. 1995. ISBN 0145060125
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* Bielskis, Andrius. ''Towards a Postmodern Understanding of the Political: From Genealogy to Hermeneutics.'' New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. ISBN 9781403995995
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* Brass, Tom. ''Peasants, Populism and Postmodernism.'' London: F. Cass, 2000. ISBN 9780714680002
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* Callinicos, Alex. ''Against Postmodernism: A Marxist Critique.'' New York: St. Martin's Press, 1990. ISBN 9780312042257
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* Castells, Manuel. ''The Rise of the Network Society.'' Malden, Mass.: Blackwell Publishers, 1996. ISBN 9781557866165
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* Coupland, Douglas. ''Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture.'' New York: St. Martin's Press, 1991. ISBN 9780312054366
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* D'Entrèves, Maurizio Passerin, and Seyla Benhabib, eds. ''Habermas and the Unfinished Project of Modernity: Critical Essays on The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity.'' Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1997. ISBN 0262540800
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* Derrida, Jacques. ''The Truth in Painting,'' Translated by Geoffrey Bennington and Ian McLeod. Chicago: University Of Chicago Press, 1987. ISBN 0226143244
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* Foucault, Michel. ''This Is Not a Pipe,'' Translated by James Harkness. University of California Press, 1983. ISBN 0520049160
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* Giddens, Anthony. ''Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age.'' Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1991. ISBN 9780804719438
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* Groothuis, Douglas R. ''Truth Decay: Defending Christianity Against the Challenges of Postmodernism.'' Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity Press, 2000. ISBN 0830822283
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* Hassan, Ihab. "From Postmodernism to Postmodernism," ''Philosophy and Literature'' 25(1)(2001).
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* Harvey, David. ''The Condition of Postmodernity: An Enquiry into the Origins of Cultural Change.'' Cambridge, Mass.: USA: Blackwell, 1989. ISBN 9780631162940
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* Hicks, Stephen R.C. ''Explaining Postmodernism: Skepticism and Socialism from Rousseau to Foucault.'' Tempe, Ariz.: Scholarly Pub., 2004. ISBN 9781592476428
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* Hutcheon, Linda. ''The Politics of Postmodernism.'' New York: Routledge, [1989] 2002. ISBN 0415280168
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* Jameson, Fredric. ''Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism.'' Durham: Duke University Press, 1991. ISBN 9780822309291
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* Lyon, David. ''Postmodernity.'' Buckingham: Open University Press, 1994. ISBN 978-0816632268
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* Lyotard, Jean-François. ''The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge,'' Translated by Geoff Bennington and Brian Massumi. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1984. ISBN 9780816611737
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* Lyotard, Jean-François. ''The Postmodern Explained: Correspondence, 1982-1985.'' Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993. ISBN 9780816622115
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* Murphy, Nancey. ''Anglo-American Postmodernity: Philosophical Perspectives on Science, Religion, and Ethics.'' Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1997. ISBN 9780813328690
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* Natoli, Joseph. ''A Primer to Postmodernity.'' Malden, Mass.: Blackwell Publishers, 1998. ISBN 9781577180609
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* Norris, Christopher. ''What's Wrong with Postmodernism: Critical Theory and the Ends of Philosophy.'' Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991. ISBN 9780745009742
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* Pangle, Thomas L. ''The Ennobling of Democracy: The Challenge of the Postmodern Age.'' Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991. ISBN 0801846358
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* Sokal, Alan, and Jean Bricmont. ''Fashionable Nonsense: Postmodern Intellectuals' Abuse of Science.'' New York: Picador USA, 1998. ISBN 9780312195458
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* Vanhoozer, Kevin J., ed. ''The Cambridge Companion to Postmodern Theology.'' Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. ISBN 0521793955
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* Vattimo, Gianni. ''The Transparent Society.'' Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992. ISBN 9780801845284
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* Veith, Jr., Gene Edward. ''Postmodern Times: A Christian Guide to Contemporary Thought and Culture.'' Wheaton, Ill.: Crossway Books, 1994. ISBN 9780891077688
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* Woods, Tim. ''Beginning Postmodernism.'' Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1999. ISBN 0719052106
  
Where modernists hoped to unearth universals or the fundamentals of art, postmodernism aims to unseat them, to embrace diversity and contradiction. A postmodern approach to art thus rejects the distinction between low and high art forms. It rejects rigid genre boundaries and favors eclecticism, the mixing of ideas and forms. Partly due to this rejection, it promotes parody, irony, and playfulness, commonly referred to as jouissance by postmodern theorists. Unlike modern art, postmodern art does not approach this fragmentation as somehow faulty or undesirable, but rather celebrates it. As the gravity of the search for underlying truth is relieved, it is replaced with 'play'. As postmodern icon David Byrne, and his band Talking Heads said: "Stop making sense."
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==External links==
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All links retrieved November 30, 2022.
  
Post-modernity, in attacking the perceived elitist approach of Modernism, sought greater connection with broader audiences. This is often labelled "accessibility" and is a central point of dispute in the question of the value of postmodern art. It has also embraced the mixing of words with art, collage and other movements in modernity, in an attempt to create more multiplicity of medium and message. Much of this centers on a shift of basic subject matter: postmodern artists regard the mass media as a fundamental subject for art, and use forms, tropes, and materials - such as banks of video monitors, found art, and depictions of media objects - as focal points for their art. With his "invention" of "readymade", Marcel Duchamp is often seen as a forerunner on postmodern art. Where Andy Warhol furthered the concept with his appropriation of common popular symbols and "ready-made" cultural artifacts, bringing the previously mundane or trivial onto the previously hallowed ground of high art.
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* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/postmodernism/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy's entry on postmodernism]
 +
* [http://www.critcrim.org/critpapers/milovanovic_postmod.htm Dueling Paradigms: Modernist V. Postmodernist Thought]
 +
* [http://www.economist.com/world/displaystory.cfm?story_id=8401159 Postmodernism is the new black]: How the shape of modern retailing was both predicted and influenced by some unlikely seers (<CITE>The Economist</CITE> Dec 19th 2006)
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* [http://www.criticarte.com/Page/ensayos/text/ModernPostmodern.html Postmodernism and art | La crisis de las vanguardias y el debate modernidad-postmodernidad] by Adolfo Vasquez Rocca PhD.
  
Postmodernism's critical stance is interlinked with presenting new appraisals of previous works. As implied above, the works of the Dada movement received greater attention, as did collagists such as Robert Rauschenberg, whose works were initially considered unimportant in the context of the modernism of the 1950s, but who, by the 1980s, began to be seen as seminal. Post-modernism also elevated the importance of cinema in artistic discussions, placing it on a peer level with the other fine arts. This is both because of the blurring of distinctions between "high" and "low" forms, and because of the recognition that cinema represented the creation of simulacra which was later duplicated in the other arts.
 
  
    See also: Contemporary art
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Postmodernism in architecture
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    Main article: Postmodern architecture
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As with many cultural movements, one of postmodernism's most pronounced and visible ideas can be seen in architecture. The functional, and formalized, shapes and spaces of the modernist movement are replaced by unapologetically diverse aesthetics; styles collide, form is adopted for its own sake, and new ways of viewing familiar styles and space abound.
 
 
 
Architects generally considered postmodern include: Peter Eisenman, Philip Johnson (later works), John Burgee, Robert Venturi, Ricardo Bofill, James Stirling, Charles Willard Moore, and Frank Gehry.
 
 
 
 
 
[edit]
 
 
 
Postmodernism, Planning & Urban Design
 
 
 
Post modern landscapes in contemporary cities can be understood better in the context of globalisation which can be described as a ‘variant form of capitalism where a growing proportion of all economic activity is being progressively organised at the international rather than the national, spatial scale.’(1) This international scope not only influences economic patterns, but also induces a multicultural ambience to metropolitan cities, effectively blending cultures into an altered context. David Harvey, in his seminal work, 'The Condition of Postmodernism' argues that post modernism, by way of contrasts, privileges heterogeneity and difference as liberative forces in the redefinition of cultural discourse and rejects meta-narratives and overarching theories.(2) It purports an existence of multi-visionary thinking within the mosaic of the contemporary metropolis. It heralded the shift from modernism to a ‘perspectivism that questions how radically different realities may co-exist, collide and interpenetrate.’(3)
 
 
 
REFERENCE:
 
 
 
(1)Engels, B. (2000) ‘City Make-overs: the place-marketing of Melbourne during the Kennett years, 1992-1999’, Urban Policy and Research 18(4), p 470
 
(2)Harvey, D. (1990) The Condition of Postmodernity, Blackwell, U.K., p 9
 
(3)Harvey, D. (1990) The Condition of Postmodernity, Blackwell, U.K., p 41
 
 
 
[edit]
 
 
 
Postmodernism in graphic design
 
 
 
    Main article: graphic design
 
 
 
Postmodernism in graphic design for the most part has been mainly a visual and decorative movement. Many designers and design critics contend that postmodernism, in the sense of literary or architectural understanding of the term, never really impacted graphic design as it did in these other fields. Alternatively, some argue that it did but took on a different persona. This can be seen in the work produced at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan during the late 1980s to late 1990s and at the MFA program at CalArts in California. But when all was said and done, the various notions of the postmodern in the various design fields never really stuck to graphic design as it did with architecture. Some argue that the "movement" (if it ever was one) had little to no impact on graphic design. More likely, it did, but more in the sense of a continuation or re-evaluation of the modern. Some would argue that this continuous re-evaluation is also just a component of the design process - happening for most of the second half of the 20th C. in the profession. Since it was ultimately the work of graphic designers that inspired pop artists like Warhol, Liechtenstein, and architects Robert Venturi and Denise Scott-Brown, it could be argued that graphic design practice and designs may be be the root of Postmodernism.
 
[edit]
 
 
 
Postmodernism in literature
 
 
 
    Main article: Postmodern literature
 
 
 
Postmodern literature argues for expansion, the return of reference, the celebration of fragmentation rather than the fear of it, and the role of reference itself in literature. While drawing on the experimental tendencies of authors such as Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner in English, and Borges in Spanish - writers who were taken as influences by American postmodern authors such as Thomas Pynchon, Don DeLillo, John Barth, William Gaddis, David Foster Wallace and Paul Auster - the advocates of postmodern literature argue that the present is fundamentally different from the modern period, and therefore requires a new literary sensibility.
 
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Postmodernism in music
 
 
 
    Main article: Postmodern music
 
 
 
Postmodern music is both a musical style and a musical condition. As a musical style, postmodern music contains characteristics of postmodern art—that is, art after modernism (see Modernism in Music); eclecticism in musical form and musical genre, combining characteristics from different genres, or employing jump-cut sectionalization (such as blocks). It tends to be self-referential and ironic, and it blurs the boundaries between "high art" and kitsch. Daniel Albright (2004) summarizes the traits of the postmodern style as bricolage, polystylism, and randomness.
 
 
 
As a musical condition, postmodern music is simply the state of music in postmodernity, music after modernity. In this sense, postmodern music does not have any one particular style or characteristic, and is not necessarily postmodern in style or technique. The music of modernity, however, was viewed primarily as a means of expression while the music of postmodernity is valued more as a spectacle, a good for mass consumption, and an indicator of group identity. For example, one significant role of music in postmodern society is to act as a badge by which people can signify their identity as a member of a particular subculture.
 
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Postmodernism in political science
 
 
 
Many situations which are considered political in nature can not be adequately discussed in traditional realist and liberal approaches to political science. Brief examples include the situation of a “draft-age youth whose identity is claimed in national narratives of ‘national security’ and the universalizing narratives of the ‘rights of man,’” of “the woman whose very womb is claimed by the irresolvable contesting narratives of ‘church,’ ‘paternity,’ ‘economy,’ and ‘liberal polity.’ In these cases, there are no fixed categories, stable sets of values, or common sense meanings to be understood in their scholarly exploration. Liberal approaches do not aid in understanding these types of situations; there is no individual or social or institutional structure whose values can impose a meaning or interpretive narrative.
 
 
 
In these margins, people resist realist concepts of power which is repressive, in order to maintain a claim on their own identity. What makes this resistance significant is that among the aspects of power resisted is that which forces individuals to take a single identity or to be subject to a particular interpretation. Meaning and interpretation in these types of situations is always uncertain; arbitrary in fact. The power in effect here is not that of oppression, but that of the cultural and social implications around them, which creates the framework within which they see themselves, which creates the boundaries of their possible courses of action.
 
 
 
Postmodern political scientists, such as Richard Ashley, claim that in these marginal sites it is impossible to construct a coherent narrative, or story, about what is really taking place without including contesting and contradicting narratives, and still have a “true” story from the perspective of a “sovereign subject,” who can dictate the values pertinent to the “meaning” of the situation. In fact, it is possible here to deconstruct the idea of meaning. Ashley attempts to reveal the ambiguity of texts, especially Western texts, how the texts themselves can be seen as "sites of conflict" within a given culture or worldview. By regarding them in this way, deconstructive readings attempt to uncover evidence of ancient cultural biases, conflicts, lies, tyrannies, and power structures, such as the tensions and ambiguity between peace and war, lord and subject, male and female, which serve as further examples of Derrida's binary oppositions in which the first element is privileged, or considered prior to and more authentic, in relation to the second. Examples of postmodern political scientists include post-colonial writers such as Frantz Fanon, feminist writers such as Cynthia Enloe, and postpositive theorists such as Ashley and James Der Derian.
 
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Postmodernism in philosophy
 
 
 
    Main article: Postmodern philosophy
 
 
 
Many figures in the 20th century philosophy of mathematics are identified as "postmodern" due to their rejection of mathematics as a strictly neutral point of view. Some figures in the philosophy of science, especially Thomas Samuel Kuhn and David Bohm, are also so viewed. Some see the ultimate expression of postmodernism in science and mathematics in the cognitive science of mathematics, which seeks to characterize the habit of mathematics itself as strictly human, and based in human cognitive bias.
 
 
 
The term "Neo-liberalism" has been used in a theological sense as a drive to deliberately modify the beliefs and practices of the church (especially evangelical) to conform to post-modernism, for more on this please see emergent church.
 
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Postmodernism and post-structuralism
 
 
 
In terms of frequently cited works, postmodernism and post-structuralism overlap quite significantly. Some philosophers, such as Jean-François Lyotard, can legitimately be classified into both groups. This is partly due to the fact that both modernism and structuralism owe much to the Enlightenment project.
 
 
 
Structuralism has a strong tendency to be scientific in seeking out stable patterns in observed phenomena — an epistemological attitude which is quite compatible with Enlightenment thinking, and incompatible with postmodernists. At the same time, findings from structuralist analysis carried a somewhat anti-Enlightenment message, revealing that rationality can be found in the minds of "savage" people, just in forms differing from those that people from "civilized" societies are used to seeing. Implicit here is a critique of the practice of colonialism, which was partly justified as a "civilizing" process by which wealthier societies bring knowledge, manners, and reason to less "civilized" ones.
 
 
 
Post-structuralism, emerging as a response to the structuralists' scientific orientation, has kept the cultural relativism in structuralism, while discarding the scientific orientations.
 
 
 
One clear difference between postmodernism and poststructuralism is found in their respective attitudes towards the demise of the project of the Enlightenment: post-structuralism is fundamentally ambivalent, while postmodernism is decidedly celebratory.
 
 
 
Another difference is the nature of the two positions. While post-structuralism is a position in philosophy, encompassing views on human beings, language, body, society, and many other issues, it is not a name of an era. Post-modernism, on the other hand, is closely associated with "post-modern" era, a period in the history coming after the modern age.
 
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Postmodernity and digital communications
 
 
 
Technological utopianism is a common trait in Western history — from the 1700s when Adam Smith essentially labelled technological progress as the source of the Wealth of Nations, through the novels of Jules Verne in the late 1800s (with the notable exception of his then-unpublished Paris in the 20th Century), through Winston Churchill's belief that there was little an inventor could not achieve. Its manifestation in post-modernity was first through the explosion of analog mass broadcasting of television. Strongly associated with the work of Marshall McLuhan who argued that "the medium is the message", the ability of mass broadcasting to create visual symbols and mass action was seen as a liberating force in human affairs, even at the same time Newton N. Minow was calling television "a vast wasteland".
 
 
 
The second wave of technological utopianism associated with postmodern thought came with the introduction of digital internetworking, and became identified with Esther Dyson and such popular outlets as Wired Magazine. According to this view digital communications makes the fragmentation of modern society a positive feature, since individuals can seek out those artistic, cultural and community experiences which they regard as being correct for themselves.
 
 
 
The common thread is that the fragmentation of society and communication gives the individual more autonomy to create their own environment and narrative. This links into the postmodern novel, which deals with the experience of structuring "truth" from fragments.
 
[edit]
 
 
 
Postmodernism and its critics
 
 
 
The term post-modernism is often used pejoratively to describe tendencies perceived of as Relativist, Counter-enlightenment or antimodern, particularly in relationship to critiques of Rationalism, Universalism or Science. It is also sometimes used to describe tendencies in the society which are held to be antithetical to traditional systems of morality. The criticisms of postmodernism are often made complex by the still fluid nature of the term, in many cases the criticisms are clearly directed at poststructuralism and the philosophical and academic movements that it has spawned rather than the larger term postmodernism.
 
 
 
The most prominent recent criticism of postmodern art is that of John Gardner. Gardner wrote that the classification "post-modern" / "modern" applied to the art of his time was an evasion, a stab at nothing - i.e., a move to elude the basic function of criticism, which, as Gardner called it, is to judge art's moral value.
 
 
 
Charles Murray, a strong critic of postmodernism, defines the term:
 
 
 
    "By contemporary intellectual fashion, I am referring to the constellation of views that come to mind when one hears the words multicultural, gender, deconstruct, politically correct, and Dead White Males. In a broader sense, contemporary intellectual fashion encompasses as well the widespread disdain in certain circles for technology and the scientific method. Embedded in this mind-set is hostility to the idea that discriminating judgments are appropriate in assessing art and literature, to the idea that hierarchies of value exist, hostility to the idea that an objective truth exists. Postmodernism is the overarching label that is attached to this perspective." [1]
 
 
 
One example is the figure of Harold Bloom, who has simultaneously been hailed as being against multiculturalism and contemporary "fads" in literature, and also placed as an important figure in postmodernism.
 
 
 
Central to the debate is the role of the concept of "objectivity" and what it means. In the broadest sense, denial of the practical possibility of objectivity is held to be the postmodern position, and a hostility towards claims advanced on the basis of objectivity its defining feature. It is this underlying hostility toward the concept of objectivity, evident in many contemporary critical theorists, that is the common point of attack for critics of postmodernism. Many critics characterise postmodernism as an ephemeral phenomenon that cannot be adequately defined simply because, as a philosophy at least, it represents nothing more substantial than a series of disparate conjectures allied only in their distrust of modernism.
 
 
 
This antipathy of postmodernists towards modernism, and their consequent tendency to define themselves against it, has also attracted criticism. It has been argued that modernity was not actually a lumbering, totalizing monolith at all, but in fact was itself dynamic and ever-changing; the evolution, therefore, between "modern" and "postmodern" should be seen as one of degree, rather than of kind - a continuation rather than a "break." One theorist who takes this view is Marshall Berman, whose book All That is Solid Melts into Air (1982) (a quote from Marx) reflects in its title the fluid nature of "the experience of modernity."
 
 
 
As noted above, some theorists such as Habermas even argue that the supposed distinction between the "modern" and the "postmodern" does not exist at all, but that the latter is really no more than a development within a larger, still-current, "modern" framework. Many who make this argument are left academics with Marxist leanings, such as Terry Eagleton, Fredric Jameson, and David Harvey (social geographer), who are concerned that postmodernism's undermining of Enlightenment values makes a progressive cultural politics difficult, if not impossible. For instance, "How can 'we' effect any change in people's poor living conditions, in inequality and injustice, if 'we' don't accept the validity of underlying universals such as the 'real world' and 'justice' in the first place?" How is any progress to be made through a philosophy so profoundly skeptical of the very notion of progress, and of unified perspectives? The critics charge that the postmodern vision of a tolerant, pluralist society in which every political ideology is perceived to be as valid, or as redundant, as the other, may ultimately encourage individuals to lead lives of a rather disastrous apathetic quietism. This reasoning leads Habermas to compare postmodernism with conservatism and the preservation of the status quo.
 
 
 
Such critics often argue that, in actual fact, such postmodern premises are rarely, if ever, actually embraced — that if they were, we would be left with nothing more than a crippling radical subjectivism. They point to the continuity of the projects of the Enlightenment and modernity as alive and well, as can be seen in the justice system, in science, in political rights movements, in the very idea of universities, and so on.
 
 
 
To some critics, there seems, indeed, to be a glaring contradiction in maintaining the death of objectivity and privileged position on one hand, while the scientific community continues a project of unprecedented scope to unify various scientific disciplines into a theory of everything, on the other. Hostility toward hierarchies of value and objectivity becomes problematic to them when postmodernity itself attempts to analyse such hierarchies with, apparently, some measure of objectivity and make categorical statements concerning them.
 
 
 
They see postmodernism, then as, essentially, a kind of semantic gamesmanship, more sophistry than substance. Postmodernism's proponents are often criticised for a tendency to indulge in exhausting, verbose stretches of rhetorical gymnastics, which critics feel sound important but are ultimately meaningless. In the Sokal Affair, Alan Sokal, a physicist, wrote a deliberately nonsensical article purportedly about interpreting physics and mathematics in terms of postmodern theory, which was nevertheless published by the Left-leaning Social Text, a journal which he and most of the scientific community considered as postmodernist. Interestingly, Social Text never acknowledged that the article's publication was a mistake, but supported a counter-argument defending the "interpretative validity" of Sokal's false article, despite the author's rebuttal of his own article.
 
 
 
Although Ken Wilber embraces many aspects of post-modernism, he distinguishes between a healthy form and an unhealthy 'extreme' form. Inherent in the extreme version is the irreconcilability of the performative contradiction. Wilber argues postmodernism must take the stance that its view is 'better' than what preceded it (modernity, Enlightenment, meta-narratives, positivism, etc.). This intrinsic and silent judgement that postmodernism imposes on its predessors is in itself not only a value judgement (a thing it often rejects), but a hierarchy in itself (a hierarchy of values). Wilber claims his recent work in integral theory addresses these performative contradictions, while retaining many of the important contributions of postmodernism. Wilber's approach is distinguished from other critiques by asking a different question. It does not ask whether postmodernism, or modernism, or any other system of thought as 'correct' or 'not correct'. Rather, it asks what are the emergent qualities of 'consciousness' that allow all of these systems of thought to arise in the first place? And, what important aspect of truth do they have to contribute?
 
 
 
In response to the critics of postmodernism, many people suggest that no "postmodern" ethos or movement has actually taken practical form, and that the term "postmodernism" has been coined by traditionalist intellectuals as a byproduct of their paranoia and resentments towards their less traditonal contemporaries.
 
[edit]
 
 
 
Relationship between modernism and postmodernism
 
 
 
The relationship between modernism and postmodernism, can best be examined through the works of several authors, some of whom argue for such a distinction, while others call it into question. Following a methodology common among the authors whose work this article examines, a number of artists and writers commonly described as modernist or postmodernist will be considered, although it is noted that this classification is at times controversial. Although useful distinctions can be drawn between the modernist and postmodernist eras, this does not erase the many continuities present between them.
 
 
 
One of the most significant differences between modernism and postmodernism in the arts is the concern for universality or totality. While modernist artists aimed to capture universality or totality in some sense, postmodernists have rejected these ambitions as "metanarratives."
 
[edit]
 
 
 
Further reading
 
 
 
    * Ashley, Richard and Walker, R. B. J. (1990) “Speaking the Language of Exile.” International Studies Quarterly v 34, no 3 259-68.
 
    * Berman, Marshall (1982) All That Is Solid Melts Into Air: The Experience of Modernity (ISBN 0140109625).
 
    * Callinicos, Alex, Against Postmodernism: A Marxist Critique (Cambridge: Polity, 1999).
 
    * Harvey, David (1989) The Condition of Postmodernity: An Enquiry into the Origins of Cultural Change (ISBN 0631162941)
 
    * Hicks, Stephen R. C. (2004) Explaining Postmodernism: Skepticism and Socialism from Rousseau to Foucault (ISBN 1592476465)
 
    * Jameson, Fredric (1991) Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (ISBN 0822310902)
 
    * Lyotard, Jean-François (1984) The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge (ISBN 0816611734)
 
    * Sokal, Alan and Jean Bricmont (1998) Fashionable Nonsense: Postmodern Intellectuals' Abuse of Science (ISBN 0312204078)
 
    * Norris, Christopher (1990) What's Wrong with Postmodernism: Critical Theory and the Ends of Philosophy (ISBN 0801841372)
 
    * Veith Jr., Gene Edward (1994) Postmodern Times: A Christian Guide to Contemporary Thought and Culture (ISBN 0891077685)
 
 
 
[edit]
 
 
 
See also
 
[edit]
 
 
 
Theoretical postmodernism
 
 
 
    * Critical race theory
 
    * Localism
 
    * Media studies
 
    * Recursionism
 
 
 
[edit]
 
 
 
Cultural and political postmodernism
 
 
 
    * Anti-racist math
 
    * Decentralization
 
    * Defamiliarization
 
    * New Age
 
    * Reinformation
 
    * Syncreticism
 
    * Universism
 
 
 
[edit]
 
 
 
External links
 
 
 
    * Modernity, postmodernism and the tradition of dissent, by Lloyd Spencer (1998)
 
    * The Postmodernism Generator: Communications From Elsewhere, randomly generate a completely meaningless essay!
 
    * The Christian Cadre's Postmodernism Page
 
 
 
[edit]
 
 
 
Notes
 
 
 
  1. ^ From Postmodernism To Postmodernity: The Local/Global Context. URL accessed on December 2, 2005.
 
 
 
 
 
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postmodernism"
 
 
 
Categories: Modernism | Postmodernism | Philosophy and Religion
 
 
 
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Latest revision as of 05:50, 30 November 2022

Postmodernism
preceded by Modernism

Postmodernity
Postchristianity
Postmodern philosophy
Postmodern architecture
Postmodern art
Postmodernist film
Postmodern literature
Postmodern music
Postmodern theater
Critical theory
Globalization
Consumerism
Minimalism in art
Minimalism in music

Postmodernism (sometimes abbreviated as Po-Mo) is a term applied to a wide-ranging set of developments in critical theory, philosophy, architecture, art, literature, and culture, which are considered to have emerged from, or superseded, modernism, in reaction to it, soon after the end of World War II, which caused people much disillusionment.

Many theorists agree that we can distinguish between two senses of postmodernism: 1) postmodernism as a reaction to the aesthetic "modernism" of the first half of the twentieth century in architecture, art, and literature; and 2) postmodernism as a reaction to the long-standing "modernity" tradition of the Enlightenment from the eighteenth century. To be distinguished from the former which is more aesthetic, the latter is quite often called "postmodernity," referring to more historical and social aspects of postmodernism. The latter is closely linked with post-structuralism (cf. Jacques Derrida's deconstruction), insinuating a rejection of the bourgeois, elitist culture of the Enlightenment. Without this distinction, postmodernism may lack a clear central hierarchy or organizing principle, embodying extreme complexity, contradiction, ambiguity, diversity, and interconnectedness or interreferentiality. But, its general features are usually considered to include: a rejection of grand narratives; a rejection of absolute and universal truth; non-existence of signified; disorientation; a use of parody; simulation without the original; late capitalism; and globalization.

Postmodernism has invited a wide spectrum of criticisms, from conservatives who feel threatened by its rejection of absolute truth, from Marxists who may tend to be allied with the Enlightenment, and from intellectuals who cannot make sense of it. It, however, is welcomed by schools such as feminism. It is even accommodated by Christian theologians as a good opportunity to develop a more convincing, new theology, and some of the examples include Jean-Luc Marion's postmetaphysical theology and John D. Caputo's deconstructive theology in search of a true God.

A Brief History of the Term "Postmodernism"

The question of what postmodernism means is problematic because the notion is complex. Ihab Hassan, one of the first to discuss about postmodernism in the 1960s and 1970s, writes in 2001: "I know less about postmodernism today than I did thirty years ago, when I began to write about it… No consensus obtains on what postmodernism really means."[1]

The historical origins of the term lead back at least to English painter John Watkins Chapman, who was probably the first to use the term "postmodernism." He used it in the 1870s to simply mean what is today understood to be post-impressionism. In 1934, Spaniard Federico de Onis used the word postmodernismo as a reaction against modernist poetry. In 1939, British historian Arnold Toynbee adopted the term with an entirely different meaning: the end of the "modern" Western bourgeois order of the last two- or three-hundred-year period. In 1945, Australian art historian Bernard Smith took up the term to suggest a movement of social realism in painting beyond abstraction. In the 1950s in America, Charles Olson used the term in poetry. Only in the 1960s and 1970s was the term more popularized through theorists such as Leslie Fielder and Ihab Hassan.

Two Facets of Modernism

Since postmodernism emerged from modernism, it is essential to have some understanding of modernism first, but modernism itself is not a single entity. If we carefully look at modernism, we realize that it has two different facets, or two different definitions: 1) twentieth-century aesthetic modernism, which emerged during the first half of the twentieth century as a reaction to nineteenth-century traditions such as the Victorian tradition; and 2) the much longer historical tradition of "modernity," which started from the humanistic rationalism of the Enlightenment of the eighteenth century, and which was still continuously influential till the twentieth century. Theorists such as David Lyon and Mary Klages have made this distinction between the two facets of modernism, and also a resultant distinction between two senses of postmodernism as well.[2][3]

Twentieth-century aesthetic modernism

Main article: Modernism

Modernism was a series of aesthetic movements of wild experimentation in visual arts, music, literature, drama, and architecture in the first half of the twentieth century. It flourished especially between 1910 to 1930, the period of "high modernism."

Modernism in this sense was rooted in the changes in Western society at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth century. It was a trend of thought that affirmed the power of human beings to create, improve, and reshape their environment, with the aid of scientific knowledge, technology, and practical experimentation. Embracing change and the present, it encompassed the works of thinkers who rebelled against nineteenth-century academic and historicist traditions, believing that the traditional forms of art, architecture, literature, religious faith, social organization, and daily life were becoming "outdated." They directly confronted the new economic, social, and political aspects of an emerging fully industrialized world.

The older ideas that history and civilization are inherently progressive, and that progress is always good, came under increasing attack. Arguments arose that not merely were the values of the artist and those of society different, but that society was antithetical to progress, and could not move forward in its present form. Philosophers called into question the previous optimism.

Two of the most disruptive thinkers of the period were, in biology, Charles Darwin and, in political science, Karl Marx. Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection undermined religious certainty of the general public, and the sense of human uniqueness among the intelligentsia. The notion that human beings were driven by the same impulses as "lower animals" proved to be difficult to reconcile with the idea of an ennobling spirituality. Marx seemed to present a political version of the same proposition: that problems with the economic order were not transient, the result of specific wrongdoers or temporary conditions, but were fundamentally contradictions within the "capitalist" system. Both thinkers would spawn defenders and schools of thought that would become decisive in establishing modernism.

Of course, there actually were a few reforming spiritual and theological movements around the same time which also reacted against the nineteenth-century traditions. They include Neo-orthodoxy by Karl Barth in Europe, and pentecostalism and fundamentalism in America. But, they seem to have been less visible and less prevalent than activities of radical aesthetic modernism.

Twentieth-century aesthetic modernism took diverse forms such as surrealism, dadaism, cubism, expressionism, and primitivism. These forms were apparently immediate reactions to the Victorian values such as bourgeois domesticity, duty, work, decorum, referentiality, utilitarianism, industry, and realism. Some of the forms of aesthetic modernism naturally resemble Romanticism, which was rejected in the Victorian period. According to Dino Felluga, the features of modernist aesthetic work include:[4]

  1. Self-reflexivity (as in Picasso's painting "Women in the Studio").
  2. An exploration of psychological and subjective states (as in expressionism or stream-of-consciousness writings such as Virginia Woolf's To the Lighthouse).
  3. Alternative ways of thinking about representation (as in cubism).
  4. A breakdown in generic distinction (as in between poetry and prose).
  5. Fragmentation in form and representation (as in T. S. Eliot's poem "The Waste Land").
  6. Extreme ambiguity and simultaneity in structure (as in William Faulkner's multiply-narrated stories such as The Sound and the Fury).
  7. Some experimentation in the breakdown between high and low forms (as in dadaism or T.S. Eliot's and James Joyce's inclusion of folk and pop-cultural material).
  8. The use of parody and irony (as in surrealism, dadaism, or James Joyce's Ulysses).

"Modernity" since the Enlightenment

In order to grasp an idea of what the "postmodernism" movement (in all its variations) is reacting against, one must first have an understanding of the definitive elements of "modernism."

Modernism in the second definition can be traced back to the Enlightenment, which was a humanistic reaction in the eighteenth century to the premodern, medieval type of religious dogmatism which could still be found in Lutheran and Calvinist scholasticism, Jesuit scholasticism, and the theory of the divine right of kings in the Church of England in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Of course, against this premodern type of religious dogmatism, there was another, religiously more profound, reaction in the eighteenth century, expressing itself in Pietism and John Wesley's Methodism. But the humanistic tradition of the Enlightenment was more influential than that.

Since its beginning, this Enlightenment tradition has a long history of philosophical, cultural, social and political development until most of the twentieth century, much longer and older than twentieth-century aesthetic modernism, and it is quite often called "modernity."[5] [6] This "modernity" tradition of the Enlightenment stressed the importance of the rational human self, objective truth or law, order, progress, etc., and it was behind most of the nineteenth century traditions. So, when the limitations of the nineteenth century were felt, "modernity" served as an indirect background against which twentieth-century aesthetic modernism sprang. When the limitations of "modernity" were more directly felt later in the twentieth century, it issued in a reaction called postmodernism, which, as will be explained below, is of a second kind, i.e., "postmodernity."

Clear thinking professor Mary Klages, author of Literary Theory: A Guide for the Perplexed, lists basic features of "modernity" since the Enlightenment as follows:[7]

  1. There is a stable, coherent, knowable self. This self is conscious, rational, autonomous, and universal—no physical conditions or differences substantially affect how this self operates.
  2. This self knows itself and the world through reason, or rationality, posited as the highest form of mental functioning, and the only objective form.
  3. The mode of knowing produced by the objective rational self is "science," which can provide universal truths about the world, regardless of the individual status of the knower.
  4. The knowledge produced by science is "truth," and is eternal.
  5. The knowledge/truth produced by science (by the rational objective knowing self) will always lead toward progress and perfection. All human institutions and practices can be analyzed by science (reason/objectivity) and improved.
  6. Reason is the ultimate judge of what is true, and therefore of what is right, and what is good (what is legal and what is ethical). Freedom consists of obedience to the laws that conform to the knowledge discovered by reason.
  7. In a world governed by reason, the true will always be the same as the good and the right (and the beautiful); there can be no conflict between what is true and what is right (etc.).
  8. Science thus stands as the paradigm for any and all socially useful forms of knowledge. Science is neutral and objective; scientists, those who produce scientific knowledge through their unbiased rational capacities, must be free to follow the laws of reason, and not be motivated by other concerns (such as money or power).
  9. Language, or the mode of expression used in producing and disseminating knowledge, must be rational also. To be rational, language must be transparent; it must function only to represent the real/perceivable world which the rational mind observes. There must be a firm and objective connection between the objects of perception and the words used to name them (between signifier and signified).

Two Senses of Postmodernism

Corresponding to the two different facets of modernism, there are two distinguishable senses of postmodernism: 1) postmodernism as a reaction to twentieth-century aesthetic modernism; and 2) postmodernism as a reaction to the "modernity" tradition of the Enlightenment. In order to be distinguished from the former, the latter is quite often called "postmodernity."[8]

A reaction to aesthetic modernism

Postmodernism as a reaction to twentieth-century aesthetic modernism emerged soon after World War II. It still carried most of the features of twentieth-century aesthetic modernism. So, some have argued that it is essentially just an outgrowth of modernism, and not a separate movement. But, there is a fundamental difference. It is that while aesthetic modernism had presented fragmentation, for example, as something tragic to be lamented (as in Eliots' "The Waste Land"), postmodernism no longer laments it but rather celebrates it. Thus, postmodernism is inclined to stay with meaninglessness, playing with nonsense. Dino Felluga sees this difference and lists some of the things "that distinguish postmodern aesthetic work from modernist work" as follows:[9]

  1. Extreme self-reflexivity, more playful and even irrelevant (as in pop artist Roy Lichtenstein's "Masterpiece" or architect Frank Gehry's Nationale-Nederlanden Building in Prague).
  2. Irony and parody (many examples in pop culture and media advertising). Regarding how to assess it, postmodern theorists are divided. While Linda Hutcheon, for example, values parody as a postmodern way to resist all ideological positions,[10] Marxist critic Fredric Jameson characterizes it as "blank parody" or "pastiche" without any motive or impulse in the dystopic postmodern age in which we have lost our connection to history.[11]
  3. A breakdown between high and low cultural forms in more immediately understandable ways (as in Andy Warhol's painting for Campbell's Tomato Soup cans).
  4. Retro. It is to use styles and fashions from the past with fascination but completely out of their original context (as in postmodern architecture in which medieval, baroque, and modern elements are often juxtaposed). Fredric Jameson and Jean Baudrillard tend to regard it as a symptom of our loss of connection to history in which the history of aesthetic styles and fashions displaces real history.
  5. A further questioning of grand narratives (as in Madonna videos such as "Like a Prayer" and "Material Girl," which question the grand narratives of traditional Christianity, capitalism, etc.).
  6. Visuality and the simulacrum vs. temporality. The predominance of visual media (tv, film, media advertising, the computer) has lead to the use of visual forms (as in Art Spiegelman's graphic novel Maus: A Surviver's Tale through the medium of comics). Visuality also explains some other related features of aesthetic postmodernism: a more breakdown between high and low cultural forms, and a retro. Baudrillard and others have argued that a retro involves copies ("simulacra") of the past without any connection to real past history, blurring the distinction between representation and temporal reality.[12]
  7. Late capitalism whose dominance is generally feared (as in the predominance of paranoia narratives in movies such as "Blade Runner" and "the Matrix"). This fear is aided by advancements in technology, especially surveillance technology, which creates the sense that we are always being watched.
  8. Disorientation (as in MTV or those films that seek to disorient the viewer completely through the revelation of a truth that changes everything that came before).
  9. Return of orality (based on an influx of oral media sources such as tv, film, and radio).

Postmodernism in this sense was much discussed in the 1960s and 1970s by theorists such as Leslie Fielder and Ihab Hassan,[13] although Hassan gradually extended his discussion to a general critique of Western culture, somewhat dealing with postmodernism in the other sense as well. Many other theorists such as Baudrillard, Jameson, and Hutcheson later joined the discussion on postmodernism in the first sense, perhaps having in mind postmodernism in the other sense as well.

"Postmodernity": a reaction to modernity

Up until the 1970s the discussion on postmodernism was generally confined to postmodernism in its first sense. In 1980, however, Jürgen Habermas's lecture on "Modernity: An Unfinished Project"[14] helped bring a shift in the discussion from postmodernism in its first sense (i.e., a reaction to twentieth-century aesthetic modernism) to postmodernism in the second sense (i.e., postmodernity), ironically because of its strong defense of modernity against postmodernity. Of course, the debate on modernity versus postmodernity had already started with the involvement of critics such as Martin Heidegger, Michel Foucault, Jean-François Lyotard, Richard Rorty, and Jacques Derrida in favor of postmodernity, as they felt that the modernity tradition of the Enlightenment was in crisis because of the emergence of problems such as alienation and exploitation within that tradition in spite of its original promise of positive cultural and social development. But, when Habermas was trying to defend modernity as an "unfinished project" we should not abandon yet, it prompted those who were in favor of postmodernity to react. Since then, a large volume of literature has continued to snowball, focusing on postmodernity as the more important facet of postmodernism.

Habermas now became the target of criticism especially from Lyotard, who published The Postmodern Condition in English in 1984, his best-known and most influential work.[15] Lyotard declared the end of the Enlightenment and rejected its tradition of "grand narrative," a totalistic, universal theory which promises to explain and solve all problems by one set of ideas.

After summarizing modernity in terms of order and rationality, Mary Klages lists some of the basic characteristics of postmodernity over against it, as follows:[16]

  1. Postmodernity is, as is expressed especially by Lyotard, the critique of grand narratives, the awareness that such narratives in favor of "order" serve to mask the contradictions and instabilities that are inherent in any social organization or practice even including Marxist society. It rejects grand narratives about large-scale or global universal concepts in favor of more situational and provisional "mini-narratives" about small practices and local events.
  2. There are only signifiers. Signifieds do not exist.
  3. This means that there are only copies, i.e., what Baudrillard calls "simulacra," and that there are no originals. For example, cds and music recordings have no original. Related to this is the concept of virtual reality, a reality created by a computer simulation game, for which there is no original.
  4. Knowledge is not good for its own sake. Its functionality or utility is more important.
  5. Knowledge is also distributed, stored, and arranged differently thought the emergence of computer technology, without which it ceases to be knowledge. The important thing about knowledge is not to assess it as truth (its technical quality), as goodness or justice (its ethical quality), or as beauty (its aesthetic quality), but rather to see who decides what knowledge is, and who knows what needs to be decided. In other words, says Lyotard, knowledge follows the paradigm of a language game, as laid out by Wittgenstein.

Deconstruction:

Main article: Deconstruction

What should be added to the list as an important aspect of postmodernity is Jacques Derrida's project of deconstruction as an attempt to criticize what is called logocentrism beyond text.

The term "deconstruction," coined by Derrida, came from Heidegger, who called for the destruction or deconstruction (the German "Destruktion" connotes both English words) of the history of ontology. In later usage, "deconstruction" became an important textual "occurrence." According to Derrida, the project of deconstruction implies that there is no intrinsic essence to a text, merely the "play" of difference (which he dubbed différance to capture the French sense of the term meaning both "to differ" and "to defer").

A deconstruction is created when the "deeper" substance of text opposes the text's more "superficial" form. This idea is not unique to Derrida but is related to the idea of hermeneutics in literature; intellectuals as early as Plato asserted it and so did modern thinkers such as Leo Strauss. Derrida's argument is that deconstruction proves that texts have multiple meanings, and that the "violence" between the different meanings of text may be elucidated by close textual analysis. According to Derrida, deconstruction is not a method or a tool but an occurrence within the text itself. Writings about deconstruction are therefore referred to in academic circles as deconstructive readings.

Deconstruction is far more important to postmodernism than its seemingly narrow focus on text might imply. According to Derrida, therefore, one consequence of deconstruction is that the text may be defined so broadly as to encompass not just written words but the entire spectrum of symbols and phenomena within Western thought. To Derrida, a result of deconstruction is that no Western philosophers have been able to escape successfully from this large web of text and reach that which is "signified," which they have imagined to exist "just beyond" the text.

Relationship of the two: the same postmodern pie

The two different senses of postmodernism are reactions to the two different facets of modernism, respectively. One can observe that the reaction of postmodernity to modernity seems to be more radical than that of aesthetic postmodernism to twentieth-century aesthetic modernism, for whereas postmodernity is a big leap from modernity, aesthetic postmodernism still resembles twentieth-century aesthetic modernism at least in some external ways. Aesthetic modernism was already a very progressive movement in the first half of the twentieth century; so, aesthetic postmodernism, reacting to it, does not have to be a very big leap.

However, it is safe to say that the two different senses of postmodernism cohere and are not separate, even though they are originally two different reactions to the two different facets of modernism, respectively. Timewise, they both started soon after World War II. In terms of content as well, they concur in many respects. They interact, and "the postmodern turn can result from the interaction between" the two "in the postmodern pie."[17] One good example of this interaction is references made by Foucault and Derrida to Belgian artist René Magritte's experiments with signification, with their appreciative understanding of Magritte's suggestion that no matter how realistically the artist can depict an item, verisimilitude is still an artistic strategy, a mere representation of the thing, not the thing itself.[18]

The interaction of the two has resulted in a convergence of them also. Today, as some of the general characteristics of postmodernism as a whole, the following points in more popular terms are mentioned:

  1. No absolute truth.
  2. No absolute ethical standard. Hence the cause of feminists and homosexuals should also be tolerated.
  3. No absolute religion. This means to promote religious inclusivism. It usually leans toward the New Age religion.
  4. Globalization. There is no absolute nation. National boundaries hinder human communication.
  5. Pro-environmentalism. Western society is blamed for the destruction of the environment.

Criticizing Postmodernism

Interestingly, postmodernism has invited a wide spectrum of criticisms, not only from conservatives but also from Marxist scholars and other intellectuals.

Conservative criticisms

The term "postmodernism" is sometimes used to describe tendencies in society that are held to be antithetical to traditional systems of morality. Elements of the Christian Right, in particular, have interpreted postmodern society to be synonymous with moral relativism and contributing to deviant behavior. Conservative Christians also criticize postmodernism of being a serious challenge to scripture, creeds and confessions, and ecclesiastical tradition, which they regard as foundations of their faith. Muslim fundamentalism, too, dislikes postmodernity in much the same way, even banning postmodern books such as Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses.

Marxist criticisms

Jürgen Habermas, a member of the Frankfurt School who is somewhat connected to Marxism, has an interesting criticism of postmodernity, saying that it is "neo-conservative."[19] According to him, postmodernity is neo-conservative because it is irrational and potentially fascist in its abandonment of the rational program of the modernity tradition of the Enlightenment. Postmodernity, says Habermas, comes from the problematic tradition of what is called the "Counter-Enlightenment," which belittles autonomous rationality of the individual, scientific objectivity, rationalistic universalism, and public law in favor of will, spirit, and imagination. He argues that even though the Enlightenment may not have been perfect, we have to rehabilitate it.

Frederic Jameson, a Marxist, has offered an influential criticism of postmodernism.[20] According to him, what lies behind postmodernism is the logic of "late capitalism," i.e., consumer capitalism, with its emphasis on marketing and consuming commodities, and not on producing them. One serious symptom of postmodernism today, therefore, is that the historical past has been shallowly transformed into a series of emptied-out stylizations, which are then consumed as commodities easily. Jameson relates this symptom to what he calls "pastiche" as contrasted from "parody." While parody can still make a strong political critique to the establishment based on its norms of judgment, pastiche as a juxtaposition of emptied-out stylizations without a normative grounding is "amputated of the satiric impulse, devoid of laughter." This also means a loss of our connection to real history. His criticism of postmodernism resembles Jean Baudrillard's based on his notion of "simulacra" (copies) of the past without any connection to real past history.

Alex Callinicos, not quite satisfied with the criticisms by Habermas and Jameson, has presented a stronger criticism.[21] Callinicos blames the irrationalism and tepid relativism of Derrida and others, saying that it is simply constituted by a nihilistic reaction of those disillusioned bourgeois academics who experienced the failure of the student insurrection of Paris 1968 which ruled out any chance of a "people's revolution." Thus, it carries no sense of political resistance at all. Callinicos also attacks the theory of "post-industrial" society, which claims that "post-industrial" society with its mystified structures of global or disorganized capital in the postmodern age is beyond the ken of Marxism. For him, there is no such thing as post-industrial society, and worldwide revolution is still necessary. Still another criticism from him is directed toward the alleged existence of aesthetic postmodernism; according to him, it actually does not exist as it is nothing more than a refinement of aesthetic modernism.

Meaningless and disingenuous

The linguist Noam Chomsky has suggested that postmodernism is meaningless because it adds nothing to analytical or empirical knowledge. He asks why postmodernist intellectuals won't respond as "people in physics, math, biology, linguistics, and other fields are happy to do when someone asks them, seriously, what are the principles of their theories, on what evidence are they based, what do they explain that wasn't already obvious, etc. These are fair requests for anyone to make. If they can't be met, then I'd suggest recourse to Hume's advice in similar circumstances: to the flames."[22]

There are lots of things I don't understand—say, the latest debates over whether neutrinos have mass or the way that Fermat's last theorem was (apparently) proven recently. But from 50 years in this game, I have learned two things: (1) I can ask friends who work in these areas to explain it to me at a level that I can understand, and they can do so, without particular difficulty; (2) if I'm interested, I can proceed to learn more so that I will come to understand it. Now Derrida, Lacan, Lyotard, Kristeva, etc.—even Foucault, whom I knew and liked, and who was somewhat different from the rest—write things that I also don't understand, but (1) and (2) don't hold: no one who says they do understand can explain it to me and I haven't a clue as to how to proceed to overcome my failures. That leaves one of two possibilities: (a) some new advance in intellectual life has been made, perhaps some sudden genetic mutation, which has created a form of "theory" that is beyond quantum theory, topology, etc., in depth and profundity; or (b) … I won't spell it out. Noam Chomsky

The criticism of postmodernism as ultimately meaningless rhetorical gymnastics was demonstrated in the Sokal Affair, where physicist Alan Sokal proposed and delivered for publication an article purportedly about interpreting physics and mathematics in terms of postmodern theory, which he had deliberately distorted to make it nonsensical. It was nevertheless published by Social Text a postmodernist cultural studies journal published by Duke University. Interestingly, editors at Social Text never acknowledged that the article's publication had been a mistake but supported a counter-argument defending the "interpretative validity" of Sokal's article, despite the author's later rebuttal of his own article.

Beyond the End of the Postmodern Era

Among the many criticisms, strictly speaking, there are some who have actually stated against postmodernism that the postmodern era has already ended, suggesting the coming of a new age of "post-postmodernism," which is a return of many of the features of modernity. British photographer David Bate observes that postmodernism has been replaced with what he calls "neo-realism" in which the postmodern type of representation no longer exists and instead "descriptive" works as in the photography exhibition in 2003 at the Tate Modern in London called Cruel and Tender: The Real in the Twentieth Century have emerged "to produce a reality as though this is 'as it really is', to make reality certain through realism and without interrogating it."[23] In his essay "The Death of Postmodernism and Beyond," literary critic Alan Kirby argues that we now inhabit an entirely new cultural landscape, which he calls "pseudo-modernism": "Postmodernism conceived of contemporary culture as a spectacle before which the individual sat powerless, and within which questions of the real were problematised. It therefore emphasised the television or the cinema screen. Its successor, which I will call pseudo-modernism, makes the individual's action the necessary condition of the cultural product."[24]

Accommodating Postmodernism

Postmodernism has also been appreciated by various schools leaning toward liberalism such as feminism and accommodated even by religious and theological people especially in Christianity.

Feminist appreciation

Some feminists such as Julia Kristeva, Jane Flax, and Judith Butler have found postmodernism to be in support of their cause. According to them, the categorization of the male/female binary in society came from the modernity tradition of the Enlightenment, and therefore it must be deconstructed. The gender difference is not naturally given. This position has built on the ideas of not only Simone de Beauvoir but also Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida, etc., and it can be called "postmodern feminism" to be distinguished from other branches of feminism.

Religious and theological accommodations

Some religious people welcome the relativist stance of postmodernism that says that there is no universal religious truth or law, for they believe that it provides an opportunity for interreligious dialogue with a spirit of pluralism. For a completely different reason, conservative believers, who are otherwise far from appreciative of postmodernism, welcome the condition of postmodern vacuum as a good context for evangelism: "A growing number of these Christians are embracing some postmodern ideas—- not uncritically, but believing they offer an authentic context for Christian living and fresh avenues of evangelism."[25]

There are also theologically ambitious Christians who accommodate the challenge of postmodernism in such a creative way as to come up with a more understandable and even convincing, new theology in the midst of postmodern uncertainty. The Cambridge Companion to Postmodern Theology lists seven types of such theologians:[26]

  1. Theology of communal practice, which enables us to see the patterns of God in communities not through any theoretical foundations of modernism (John Howard Yoder, Nicholas Lash, etc.).
  2. Postliberal theology, which involves biblical narratives to make the characters in the stories come alive, avoiding reaching any timeless core doctrine (George Lindbeck, etc.).
  3. Postmetaphysical theology, which expresses God not in terms of being but rather in terms of goodness or love (Jean-Luc Marion, etc.).
  4. Deconstructive theology, which goes through Derrida's deconstruction, but which ends up being a way of longing for God after deconstruction (John D. Caputo, etc.)
  5. Reconstructive theology, which is Whiteheadian postmodernism, pursuing a non-dogmatic theological reconstruction after deconstruction (David Ray Griffin, John B. Cobb, Jr., etc.).
  6. Feminist theology (Judith Butler, etc.).
  7. Radical orthodoxy, which presents classical Christianity as a genuine alternative not only to modernity but also to postmodernity (John Milbank, Catherine Pickstock, Graham Ward, etc.).

From above, it seems that postmodernism that may have brought a lot of challenges to many people is not necessarily an unpleasant thing but rather a good thing from which something new, truthful, and reliable can be expected to come.

Notes

  1. Ihab Hassan, "From Postmodernism to Postmodernism," Philosophy and Literature 25:1 (2001).
  2. David Lyon. Postmodernity. (Buckingham: Open University Press, 1994)
  3. Mary Klages, "Postmodernism." English Department, University of Colorado. Retrieved March 8, 2008.
  4. Dino Felluga, "Introduction to Postmodernism." Retrieved March 5, 2008.
  5. Lyon, 1994
  6. Klages, "Postmodernism." Retrieved March 8, 2008.
  7. Mary Klages "Postmodernism." Retrieved March 8, 2008.
  8. Klages, "Postmodernism." Retrieved March 8, 2008.
  9. Felluga, "Introduction to Postmodernism." Retrieved March 5, 2008.
  10. Linda Hutcheon. The Politics of Postmodernism. (New York: Routledge, 1989).
  11. Fredric Jameson. Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism. {Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1991).
  12. Jean Baudrillard. Simulacra and Simulation, trans. Sheila Faria Glaser (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1994).
  13. See, for example, Leslie Fiedler, "The New Mutants," Partisan Review 32 (4) (Fall 1965); Ihab Hassan, "The Literature of Silence," Encounter 28 (1) (January 1967).
  14. Jürgen Habermas, "Modernity: An Unfinished Project," in Habermas and the Unfinished Project of Modernity: Critical Essays on The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity, ed. Maurizio Passerin d'Entrèves and Seyla Benhabib. (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997).
  15. Jean-François Lyotard. The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge, trans. Geoff Bennington and Brian Massumi (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1984).
  16. Klages "Postmodernism." Retrieved March 8, 2008.
  17. Craig Bartholomew, "Post/Late? Modernity as the Context for Christian Scholarship Today." Retrieved March 10, 2008.
  18. For example, Michel Foucault, This Is Not a Pipe, trans. James Harkness (University of California Press, 1983); and Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, trans. Geoffrey Bennington and Ian McLeod (Chicago: University Of Chicago Press, 1987).
  19. Jürgen Habermas, "Modernity: An Unfinished Project," in Habermas and the Unfinished Project of Modernity: Critical Essays on The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity, ed. Maurizio Passerin d'Entrèves and Seyla Benhabib (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997).
  20. Frederic Jameson. Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism.
  21. Alex Callinicos. Against Postmodernism: A Marxist Critique. (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1990).
  22. Noam Chomsky, "On Postmodernism." Retrieved December 18, 2007.
  23. David Bate"After Modernism?" www.lensculture.com. Retrieved March 12, 2008.
  24. Alan Kirby, 2006."The Death of Postmodernism and Beyond.".Philosophy Now- A magazine of Ideas. Retrieved March 12, 2008.
  25. Six postmodern Christians discuss the possibilities and limits of postmodernism. A forum with Carlos Aguilar, Vincent Bacote, Andy Crouch, Catherine Crouch, Sherri King, and Chris Simmons "The Antimoderns: Six Postmodern Christians Discuss the Possibilities and Limits of Postmodernism.". November 13, 2000. Christianity Today. Retrieved March 13, 2008.
  26. Kevin J. Vanhoozer, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Postmodern Theology. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003).

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

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  • Lyotard, Jean-François. The Postmodern Explained: Correspondence, 1982-1985. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993. ISBN 9780816622115
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  • Sokal, Alan, and Jean Bricmont. Fashionable Nonsense: Postmodern Intellectuals' Abuse of Science. New York: Picador USA, 1998. ISBN 9780312195458
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External links

All links retrieved November 30, 2022.


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