fbpx
Wikipedia

Postmodernism

Postmodernism is an intellectual stance or mode of discourse[1][2] characterized by skepticism toward the "grand narratives" of modernism, rejection of epistemic certainty or the stability of meaning, and sensitivity to the role of ideology in maintaining political power.[3][4] Claims to objectivity are dismissed as naïve realism,[5] with attention drawn to the conditional nature of knowledge claims within particular historical, political, and cultural discourses.[4] The postmodern outlook is characterized by self-referentiality, epistemological relativism, moral relativism, pluralism, irony, irreverence, and eclecticism;[4] it rejects the "universal validity" of binary oppositions, stable identity, hierarchy, and categorization.[6][7]

Initially emerging from a mode of literary criticism, postmodernism developed in the mid-twentieth century as a rejection of modernism,[8][9][10][11] and has been observed across many disciplines.[12][13] Postmodernism is associated with the disciplines deconstruction and post-structuralism.[4] Various authors have criticized postmodernism as promoting obscurantism, as abandoning Enlightenment rationalism and scientific rigor, and as adding nothing to analytical or empirical knowledge.[14][15][16][17][18][19]

Definition

Postmodernism is an intellectual stance or mode of discourse[1][2] which challenges worldviews associated with Enlightenment rationality dating back to the 17th century.[4] Postmodernism is associated with relativism and a focus on the role of ideology in the maintenance of economic and political power.[4] Postmodernists are "skeptical of explanations which claim to be valid for all groups, cultures, traditions, or races, and instead focuses on the relative truths of each person".[20] It considers "reality" to be a mental construct.[20] Postmodernism rejects the possibility of unmediated reality or objectively-rational knowledge, asserting that all interpretations are contingent on the perspective from which they are made;[5] claims to objective fact are dismissed as naive realism.[4]

Postmodern thinkers frequently describe knowledge claims and value systems as contingent or socially-conditioned, describing them as products of political, historical, or cultural discourses[21] and hierarchies.[4] Accordingly, postmodern thought is broadly characterized by tendencies to self-referentiality, epistemological and moral relativism, pluralism, and irreverence.[4] Postmodernism is often associated with schools of thought such as deconstruction and post-structuralism.[4] Postmodernism relies on critical theory, which considers the effects of ideology, society, and history on culture.[22] Postmodernism and critical theory commonly criticize universalist ideas of objective reality, morality, truth, human nature, reason, language, and social progress.[4]

Initially, postmodernism was a mode of discourse on literature and literary criticism, commenting on the nature of literary text, meaning, author and reader, writing, and reading.[8] Postmodernism developed in the mid- to late-twentieth century across many scholarly disciplines as a departure or rejection of modernism.[9][10][11][12][13] As a critical practice, postmodernism employs concepts such as hyperreality, simulacrum, trace, and difference, and rejects abstract principles in favor of direct experience.[20]

Origins of term

The term postmodern was first used in 1870.[23] John Watkins Chapman suggested "a Postmodern style of painting" as a way to depart from French Impressionism.[24] J. M. Thompson, in his 1914 article in The Hibbert Journal (a quarterly philosophical review), used it to describe changes in attitudes and beliefs in the critique of religion, writing: "The raison d'être of Post-Modernism is to escape from the double-mindedness of Modernism by being thorough in its criticism by extending it to religion as well as theology, to Catholic feeling as well as to Catholic tradition."[25]

In 1942 H. R. Hays described postmodernism as a new literary form.[26]

In 1926, Bernard Iddings Bell, president of St. Stephen's College (now Bard College), published Postmodernism and Other Essays, marking the first use of the term to describe the historical period following Modernity.[27][28] The essay criticizes the lingering socio-cultural norms, attitudes, and practices of the Age of Enlightenment. It also forecasts the major cultural shifts toward Postmodernity and (Bell being an Anglican Episcopal priest[29][30]) suggests orthodox religion as a solution.[31] However, the term postmodernity was first used as a general theory for a historical movement in 1939 by Arnold J. Toynbee: "Our own Post-Modern Age has been inaugurated by the general war of 1914–1918".[32]

 
Portland Building (1982), by architect Michael Graves, an example of Postmodern architecture

In 1949 the term was used to describe a dissatisfaction with modern architecture and led to the postmodern architecture movement[33] in response to the modernist architectural movement known as the International Style. Postmodernism in architecture was initially marked by a re-emergence of surface ornament, reference to surrounding buildings in urban settings, historical reference in decorative forms (eclecticism), and non-orthogonal angles.[34]

Author Peter Drucker suggested the transformation into a post-modern world that happened between 1937 and 1957 and described it as a "nameless era" characterized as a shift to a conceptual world based on pattern, purpose, and process rather than a mechanical cause. This shift was outlined by four new realities: the emergence of an Educated Society, the importance of international development, the decline of the nation-state, and the collapse of the viability of non-Western cultures.[35]

In 1971, in a lecture delivered at the Institute of Contemporary Art, London, Mel Bochner described "post-modernism" in art as having started with Jasper Johns, "who first rejected sense-data and the singular point-of-view as the basis for his art, and treated art as a critical investigation".[36]

In 1996, Walter Truett Anderson described postmodernism as belonging to one of four typological world views which he identified as:

  • Neo-romantic, in which truth is found through attaining harmony with nature or spiritual exploration of the inner self.[37]
  • Postmodern-ironist, which sees truth as socially constructed.
  • Scientific-rational, in which truth is defined through methodical, disciplined inquiry.
  • Social-traditional, in which truth is found in the heritage of American and Western civilization.

History

The basic features of what is now called postmodernism can be found as early as the 1940s, most notably in the work of artists such as Jorge Luis Borges.[38] However, most scholars today agree postmodernism began to compete with modernism in the late 1950s and gained ascendancy over it in the 1960s.[39]

The primary features of postmodernism typically include the ironic play with styles, citations, and narrative levels,[40][41] a metaphysical skepticism or nihilism towards a "grand narrative" of Western culture,[42] and a preference for the virtual at the expense of the Real (or more accurately, a fundamental questioning of what 'the real' constitutes).[43]

Since the late 1990s, there has been a growing sentiment in popular culture and in academia that postmodernism "has gone out of fashion".[44] Others argue that postmodernism is dead in the context of current cultural production.[45][46][47]

Theories and derivatives

Structuralism and post-structuralism

Structuralism was a philosophical movement developed by French academics in the 1950s, partly in response to French existentialism,[48] and often interpreted in relation to modernism and high modernism. Thinkers who have been called "structuralists" include the anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, the linguist Ferdinand de Saussure, the Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser, and the semiotician Algirdas Greimas. The early writings of the psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan and the literary theorist Roland Barthes have also been called "structuralist". Those who began as structuralists but became post-structuralists include Michel Foucault, Roland Barthes, Jean Baudrillard, and Gilles Deleuze. Other post-structuralists include Jacques Derrida, Pierre Bourdieu, Jean-François Lyotard, Julia Kristeva, Hélène Cixous, and Luce Irigaray. The American cultural theorists, critics, and intellectuals whom they influenced include Judith Butler, John Fiske, Rosalind Krauss, Avital Ronell, and Hayden White.

Like structuralists, post-structuralists start from the assumption that people's identities, values, and economic conditions determine each other rather than having intrinsic properties that can be understood in isolation.[49] Thus the French structuralists considered themselves to be espousing relativism and constructionism. But they nevertheless tended to explore how the subjects of their study might be described, reductively, as a set of essential relationships, schematics, or mathematical symbols. (An example is Claude Lévi-Strauss's algebraic formulation of mythological transformation in "The Structural Study of Myth"[50]).

Postmodernism entails reconsideration of the entire Western value system (love, marriage, popular culture, shift from an industrial to a service economy) that took place since the 1950s and 1960s, with a peak in the Social Revolution of 1968—are described with the term postmodernity,[51] as opposed to postmodernism, a term referring to an opinion or movement.[52] Post-structuralism is characterized by new ways of thinking through structuralism, contrary to the original form.[53]

Deconstruction

One of the most well-known postmodernist concerns is deconstruction, a theory for philosophy, literary criticism, and textual analysis developed by Jacques Derrida.[54] Critics have insisted that Derrida's work is rooted in a statement found in Of Grammatology: "Il n'y a pas de hors-texte" ('there is nothing outside the text'). Such critics misinterpret the statement as denying any reality outside of books. The statement is actually part of a critique of "inside" and "outside" metaphors when referring to the text, and is a corollary to the observation that there is no "inside" of a text as well.[55] This attention to a text's unacknowledged reliance on metaphors and figures embedded within its discourse is characteristic of Derrida's approach. Derrida's method sometimes involves demonstrating that a given philosophical discourse depends on binary oppositions or excluding terms that the discourse itself has declared to be irrelevant or inapplicable. Derrida's philosophy inspired a postmodern movement called deconstructivism among architects, characterized by a design that rejects structural "centers" and encourages decentralized play among its elements. Derrida discontinued his involvement with the movement after the publication of his collaborative project with architect Peter Eisenman in Chora L Works: Jacques Derrida and Peter Eisenman.[56]

Post-postmodernism

The connection between postmodernism, posthumanism, and cyborgism has led to a challenge to postmodernism, for which the terms Post-postmodernism and postpoststructuralism were first coined in 2003:[57][58]

In some sense, we may regard postmodernism, posthumanism, poststructuralism, etc., as being of the 'cyborg age' of mind over body. Deconference was an exploration in post-cyborgism (i.e. what comes after the postcorporeal era), and thus explored issues of postpostmodernism, postpoststructuralism, and the like. To understand this transition from 'pomo' (cyborgism) to 'popo' (postcyborgism) we must first understand the cyborg era itself.[59]

More recently metamodernism, post-postmodernism and the "death of postmodernism" have been widely debated: in 2007 Andrew Hoberek noted in his introduction to a special issue of the journal Twentieth-Century Literature titled "After Postmodernism" that "declarations of postmodernism's demise have become a critical commonplace". A small group of critics has put forth a range of theories that aim to describe culture or society in the alleged aftermath of postmodernism, most notably Raoul Eshelman (performatism), Gilles Lipovetsky (hypermodernity), Nicolas Bourriaud (altermodern), and Alan Kirby (digimodernism, formerly called pseudo-modernism). None of these new theories or labels have so far gained very widespread acceptance. Sociocultural anthropologist Nina Müller-Schwarze offers neostructuralism as a possible direction.[60] The exhibition Postmodernism – Style and Subversion 1970–1990 at the Victoria and Albert Museum (London, 24 September 2011 – 15 January 2012) was billed as the first show to document postmodernism as a historical movement.

Philosophy

In the 1970s a group of poststructuralists in France developed a radical critique of modern philosophy with roots discernible in Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, and Heidegger, and became known as postmodern theorists, notably including Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Jean-François Lyotard, Jean Baudrillard, and others. New and challenging modes of thought and writing pushed the development of new areas and topics in philosophy. By the 1980s, this spread to America (Richard Rorty) and the world.[61]

Jacques Derrida

Jacques Derrida was a French-Algerian philosopher best known for developing a form of semiotic analysis known as deconstruction, which he discussed in numerous texts, and developed in the context of phenomenology.[62][63][64] He is one of the major figures associated with post-structuralism and postmodern philosophy.[65][66][67]

Derrida re-examined the fundamentals of writing and its consequences on philosophy in general; sought to undermine the language of "presence" or metaphysics in an analytical technique which, beginning as a point of departure from Heidegger's notion of Destruktion, came to be known as deconstruction.[68]

Michel Foucault

Michel Foucault was a French philosopher, historian of ideas, social theorist, and literary critic. First associated with structuralism, Foucault created an oeuvre that today is seen as belonging to post-structuralism and to postmodern philosophy. Considered a leading figure of French theory [fr], his work remains fruitful in the English-speaking academic world in a large number of sub-disciplines. The Times Higher Education Guide described him in 2009 as the most cited author in the humanities.[69]

Michel Foucault introduced concepts such as discursive regime, or re-invoked those of older philosophers like episteme and genealogy in order to explain the relationship between meaning, power, and social behavior within social orders (see The Order of Things, The Archaeology of Knowledge, Discipline and Punish, and The History of Sexuality).[70][71][72][73]

Jean-François Lyotard

Influenced by Nietzsche,[74] Jean-François Lyotard is credited with being the first to use the term in a philosophical context, in his 1979 work The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge. In it, he follows Wittgenstein's language games model and speech act theory, contrasting two different language games, that of the expert, and that of the philosopher. He talks about the transformation of knowledge into information in the computer age and likens the transmission or reception of coded messages (information) to a position within a language game.[3]

Lyotard defined philosophical postmodernism in The Postmodern Condition, writing: "Simplifying to the extreme, I define postmodern as incredulity towards metanarratives...."[75] where what he means by metanarrative (in French, grands récits) is something like a unified, complete, universal, and epistemically certain story about everything that is. Postmodernists reject metanarratives because they reject the concept of truth that metanarratives presuppose. Postmodernist philosophers, in general, argue that truth is always contingent on historical and social context rather than being absolute and universal—and that truth is always partial and "at issue" rather than being complete and certain.[3]

Richard Rorty

Richard Rorty argues in Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature that contemporary analytic philosophy mistakenly imitates scientific methods. In addition, he denounces the traditional epistemological perspectives of representationalism and correspondence theory that rely upon the independence of knowers and observers from phenomena and the passivity of natural phenomena in relation to consciousness.

Jean Baudrillard

Jean Baudrillard, in Simulacra and Simulation, introduced the concept that reality or the principle of the Real is short-circuited by the interchangeability of signs in an era whose communicative and semantic acts are dominated by electronic media and digital technologies. For Baudrillard, "simulation is no longer that of a territory, a referential being or a substance. It is the generation by models of a real without origin or reality: a hyperreal."[76]

Fredric Jameson

Fredric Jameson set forth one of the first expansive theoretical treatments of postmodernism as a historical period, intellectual trend, and social phenomenon in a series of lectures at the Whitney Museum, later expanded as Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (1991).[77]

Douglas Kellner

In Analysis of the Journey, a journal birthed from postmodernism, Douglas Kellner insists that the "assumptions and procedures of modern theory" must be forgotten. Extensively, Kellner analyzes the terms of this theory in real-life experiences and examples.[78] Kellner used science and technology studies as a major part of his analysis; he urged that the theory is incomplete without it. The scale was larger than just postmodernism alone; it must be interpreted through cultural studies where science and technology studies play a huge role. The reality of the September 11 attacks on the United States of America is the catalyst for his explanation. In response, Kellner continues to examine the repercussions of understanding the effects of the 11 September attacks. He questions if the attacks are only able to be understood in a limited form of postmodern theory due to the level of irony.[79]

The conclusion he depicts is simple: postmodernism, as most use it today, will decide what experiences and signs in one's reality will be one's reality as they know it.[80]

Manifestations

Architecture

 
Neue Staatsgalerie (1977–84), Stuttgart, Germany, designed by the British architects James Stirling and Michael Wilford, showing the eclectic mix of classical architecture and colourful ironic detailing.
 
Ray and Maria Stata Center (2004), designed by the Canadian-American architect Frank Gehry for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Modern Architecture, as established and developed by Walter Gropius and Le Corbusier, was focused on:

  • the attempted harmony of form and function;[81] and,
  • the dismissal of "frivolous ornament."[82][83][page needed]
  • the pursuit of a perceived ideal perfection;

They argued for architecture that represented the spirit of the age as depicted in cutting-edge technology, be it airplanes, cars, ocean liners, or even supposedly artless grain silos.[84] Modernist Ludwig Mies van der Rohe is associated with the phrase "less is more".

Critics of Modernism have:

  • argued that the attributes of perfection and minimalism are themselves subjective;
  • pointed out anachronisms in modern thought; and,
  • questioned the benefits of its philosophy.[85][full citation needed]

The intellectual scholarship regarding postmodernism and architecture is closely linked with the writings of critic-turned-architect Charles Jencks, beginning with lectures in the early 1970s and his essay "The Rise of Post Modern Architecture" from 1975.[86] His magnum opus, however, is the book The Language of Post-Modern Architecture, first published in 1977, and since running to seven editions.[87] Jencks makes the point that Post-Modernism (like Modernism) varies for each field of art, and that for architecture it is not just a reaction to Modernism but what he terms double coding: "Double Coding: the combination of Modern techniques with something else (usually traditional building) in order for architecture to communicate with the public and a concerned minority, usually other architects."[88] In their book, "Revisiting Postmodernism", Terry Farrell and Adam Furman argue that postmodernism brought a more joyous and sensual experience to the culture, particularly in architecture.[89]

Art

Postmodern art is a body of art movements that sought to contradict some aspects of modernism or some aspects that emerged or developed in its aftermath. Cultural production manifesting as intermedia, installation art, conceptual art, deconstructionist display, and multimedia, particularly involving video, are described as postmodern.[90]

Graphic design

Early mention of postmodernism as an element of graphic design appeared in the British magazine, "Design".[91] A characteristic of postmodern graphic design is that "retro, techno, punk, grunge, beach, parody, and pastiche were all conspicuous trends. Each had its own sites and venues, detractors and advocates."[92]

Literature

 

Jorge Luis Borges' (1939) short story "Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote", is often considered as predicting postmodernism[93] and is a paragon of the ultimate parody.[94] Samuel Beckett is also considered an important precursor and influence. Novelists who are commonly connected with postmodern literature include Vladimir Nabokov, William Gaddis, Umberto Eco, Italo Calvino, Pier Vittorio Tondelli, John Hawkes, William S. Burroughs, Kurt Vonnegut, John Barth, Robert Coover, Jean Rhys, Donald Barthelme, E. L. Doctorow, Richard Kalich, Jerzy Kosiński, Don DeLillo, Thomas Pynchon[95] (Pynchon's work has also been described as high modern[96]), Ishmael Reed, Kathy Acker, Ana Lydia Vega, Jáchym Topol and Paul Auster.

In 1971, the American scholar Ihab Hassan published The Dismemberment of Orpheus: Toward a Postmodern Literature, an early work of literary criticism from a postmodern perspective that traces the development of what he calls "literature of silence" through Marquis de Sade, Franz Kafka, Ernest Hemingway, Samuel Beckett, and many others, including developments such as the Theatre of the Absurd and the nouveau roman.

In Postmodernist Fiction (1987), Brian McHale details the shift from modernism to postmodernism, arguing that the former is characterized by an epistemological dominant and that postmodern works have developed out of modernism and are primarily concerned with questions of ontology.[97] McHale's second book, Constructing Postmodernism (1992), provides readings of postmodern fiction and some contemporary writers who go under the label of cyberpunk. McHale's "What Was Postmodernism?" (2007)[98] follows Raymond Federman's lead in now using the past tense when discussing postmodernism.

Music

 
American singer-songwriter Madonna

Jonathan Kramer has written that avant-garde musical compositions (which some would consider modernist rather than postmodernist) "defy more than seduce the listener, and they extend by potentially unsettling means the very idea of what music is."[99] In the 1960s, composers such as Terry Riley, Henryk Górecki, Bradley Joseph, John Adams, Steve Reich, Philip Glass, Michael Nyman, and Lou Harrison reacted to the perceived elitism and dissonant sound of atonal academic modernism by producing music with simple textures and relatively consonant harmonies, whilst others, most notably John Cage challenged the prevailing narratives of beauty and objectivity common to Modernism.

Author on postmodernism, Dominic Strinati, has noted, it is also important "to include in this category the so-called 'art rock' musical innovations and mixing of styles associated with groups like Talking Heads, and performers like Laurie Anderson, together with the self-conscious 'reinvention of disco' by the Pet Shop Boys".[100]

In the late-20th century, avant-garde academics labelled American singer Madonna, as the "personification of the postmodern",[101] with Christian writer Graham Cray saying that "Madonna is perhaps the most visible example of what is called post-modernism",[102] and Martin Amis described her as "perhaps the most postmodern personage on the planet".[102] She was also suggested by assistant professor Olivier Sécardin of Utrecht University to epitomise postmodernism.[103]

Urban planning

Modernism sought to design and plan cities that followed the logic of the new model of industrial mass production; reverting to large-scale solutions, aesthetic standardisation, and prefabricated design solutions.[104] Modernism eroded urban living by its failure to recognise differences and aim towards homogeneous landscapes (Simonsen 1990, 57). Jane Jacobs' 1961 book The Death and Life of Great American Cities[105] was a sustained critique of urban planning as it had developed within Modernism and marked a transition from modernity to postmodernity in thinking about urban planning (Irving 1993, 479).

The transition from Modernism to Postmodernism is often said to have happened at 3:32 pm on 15 July in 1972, when Pruitt–Igoe, a housing development for low-income people in St. Louis designed by architect Minoru Yamasaki, which had been a prize-winning version of Le Corbusier's 'machine for modern living,' was deemed uninhabitable and was torn down (Irving 1993, 480). Since then, Postmodernism has involved theories that embrace and aim to create diversity. It exalts uncertainty, flexibility and change (Hatuka & D'Hooghe 2007) and rejects utopianism while embracing a utopian way of thinking and acting.[106] Postmodernity of 'resistance' seeks to deconstruct Modernism and is a critique of the origins without necessarily returning to them (Irving 1993, 60). As a result of Postmodernism, planners are much less inclined to lay a firm or steady claim to there being one single 'right way' of engaging in urban planning and are more open to different styles and ideas of 'how to plan' (Irving 474).[104][106][107][108]

The postmodern approach to understanding the city were pioneered in the 1980s by what could be called the "Los Angeles School of Urbanism" centered on the UCLA's Urban Planning Department in the 1980s, where contemporary Los Angeles was taken to be the postmodern city par excellence, contra posed to what had been the dominant ideas of the Chicago School formed in the 1920s at the University of Chicago, with its framework of urban ecology and emphasis on functional areas of use within a city, and the concentric circles to understand the sorting of different population groups.[109] Edward Soja of the Los Angeles School combined Marxist and postmodern perspectives and focused on the economic and social changes (globalization, specialization, industrialization/deindustrialization, Neo-Liberalism, mass migration) that lead to the creation of large city-regions with their patchwork of population groups and economic uses.[109][110]

Criticisms

Criticisms of postmodernism are intellectually diverse, including the argument that postmodernism is meaningless and promotes obscurantism.

In part in reference to post-modernism, conservative English philosopher Roger Scruton wrote, "A writer who says that there are no truths, or that all truth is 'merely relative,' is asking you not to believe him. So don't."[111] Similarly, Dick Hebdige criticized the vagueness of the term, enumerating a long list of otherwise unrelated concepts that people have designated as postmodernism, from "the décor of a room" or "a 'scratch' video", to fear of nuclear armageddon and the "implosion of meaning", and stated that anything that could signify all of those things was "a buzzword".[112]

The linguist and philosopher Noam Chomsky has said that postmodernism is meaningless because it adds nothing to analytical or empirical knowledge. He asks why postmodernist intellectuals do not respond like people in other fields when asked, "what are the principles of their theories, on what evidence are they based, what do they explain that wasn't already obvious, etc.?...If [these requests] can't be met, then I'd suggest recourse to Hume's advice in similar circumstances: 'to the flames'."[113]

Christian philosopher William Lane Craig has said "The idea that we live in a postmodern culture is a myth. In fact, a postmodern culture is an impossibility; it would be utterly unliveable. People are not relativistic when it comes to matters of science, engineering, and technology; rather, they are relativistic and pluralistic in matters of religion and ethics. But, of course, that's not postmodernism; that's modernism!"[114]

American author Thomas Pynchon targeted postmodernism as an object of derision in his novels, openly mocking postmodernist discourse.[115]

American academic and aesthete Camille Paglia has said:

The end result of four decades of postmodernism permeating the art world is that there is very little interesting or important work being done right now in the fine arts. The irony was a bold and creative posture when Duchamp did it, but it is now an utterly banal, exhausted, and tedious strategy. Young artists have been taught to be "cool" and "hip" and thus painfully self-conscious. They are not encouraged to be enthusiastic, emotional, and visionary. They have been cut off from artistic tradition by the crippled skepticism about history that they have been taught by ignorant and solipsistic postmodernists. In short, the art world will never revive until postmodernism fades away. Postmodernism is a plague upon the mind and the heart.[116]

German philosopher Albrecht Wellmer has said that "postmodernism at its best might be seen as a self-critical – a sceptical, ironic, but nevertheless unrelenting – form of modernism; a modernism beyond utopianism, scientism and foundationalism; in short a post-metaphysical modernism."[117]

A formal, academic critique of postmodernism can be found in Beyond the Hoax by physics professor Alan Sokal and in Fashionable Nonsense by Sokal and Belgian physicist Jean Bricmont, both books discussing the so-called Sokal affair. In 1996, Sokal wrote a deliberately nonsensical article[118] in a style similar to postmodernist articles, which was accepted for publication by the postmodern cultural studies journal, Social Text. On the same day of the release he published another article in a different journal explaining the Social Text article hoax.[119][120] The philosopher Thomas Nagel has supported Sokal and Bricmont, describing their book Fashionable Nonsense as consisting largely of "extensive quotations of scientific gibberish from name-brand French intellectuals, together with eerily patient explanations of why it is gibberish,"[121] and agreeing that "there does seem to be something about the Parisian scene that is particularly hospitable to reckless verbosity."[122]

Zimbabwean-born British Marxist Alex Callinicos says that postmodernism "reflects the disappointed revolutionary generation of '68, and the incorporation of many of its members into the professional and managerial 'new middle class'. It is best read as a symptom of political frustration and social mobility rather than as a significant intellectual or cultural phenomenon in its own right."[123]

Analytic philosopher Daniel Dennett said, "Postmodernism, the school of 'thought' that proclaimed 'There are no truths, only interpretations' has largely played itself out in absurdity, but it has left behind a generation of academics in the humanities disabled by their distrust of the very idea of truth and their disrespect for evidence, settling for 'conversations' in which nobody is wrong and nothing can be confirmed, only asserted with whatever style you can muster."[124]

American historian Richard Wolin traces the origins of postmodernism to intellectual roots in fascism, writing "postmodernism has been nourished by the doctrines of Friedrich Nietzsche, Martin Heidegger, Maurice Blanchot, and Paul de Man—all of whom either prefigured or succumbed to the proverbial intellectual fascination with fascism."[125]

Daniel A. Farber and Suzanna Sherry criticised postmodernism for reducing the complexity of the modern world to an expression of power and for undermining truth and reason:

If the modern era begins with the European Enlightenment, the postmodern era that captivates the radical multiculturalists begins with its rejection. According to the new radicals, the Enlightenment-inspired ideas that have previously structured our world, especially the legal and academic parts of it, are a fraud perpetrated and perpetuated by white males to consolidate their own power. Those who disagree are not only blind but bigoted. The Enlightenment's goal of an objective and reasoned basis for knowledge, merit, truth, justice, and the like is an impossibility: "objectivity," in the sense of standards of judgment that transcend individual perspectives, does not exist. Reason is just another code word for the views of the privileged. The Enlightenment itself merely replaced one socially constructed view of reality with another, mistaking power for knowledge. There is naught but power.[126]

Richard Caputo, William Epstein, David Stoesz & Bruce Thyer consider postmodernism to be a "dead-end in social work epistemology." They write:

Postmodernism continues to have a detrimental influence on social work, questioning the Enlightenment, criticizing established research methods, and challenging scientific authority. The promotion of postmodernism by editors of Social Work and the Journal of Social Work Education has elevated postmodernism, placing it on a par with theoretically guided and empirically based research. The inclusion of postmodernism in the 2008 Educational Policy and Accreditation Standards of the Council on Social Work Education and its 2015 sequel further erode the knowledge-building capacity of social work educators. In relation to other disciplines that have exploited empirical methods, social work's stature will continue to ebb until postmodernism is rejected in favor of scientific methods for generating knowledge.[127]

H. Sidky pointed out what he sees as several inherent flaws of a postmodern antiscience perspective, including the confusion of the authority of science (evidence) with the scientist conveying the knowledge; its self-contradictory claim that all truths are relative; and its strategic ambiguity. He sees 21st-century anti-scientific and pseudo-scientific approaches to knowledge, particularly in the United States, as rooted in a postmodernist "decades-long academic assault on science:"

Many of those indoctrinated in postmodern anti-science went on to become conservative political and religious leaders, policymakers, journalists, journal editors, judges, lawyers, and members of city councils and school boards. Sadly, they forgot the lofty ideals of their teachers, except that science is bogus.[128]

Criticism by "postmodernists" themselves

The French psychotherapist and philosopher, Félix Guattari, rejected its theoretical assumptions by arguing that the structuralist and postmodernist visions of the world were not flexible enough to seek explanations in psychological, social, and environmental domains at the same time.[129]

In an interview with Truls Lie, Jean Baudrillard noted: "[ Transmodernism, etc.] are better terms than “postmodernism”. It is not about modernity; it is about every system that has developed its mode of expression to the extent that it surpasses itself and its own logic. This is what I am trying to analyze." "There is no longer any ontologically secret substance. I perceive this to be nihilism rather than postmodernism."[130]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Nuyen, A.T., 1992. The Role of Rhetorical Devices in Postmodernist Discourse. Philosophy & Rhetoric, pp.183–194.
  2. ^ a b Torfing, Jacob (1999). New theories of discourse : Laclau, Mouffe, and Z̆iz̆ek. Oxford, UK Malden, Mass: Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 0-631-19557-2.
  3. ^ a b c Aylesworth, Gary (5 February 2015) [1st pub. 2005]. "Postmodernism". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. sep-postmodernism (Spring 2015 ed.). Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Duignan, Brian. "Postmodernism". Britannica.com. Retrieved 24 April 2016.
  5. ^ a b Bryant, Ian; Rennie Johnston; Robin Usher (2004). Adult Education and the Postmodern Challenge: Learning Beyond the Limits. Routledge. p. 203.
  6. ^ . American Heritage Dictionary. Houghton, Mifflin, Harcourt. 2019. Archived from the original on 15 June 2018. Retrieved 5 May 2019 – via AHDictionary.com. Of or relating to an intellectual stance often marked by eclecticism and irony and tending to reject the universal validity of such principles as hierarchy, binary opposition, categorization, and stable identity.
  7. ^ Bauman, Zygmunt (1992). Intimations of postmodernity. London New York: Routledge. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-415-06750-8.
  8. ^ a b Lyotard, Jean-François (1989). The Lyotard reader. Oxford, UK / Cambridge, Massachusetts: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-16339-5.
  9. ^ a b . Oxford Dictionary (American English). Archived from the original on 17 January 2013 – via oxforddictionaries.com.
  10. ^ a b Mura, Andrea (2012). "The Symbolic Function of Transmodernity". Language and Psychoanalysis. 1 (1): 68–87. doi:10.7565/landp.2012.0005.
  11. ^ a b . The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th ed.). 2000. Archived from the original on 9 December 2008 – via Bartleby.com.
  12. ^ a b Hutcheon, Linda (2002). The politics of postmodernism. London New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-203-42605-0.
  13. ^ a b Hatch, Mary (2013). Organization theory : modern, symbolic, and postmodern perspectives. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-964037-9.
  14. ^ Hicks, Stephen (2011). Explaining postmodernism : skepticism and socialism from Rousseau to Foucault. Roscoe, Illinois: Ockham's Razor Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9832584-0-7.
  15. ^ Brown, Callum (2013). Postmodernism for historians. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-83610-2.
  16. ^ Bruner, Edward M. (1994). (PDF). American Anthropologist. 96 (2): 397–415. doi:10.1525/aa.1994.96.2.02a00070. JSTOR 681680. S2CID 161259515. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 February 2020.
  17. ^ Callinicos, Alex (1989). Against postmodernism : a marxist critique. Cambridge: Polity Press. ISBN 0-7456-0614-8.
  18. ^ Devigne, Robert (1994). "Introduction". Recasting conservatism : Oakeshott, Strauss, and the response to postmodernism. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-06868-9.
  19. ^ Sokal, Alan; Bricmont, Jean (1999). Intellectual impostures : postmodern philosophers' abuse of science. London: Profile. ISBN 1-86197-124-9.
  20. ^ a b c "Postmodernism Glossary". Faith and Reason. 11 September 1998. Retrieved 10 June 2019 – via PBS.org.
  21. ^ Harari, Yuval Noah (2015). Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind. Translated from Hebrew by the author with John Purcell and Haim Watzman. London: Penguin Random House UK. p. 270. ISBN 978-0-09-959008-8. OCLC 910498369.
  22. ^ Kellner, Douglas (1995). Media culture : cultural studies, identity, and politics between the modern and the postmodern. London / New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-10569-2.
  23. ^ Welsch, Wolfgang; Sandbothe, Mike (1997). "Postmodernity as a Philosophical Concept". International Postmodernism. Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages. Vol. XI. p. 76. doi:10.1075/chlel.xi.07wel. ISBN 978-90-272-3443-8.
  24. ^ Hassan, Ihab, The Postmodern Turn, Essays in Postmodern Theory and Culture, Ohio University Press, 1987. p. 12ff.
  25. ^ Thompson, J. M. "Post-Modernism," The Hibbert Journal. Vol XII No. 4, July 1914. p. 733
  26. ^ Dorsey, Arris (2018). Origins of Sociological Theory. Collier, Readale. p. 211. ISBN 978-1-83947-426-2.
  27. ^ Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 2004
  28. ^ Madsen, Deborah (1995). Postmodernism: A Bibliography. Amsterdam; Atlanta, Georgia: Rodopi.
  29. ^ Russell Kirk: American Conservative. University Press of Kentucky. 9 November 2015. ISBN 9780813166209.
  30. ^ Russello, Gerald J. (25 October 2007). The Postmodern Imagination of Russell Kirk. University of Missouri Press. ISBN 9780826265944 – via Google Books.
  31. ^ Bell, Bernard Iddings (1926). Postmodernism and Other Essays. Milwaukie: Morehouse Publishing Company.
  32. ^ Arnold J. Toynbee, A study of History, Volume 5, Oxford University Press, 1961 [1939], p. 43.
  33. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, 2004
  34. ^ Seah, Isaac. "Post Modernism in Architecture".
  35. ^ Drucker, Peter F. (1957). . New York: Harper Brothers. Archived from the original on 12 April 2019. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  36. ^ Bochner, Mel (2008). Solar System & Rest Rooms: Writings and Interviews 1965–2007. USA: The MIT Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-262-02631-4.
  37. ^ Anderson, Walter Truett (1996). The Fontana Postmodernism Reader.
  38. ^ See Barth, John: "The Literature of Exhaustion." The Atlantic Monthly, August 1967, pp. 29–34.
  39. ^ Cf., for example, Huyssen, Andreas: After the Great Divide. Modernism, Mass Culture, Postmodernism. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1986, p. 188.
  40. ^ See Hutcheon, Linda: A Poetics of Postmodernism. History, Theory, Fiction. New York: Routledge, 1988, pp. 3–21
  41. ^ See McHale, Brian: Postmodern Fiction, London: Methuen, 1987.
  42. ^ See Lyotard, Jean-François, The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge, Minneapolis: University of Minneapolis Press 1984
  43. ^ See Baudrillard, Jean: "Simulacra and Simulations." In: Jean Baudrillard. Selected Writings. Stanford: Stanford University Press 1988, pp. 166–184.
  44. ^ Potter, Garry and Lopez, Jose (eds.): After Postmodernism: An Introduction to Critical Realism. London: The Athlone Press 2001, p. 4.
  45. ^ Fjellestad, Danuta; Engberg, Maria (2013). . Reconstruction: Studies in Contemporary Culture. 12 (4). Archived from the original on 23 February 2013. DiVA 833886.
  46. ^ Kirby, Alan (2006). "The Death of Postmodernism and Beyond". Philosophy Now. 58: 34–37.
  47. ^ Gibbons, Alison (2017). "Postmodernism is dead. What comes next?". TLS. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  48. ^ Kurzweil, Edith (2017). The age of structuralism : from Lévi-Strauss to Foucault. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-351-30584-6.
  49. ^ Lévi-Strauss, Claude (1963). Structural Anthropology (I ed.). USA: New York: Basic Books. p. 324. ISBN 0-465-09516-X.
    Lévi-Strauss, quoting D'Arcy Westworth Thompson states: "To those who question the possibility of defining the interrelations between entities whose nature is not completely understood, I shall reply with the following comment by a great naturalist: In a very large part of morphology, our essential task lies in the comparison of related forms rather than in the precise definition of each; and the deformation of a complicated figure may be a phenomenon easy of comprehension, though the figure itself has to be left unanalyzed and undefined."
  50. ^ Lévi-Strauss, Claude. Anthropologie Structurale. Paris: Éditions Plon, 1958.
    Lévi-Strauss, Claude. Structural Anthropology. Trans. Claire Jacobson and Brooke Grundfest Schoepf (New York: Basic Books, 1963), 228.
  51. ^ "TRANS Nr. 11: Paul Michael Lützeler (St. Louis): From Postmodernism to Postcolonialism". inst.at.
  52. ^ Sarup, Madan (1993). An introductory guide to post-structuralism and postmodernism. Athens: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-1531-1.
  53. ^ Yilmaz, K (2010). "Postmodernism and its Challenge to the Discipline of History: Implications for History Education". Educational Philosophy & Theory. 42 (7): 779–795. doi:10.1111/j.1469-5812.2009.00525.x. S2CID 145695056.
  54. ^ Culler, Jonathan (2008). On deconstruction : theory and criticism after structuralism. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-46151-1.
  55. ^ Derrida (1967), Of Grammatology, Part II, Introduction to the "Age of Rousseau," section 2 "...That Dangerous Supplement...", title, "The Exorbitant Question of Method", pp. 158–59, 163.
  56. ^ Peeters, Benoît. Derrida: A Biography, pp. 377–8, translated by Andrew Brown, Polity Press, 2013, ISBN 978-0-7456-5615-1
  57. ^ Mann, Steve (2003). "Decon2 (Decon Squared): Deconstructing Decontamination" (PDF). Leonardo. 36 (4): 285–290. doi:10.1162/002409403322258691. JSTOR 1577323. S2CID 57559253.
  58. ^ Campbell, Heidi A. (2006). "Postcyborg Ethics: A New Way to Speak of Technology". Explorations in Media Ecology. 5 (4): 279–296. doi:10.1386/eme.5.4.279_1.
  59. ^ Mann, Steve; Fung, James; Federman, Mark; Baccanico, Gianluca (2002). "PanopDecon: Deconstructing, decontaminating, and decontextualizing panopticism in the postcyborg era". Surveillance & Society. 1 (3): 375–398. doi:10.24908/ss.v1i3.3346.
  60. ^ Müller Schwarze, Nina 2015 The Blood of Victoriano Lorenzo: An Ethnography of the Cholos of Northern Coclé Province. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland Press.
  61. ^ Best, Steven; Kellner, Douglas (2 November 2001). "The Postmodern Turn in Philosophy: Theoretical Provocations and Normative Deficits". UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies. UCLA. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  62. ^ "Jacques Derrida". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. 11 October 2018. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  63. ^ McCance, Dawne (5 December 2014) [2009: Equinox]. Derrida on Religion: Thinker of Differance. Key thinkers in the study of religion. London: Routledge. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-317-49093-7. OCLC 960024707.
  64. ^ Peters, Michael A.; Biesta, Gert (2009). Derrida, Deconstruction, and the Politics of Pedagogy. New York: Peter Lang. p. 134. ISBN 978-1-4331-0009-3. OCLC 314727596.
  65. ^ Bensmaïa, Réda (2006). "Poststructuralism". In Kritzman, Lawrence D.; Reilly, Brian J.; Debevoise, M. B. (eds.). The Columbia History of Twentieth-Century French Thought. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 92–93. ISBN 978-0-231-10790-7.
  66. ^ Poster, Mark (1989). "Introduction: Theory and the Problem of Context". Critical Theory and Poststructuralism: In Search of a Context. Cornell University Press. pp. 4–6. ISBN 978-1-5017-4618-5.
  67. ^ Leitch, Vincent B. (1 January 1996). Postmodernism - Local Effects, Global Flows. SUNY series in postmodern culture. Albany, NY: SUNY Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-1-4384-1044-9. OCLC 715808589. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  68. ^ Lurcza, Zsuzsanna (2017). "Deconstruction of the Destruktion – Heidegger and Derrida". Philobiblon. Transylvanian Journal of Multidisciplinary Research in Humanities. 22 (2). doi:10.26424/philobib.2017.22.2.11. ISSN 1224-7448.
  69. ^ "The most cited authors of books in the humanities". Times Higher Education. THE World Universities Insights. 2019.
  70. ^ Foucault, Michel, 1926–1984. (17 April 2018). The order of things : an archaeology of the human sciences. ISBN 978-1-317-33667-9. OCLC 1051836299.
  71. ^ Foucault, Michel (15 April 2013). Archaeology of Knowledge. doi:10.4324/9780203604168. ISBN 978-0-203-60416-8.
  72. ^ Foucault, Michel (2020). Discipline and Punish: the birth of the prison. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-241-38601-9. OCLC 1117463412.
  73. ^ Foucault, Michel, 1926-1984, author. The History of Sexuality : an introduction. ISBN 978-1-4114-7321-8. OCLC 910324749. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  74. ^ Continental Philosophy and Modern Theology: An Engagement. Wipf and Stock Publishers. 18 January 2012. ISBN 9781610977494.
  75. ^ Lyotard, J.-F. (1979). The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-944624-06-7. OCLC 232943026.
  76. ^ Luke, Timothy W. (1991). "Power and politics in hyperreality: The critical project of Jean Baudrillard". The Social Science Journal. 28 (3): 347–367. doi:10.1016/0362-3319(91)90018-Y.
  77. ^ Jameson, Fredric (1991). Postmodernism, or, The cultural logic of late capitalism. Durham: Duke University Press. ISBN 0-8223-0929-7.
  78. ^ Kellner, Douglas (1988). "Postmodernism as Social Theory: Some Challenges and Problems". Theory, Culture & Society. 5 (2–3): 239–269. doi:10.1177/0263276488005002003. ISSN 0263-2764. S2CID 144625142.
  79. ^ Lule, Jack (2001). "The Postmodern Adventure [Book Review]". Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly. 78 (4): 865–866. doi:10.1177/107769900107800415. S2CID 221059611.
  80. ^ Danto, AC (1990). "The Hyper-Intellectual". New Republic. Vol. 203, no. 11/12. pp. 44–48.
  81. ^ Sullivan, Louis. "The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered," published Lippincott's Magazine (March 1896).
  82. ^ Loos, Adolf (1910). "Ornament and Crime".
  83. ^ Tafuri, Manfredo (1976). Architecture and Utopia: Design and Capitalist Development (PDF). Cambridge: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-20033-2.
  84. ^ Le Corbusier, Towards a New Architecture. Dover Publications, 1985/1921.
  85. ^ Venturi, et al.
  86. ^ Jencks, Charles (1975). "The Rise of Post Modern Architecture". Architectural Association Quarterly. 7 (4): 3–14.
  87. ^ Jencks, Charles (1977). The language of post-modern architecture. New York: Rizzoli. ISBN 0-8478-0167-5.
  88. ^ Jencks, Charles. "The Language of Post-Modern Architecture", Academy Editions, London 1974.
  89. ^ Farrell, Terry (2017). Revisiting Postmodernism. Newcastle upon Tyne: RIBA Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85946-632-2.
  90. ^ Lee, Pamela (2013). New Games : Postmodernism After Contemporary Art. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-98879-7.
  91. ^ Poynor, Rick (2003). No more rules : graphic design and postmodernism. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 18. ISBN 0-300-10034-5.
  92. ^ Drucker, Johanna and Emily McVarish (2008). Graphic Design History. Pearson. pp. 305–306. ISBN 978-0-13-241075-5.
  93. ^ Elizabeth Bellalouna, Michael L. LaBlanc, Ira Mark Milne (2000) Literature of Developing Nations for Students: L-Z p.50
  94. ^ Stavans, Ilan (1997). Antiheroes: Mexico and Its Detective Novel. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-8386-3644-2.
  95. ^ McHale, Brian (2011). "Pynchon's postmodernism". In Dalsgaard, Inger H; Herman, Luc; McHale, Brian (eds.). The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon. pp. 97–111. doi:10.1017/CCOL9780521769747.010. ISBN 978-0-521-76974-7.
  96. ^ "Mail, Events, Screenings, News: 32". People.bu.edu. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  97. ^ McHale, B., Postmodernist Fiction (Abingdon-on-Thames: Routledge, 2003).
  98. ^ McHale, Brian (20 December 2007). "What Was Postmodernism?". Electronic Book Review. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  99. ^ Kramer, Jonathan (2016). Postmodern music, postmodern listening. New York: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-5013-0602-0.
  100. ^ Strinati, Dominic (1995). An Introduction to Theories of Popular Culture. London: Routledge. p. 234.
  101. ^ Brown, Stephen (2003). "On Madonna'S Brand Ambition: Presentation Transcript". Association For Consumer Research. pp. 119–201. from the original on 19 April 2017. Retrieved 1 April 2021.
  102. ^ a b McGregor, Jock (2008). (PDF). L'Abri. pp. 1–8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 December 2020. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
  103. ^ Brendan, Canavan; McCamley, Claire (February 2020). "The passing of the postmodern in pop? Epochal consumption and marketing from Madonna, through Gaga, to Taylor". Journal of Business Research. 107: 222–230. doi:10.1016/j.jbusres.2018.12.005.
  104. ^ a b Goodchild, Barry (1990). "Planning and the Modern/Postmodern Debate". The Town Planning Review. 61 (2): 119–137. doi:10.3828/tpr.61.2.q5863289k1353533. JSTOR 40112887.
  105. ^ Jacobs, Jane (1993). The death and life of great American cities. New York: Modern Library. ISBN 0-679-64433-4.
  106. ^ a b Hatuka, Tali; d'Hooghe, Alexander (2007). "After Postmodernism: Readdressing the Role of Utopia in Urban Design and Planning". Places. 19 (2): 20–27.
  107. ^ Irving, Allan (1993). "The Modern/Postmodern Divide and Urban Planning". University of Toronto Quarterly. 62 (4): 474–487. doi:10.3138/utq.62.4.474. S2CID 144261041.
  108. ^ Simonsen, Kirsten (1990). "Planning on 'Postmodern' Conditions". Acta Sociologica. 33 (1): 51–62. doi:10.1177/000169939003300104. JSTOR 4200779. S2CID 144268594.
  109. ^ a b Soja, Edward W. (14 March 2014). My Los Angeles: From Urban Restructuring to Regional Urbanization. Univ of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-95763-3.
  110. ^ Shiel, Mark (30 October 2017). "Edward Soja". Mediapolis. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  111. ^ Scruton, Roger (1996). Modern philosophy: an introduction and survey. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-024907-9.
  112. ^ Dick Hebdige, 'Postmodernism and "the other side"', in Cultural Theory and Popular Culture: A reader, edited by John Storey, London, Pearson Education, 2006
  113. ^ "Noam Chomsky on Post-Modernism". bactra.org.
  114. ^ Craig, William Lane (3 July 2008). "God is Not Dead Yet". Christianity Today. Retrieved 30 April 2014.
  115. ^ Pöhlmann, Sascha (2019). The New Pynchon studies. Cambridge. pp. 17–32. ISBN 978-1108474467.
  116. ^ de Castro, Eliana (12 December 2015). "Camille Paglia: "Postmodernism is a plague upon the mind and the heart"". Fausto Mag. Postmodernism is a plague upon the mind and the heart.
  117. ^ Wellmer, Albrecht (1991). "Introduction". The persistence of modernity : essays on aesthetics, ethic, and postmodernism. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-23160-3.
  118. ^ Sokal, Alan D. (1996), "Transgressing the Boundaries: Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity", Social Text, 46–47 (46/47): 217–252, doi:10.2307/466856, JSTOR 466856, from the original on 19 May 2017, retrieved 15 March 2008
  119. ^ Sokal, Alan D. (5 June 1996), "A Physicist Experiments with Cultural Studies", Lingua Franca, from the original on 5 October 2007
  120. ^ Jedlitschka, Karsten (5 August 2018). "Guenter Lewy, Harmful and Undesirable. Book Censorship in Nazi Germany. Oxford, Oxford University Press 2016". Historische Zeitschrift. 307 (1): 274–275. doi:10.1515/hzhz-2018-1368. ISSN 2196-680X. S2CID 159895878.
  121. ^ Nagel, Thomas (2002). Concealment and Exposure & Other Essays. Oxford University Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-19-515293-7.
  122. ^ Nagel, p. 165.
  123. ^ Callinicos, Alex (1990). Against postmodernism : a Marxist critique. New York, N.Y: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-04224-8.
  124. ^ Dennett on Wieseltier V. Pinker in the New Republic http://edge.org/conversation/dennett-on-wieseltier-v-pinker-in-the-new-republic 5 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  125. ^ Wolin, Richard (2019). The seduction of unreason : the intellectual romance with fascism: from Nietzsche to postmodernism. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-19235-2.
  126. ^ Daniel Farber and Suzanne Sherry, Beyond All Reason The Radical Assault on Truth in American Law, New York Times, https://www.nytimes.com/books/first/f/farber-reason.html
  127. ^ Caputo, Richard; Epstein, William; Stoesz, David; Thyer, Bruce (2015). "Postmodernism: A Dead End in Social Work Epistemology". Journal of Social Work Education. 51 (4): 638–647. doi:10.1080/10437797.2015.1076260. S2CID 143246585.
  128. ^ Sidky, H. (2018). . Skeptical Inquirer. 42 (2): 38–43. Archived from the original on 6 June 2018. Retrieved 6 June 2018.
  129. ^ Guattari, Felix (1989). "The three ecologies" (PDF). New Formations (8): 134.
  130. ^ . 22 January 2021. Archived from the original on 22 January 2021. Retrieved 2 March 2022.

Further reading

  • "Graphic Design in the Postmodern Era". Emigre (47). 1998.
  • Alexie, Sherman (2000). "The Toughest Indian in the World" (ISBN 0-8021-3800-4)
  • Anderson, Perry. The origins of postmodernity. London: Verso, 1998.
  • Anderson, Walter Truett. The Truth about the Truth (New Consciousness Reader). New York: Tarcher. (1995) (ISBN 0-87477-801-8)
  • Arena, Leonardo Vittorio (2015) On Nudity. An Introduction to Nonsense, Mimesis International.
  • Ashley, Richard and Walker, R. B. J. (1990) "Speaking the Language of Exile." International Studies Quarterly v 34, no 3 259–68.
  • Bauman, Zygmunt (2000) Liquid Modernity. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Beck, Ulrich (1986) Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity.
  • Benhabib, Seyla (1995) "Feminism and Postmodernism" in (ed. Nicholson) Feminism Contentions: A Philosophical Exchange. New York: Routledge.
  • Berman, Marshall (1982) All That Is Solid Melts into Air: The Experience of Modernity (ISBN 0-14-010962-5).
  • Bertens, Hans (1995) The Idea of the Postmodern: A History. London: Routledge. (ISBN 978-0-415-06012-7).
  • Best, Steven and Douglas Kellner. Postmodern Theory (1991) excerpt and text search
  • Best, Steven, and Douglas Kellner. The Postmodern Turn (1997) excerpt and text search
  • Best, Steven, and Douglas Kellner. The Postmodern Adventure: Science, Technology, and Cultural Studies at the Third Millennium Guilford Press, 2001 (ISBN 978-1-57230-665-3)
  • Bielskis, Andrius (2005) Towards a Postmodern Understanding of the Political: From Genealogy to Hermeneutics (Palgrave Macmillan, 2005).
  • Brass, Tom, Peasants, Populism and Postmodernism (London: Cass, 2000).
  • Butler, Judith (1995) 'Contingent Foundations' in (ed. Nicholson) Feminist Contentions: A Philosophical Exchange. New York: Routledge.
  • Callinicos, Alex, Against Postmodernism: A Marxist Critique (Cambridge: Polity, 1999).
  • Dirlik, Arif; Zhang, Xudong, eds. (2000). Postmodernism & China. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. ISBN 0-8223-8022-6. OCLC 52341080.
  • Drabble, M. The Oxford Companion to English Literature, 6 ed., article "Postmodernism".
  • Farrell, John. "Paranoia and Postmodernism," the epilogue to Paranoia and Modernity: Cervantes to Rousseau (Cornell UP, 2006), 309–327.
  • Featherstone, M. (1991) Consumer culture and postmodernism, London; Newbury Park, Calif., Sage Publications.
  • Giddens, Anthony (1991) Modernity and Self Identity, Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Gosselin, Paul (2012) Flight From the Absolute: Cynical Observations on the Postmodern West. volume I. Samizdat Flight From the Absolute: Cynical Observations on the Postmodern West. Volume I (ISBN 978-2-9807774-3-1)
  • Goulimari, Pelagia (ed.) (2007) Postmodernism. What Moment? Manchester: Manchester University Press (ISBN 978-0-7190-7308-3)
  • Grebowicz, Margaret (ed.), Gender After Lyotard. NY: Suny Press, 2007. (ISBN 978-0-7914-6956-9)
  • Greer, Robert C. Mapping Postmodernism. IL: Intervarsity Press, 2003. (ISBN 0-8308-2733-1)
  • Groothuis, Douglas. Truth Decay. Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity Press, 2000.
  • Harvey, David (1989) The Condition of Postmodernity: An Enquiry into the Origins of Cultural Change (ISBN 0-631-16294-1)
  • Honderich, T., The Oxford Companion to Philosophy, article "Postmodernism".
  • Hutcheon, Linda. The Politics of Postmodernism. (2002) online edition
  • Jameson, Fredric (1991) Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (ISBN 0-8223-1090-2)
  • Jarzombek, Mark (2016). Digital Stockholm Syndrome in the Post-Ontological Age. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Kimball, Roger (2000). Experiments against Reality: the Fate of Culture in the Postmodern Age. Chicago: I.R. Dee. viii, 359 p. (ISBN 1-56663-335-4)
  • Kirby, Alan (2009) Digimodernism. New York: Continuum.
  • Lash, S. (1990) The sociology of postmodernism London, Routledge.
  • Lucy, Niall. (2016) A dictionary of Postmodernism (ISBN 978-1-4051-5077-4)
  • Lyotard, Jean-François (1984) The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge (ISBN 0-8166-1173-4)
  • Lyotard, Jean-François (1988). The Postmodern Explained: Correspondence 1982–1985. Ed. Julian Pefanis and Morgan Thomas. (ISBN 0-8166-2211-6)
  • Lyotard, Jean-François (1993), "Scriptures: Diffracted Traces." In: Theory, Culture and Society, Vol. 21(1), 2004.
  • Lyotard, Jean-François (1995), "Anamnesis: Of the Visible." In: Theory, Culture and Society, Vol. 21(1), 2004.
  • MacIntyre, Alasdair, After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory (University of Notre Dame Press, 1984, 2nd edn.).
  • Magliola, Robert On Deconstructing Life-Worlds: Buddhism, Christianity, Culture (Atlanta: Scholars Press of American Academy of Religion, 1997; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000; ISBN 0-7885-0295-6, cloth, ISBN 0-7885-0296-4, pbk).
  • Magliola, Robert, Derrida on the Mend (Lafayette: Purdue University Press, 1984; 1986; pbk. 2000, ISBN I-55753-205-2).
  • Manuel, Peter. "Music as Symbol, Music as Simulacrum: Pre-Modern, Modern, and Postmodern Aesthetics in Subcultural Musics," Popular Music 1/2, 1995, pp. 227–239.
  • McHale, Brian (1992), Constructing Postmodernism. NY & London: Routledge.
  • McHale, Brian (2007), "What Was Postmodernism?" electronic book review, [1] 18 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  • McHale, Brian (2008), "1966 Nervous Breakdown, or, When Did Postmodernism Begin?" Modern Language Quarterly 69, 3:391–413.
  • McHale, Brian, (1987) Postmodernist Fiction. London: Routledge.
  • Mura, Andrea (2012). (PDF). Language and Psychoanalysis (1): 68–87. doi:10.7565/landp.2012.0005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 October 2015.
  • Murphy, Nancey, Anglo-American Postmodernity: Philosophical Perspectives on Science, Religion, and Ethics (Westview Press, 1997).
  • Natoli, Joseph (1997) A Primer to Postmodernity (ISBN 1-57718-061-5)
  • Norris, Christopher (1990) What's Wrong with Postmodernism: Critical Theory and the Ends of Philosophy (ISBN 0-8018-4137-2)
  • Pangle, Thomas L., The Ennobling of Democracy: The Challenge of the Postmodern Age, Baltimore, The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991 ISBN 0-8018-4635-8
  • Park, Jin Y., ed., Buddhisms and Deconstructions Lanham: Rowland & Littlefield, 2006, ISBN 978-0-7425-3418-6; ISBN 0-7425-3418-9.
  • Pérez, Rolando. Ed. Agorapoetics: Poetics after Postmodernism. Aurora: The Davies Group, Publishers. 2017. ISBN 978-1-934542-38-5.
  • Philip B. Meggs; Alston W. Purvis (2011). "22". Meggs' History of Graphic Design (5 ed.). John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated. ISBN 978-0-470-16873-8.
  • Powell, Jim (1998). "Postmodernism For Beginners" (ISBN 978-1-934389-09-6)
  • Sim, Stuart. (1999). "The Routledge critical dictionary of postmodern thought" (ISBN 0-415-92353-0)
  • Sokal, Alan and Jean Bricmont (1998) Fashionable Nonsense: Postmodern Intellectuals' Abuse of Science (ISBN 0-312-20407-8)
  • Stephen, Hicks (2014). "Explaining Postmodernism: Skepticism and Socialism from Rousseau to Foucault (Expanded Edition)", Ockham's Razor Publishing
  • Vattimo, Gianni (1989). The Transparent Society (ISBN 0-8018-4528-9)
  • Veith Jr., Gene Edward (1994) Postmodern Times: A Christian Guide to Contemporary Thought and Culture (ISBN 0-89107-768-5)
  • Windschuttle, Keith (1996) The Killing of History: How Literary Critics and Social Theorists are Murdering Our Past. New York: The Free Press.
  • Woods, Tim, Beginning Postmodernism, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1999, (Reprinted 2002) (ISBN 0-7190-5210-6 Hardback, ISBN 0-7190-5211-4 Paperback).

External links

  • Postmodernism and truth by philosopher Daniel Dennett
  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy's entry on postmodernism

postmodernism, this, article, about, philosophical, artistic, movement, architectural, style, postmodern, architecture, condition, state, being, postmodernity, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, written, like, research, paper, scientific, journal, tha. This article is about the philosophical and artistic movement For the architectural style see Postmodern architecture For the condition or state of being see Postmodernity For other uses see Postmodernism disambiguation This article is written like a research paper or scientific journal that may use overly technical terms or may not be written like an encyclopedic article Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Postmodernism is an intellectual stance or mode of discourse 1 2 characterized by skepticism toward the grand narratives of modernism rejection of epistemic certainty or the stability of meaning and sensitivity to the role of ideology in maintaining political power 3 4 Claims to objectivity are dismissed as naive realism 5 with attention drawn to the conditional nature of knowledge claims within particular historical political and cultural discourses 4 The postmodern outlook is characterized by self referentiality epistemological relativism moral relativism pluralism irony irreverence and eclecticism 4 it rejects the universal validity of binary oppositions stable identity hierarchy and categorization 6 7 Initially emerging from a mode of literary criticism postmodernism developed in the mid twentieth century as a rejection of modernism 8 9 10 11 and has been observed across many disciplines 12 13 Postmodernism is associated with the disciplines deconstruction and post structuralism 4 Various authors have criticized postmodernism as promoting obscurantism as abandoning Enlightenment rationalism and scientific rigor and as adding nothing to analytical or empirical knowledge 14 15 16 17 18 19 Contents 1 Definition 2 Origins of term 3 History 4 Theories and derivatives 4 1 Structuralism and post structuralism 4 2 Deconstruction 4 3 Post postmodernism 5 Philosophy 5 1 Jacques Derrida 5 2 Michel Foucault 5 3 Jean Francois Lyotard 5 4 Richard Rorty 5 5 Jean Baudrillard 5 6 Fredric Jameson 5 7 Douglas Kellner 6 Manifestations 6 1 Architecture 6 2 Art 6 3 Graphic design 6 4 Literature 6 5 Music 6 6 Urban planning 7 Criticisms 7 1 Criticism by postmodernists themselves 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksDefinition EditPostmodernism is an intellectual stance or mode of discourse 1 2 which challenges worldviews associated with Enlightenment rationality dating back to the 17th century 4 Postmodernism is associated with relativism and a focus on the role of ideology in the maintenance of economic and political power 4 Postmodernists are skeptical of explanations which claim to be valid for all groups cultures traditions or races and instead focuses on the relative truths of each person 20 It considers reality to be a mental construct 20 Postmodernism rejects the possibility of unmediated reality or objectively rational knowledge asserting that all interpretations are contingent on the perspective from which they are made 5 claims to objective fact are dismissed as naive realism 4 Postmodern thinkers frequently describe knowledge claims and value systems as contingent or socially conditioned describing them as products of political historical or cultural discourses 21 and hierarchies 4 Accordingly postmodern thought is broadly characterized by tendencies to self referentiality epistemological and moral relativism pluralism and irreverence 4 Postmodernism is often associated with schools of thought such as deconstruction and post structuralism 4 Postmodernism relies on critical theory which considers the effects of ideology society and history on culture 22 Postmodernism and critical theory commonly criticize universalist ideas of objective reality morality truth human nature reason language and social progress 4 Initially postmodernism was a mode of discourse on literature and literary criticism commenting on the nature of literary text meaning author and reader writing and reading 8 Postmodernism developed in the mid to late twentieth century across many scholarly disciplines as a departure or rejection of modernism 9 10 11 12 13 As a critical practice postmodernism employs concepts such as hyperreality simulacrum trace and difference and rejects abstract principles in favor of direct experience 20 Origins of term EditThe term postmodern was first used in 1870 23 John Watkins Chapman suggested a Postmodern style of painting as a way to depart from French Impressionism 24 J M Thompson in his 1914 article in The Hibbert Journal a quarterly philosophical review used it to describe changes in attitudes and beliefs in the critique of religion writing The raison d etre of Post Modernism is to escape from the double mindedness of Modernism by being thorough in its criticism by extending it to religion as well as theology to Catholic feeling as well as to Catholic tradition 25 In 1942 H R Hays described postmodernism as a new literary form 26 In 1926 Bernard Iddings Bell president of St Stephen s College now Bard College published Postmodernism and Other Essays marking the first use of the term to describe the historical period following Modernity 27 28 The essay criticizes the lingering socio cultural norms attitudes and practices of the Age of Enlightenment It also forecasts the major cultural shifts toward Postmodernity and Bell being an Anglican Episcopal priest 29 30 suggests orthodox religion as a solution 31 However the term postmodernity was first used as a general theory for a historical movement in 1939 by Arnold J Toynbee Our own Post Modern Age has been inaugurated by the general war of 1914 1918 32 Portland Building 1982 by architect Michael Graves an example of Postmodern architecture In 1949 the term was used to describe a dissatisfaction with modern architecture and led to the postmodern architecture movement 33 in response to the modernist architectural movement known as the International Style Postmodernism in architecture was initially marked by a re emergence of surface ornament reference to surrounding buildings in urban settings historical reference in decorative forms eclecticism and non orthogonal angles 34 Author Peter Drucker suggested the transformation into a post modern world that happened between 1937 and 1957 and described it as a nameless era characterized as a shift to a conceptual world based on pattern purpose and process rather than a mechanical cause This shift was outlined by four new realities the emergence of an Educated Society the importance of international development the decline of the nation state and the collapse of the viability of non Western cultures 35 In 1971 in a lecture delivered at the Institute of Contemporary Art London Mel Bochner described post modernism in art as having started with Jasper Johns who first rejected sense data and the singular point of view as the basis for his art and treated art as a critical investigation 36 In 1996 Walter Truett Anderson described postmodernism as belonging to one of four typological world views which he identified as Neo romantic in which truth is found through attaining harmony with nature or spiritual exploration of the inner self 37 Postmodern ironist which sees truth as socially constructed Scientific rational in which truth is defined through methodical disciplined inquiry Social traditional in which truth is found in the heritage of American and Western civilization History EditThe basic features of what is now called postmodernism can be found as early as the 1940s most notably in the work of artists such as Jorge Luis Borges 38 However most scholars today agree postmodernism began to compete with modernism in the late 1950s and gained ascendancy over it in the 1960s 39 The primary features of postmodernism typically include the ironic play with styles citations and narrative levels 40 41 a metaphysical skepticism or nihilism towards a grand narrative of Western culture 42 and a preference for the virtual at the expense of the Real or more accurately a fundamental questioning of what the real constitutes 43 Since the late 1990s there has been a growing sentiment in popular culture and in academia that postmodernism has gone out of fashion 44 Others argue that postmodernism is dead in the context of current cultural production 45 46 47 Theories and derivatives EditStructuralism and post structuralism Edit Structuralism was a philosophical movement developed by French academics in the 1950s partly in response to French existentialism 48 and often interpreted in relation to modernism and high modernism Thinkers who have been called structuralists include the anthropologist Claude Levi Strauss the linguist Ferdinand de Saussure the Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser and the semiotician Algirdas Greimas The early writings of the psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan and the literary theorist Roland Barthes have also been called structuralist Those who began as structuralists but became post structuralists include Michel Foucault Roland Barthes Jean Baudrillard and Gilles Deleuze Other post structuralists include Jacques Derrida Pierre Bourdieu Jean Francois Lyotard Julia Kristeva Helene Cixous and Luce Irigaray The American cultural theorists critics and intellectuals whom they influenced include Judith Butler John Fiske Rosalind Krauss Avital Ronell and Hayden White Like structuralists post structuralists start from the assumption that people s identities values and economic conditions determine each other rather than having intrinsic properties that can be understood in isolation 49 Thus the French structuralists considered themselves to be espousing relativism and constructionism But they nevertheless tended to explore how the subjects of their study might be described reductively as a set of essential relationships schematics or mathematical symbols An example is Claude Levi Strauss s algebraic formulation of mythological transformation in The Structural Study of Myth 50 Postmodernism entails reconsideration of the entire Western value system love marriage popular culture shift from an industrial to a service economy that took place since the 1950s and 1960s with a peak in the Social Revolution of 1968 are described with the term postmodernity 51 as opposed to postmodernism a term referring to an opinion or movement 52 Post structuralism is characterized by new ways of thinking through structuralism contrary to the original form 53 Deconstruction Edit Main article Deconstruction One of the most well known postmodernist concerns is deconstruction a theory for philosophy literary criticism and textual analysis developed by Jacques Derrida 54 Critics have insisted that Derrida s work is rooted in a statement found in Of Grammatology Il n y a pas de hors texte there is nothing outside the text Such critics misinterpret the statement as denying any reality outside of books The statement is actually part of a critique of inside and outside metaphors when referring to the text and is a corollary to the observation that there is no inside of a text as well 55 This attention to a text s unacknowledged reliance on metaphors and figures embedded within its discourse is characteristic of Derrida s approach Derrida s method sometimes involves demonstrating that a given philosophical discourse depends on binary oppositions or excluding terms that the discourse itself has declared to be irrelevant or inapplicable Derrida s philosophy inspired a postmodern movement called deconstructivism among architects characterized by a design that rejects structural centers and encourages decentralized play among its elements Derrida discontinued his involvement with the movement after the publication of his collaborative project with architect Peter Eisenman in Chora L Works Jacques Derrida and Peter Eisenman 56 Post postmodernism Edit The connection between postmodernism posthumanism and cyborgism has led to a challenge to postmodernism for which the terms Post postmodernism and postpoststructuralism were first coined in 2003 57 58 In some sense we may regard postmodernism posthumanism poststructuralism etc as being of the cyborg age of mind over body Deconference was an exploration in post cyborgism i e what comes after the postcorporeal era and thus explored issues of postpostmodernism postpoststructuralism and the like To understand this transition from pomo cyborgism to popo postcyborgism we must first understand the cyborg era itself 59 More recently metamodernism post postmodernism and the death of postmodernism have been widely debated in 2007 Andrew Hoberek noted in his introduction to a special issue of the journal Twentieth Century Literature titled After Postmodernism that declarations of postmodernism s demise have become a critical commonplace A small group of critics has put forth a range of theories that aim to describe culture or society in the alleged aftermath of postmodernism most notably Raoul Eshelman performatism Gilles Lipovetsky hypermodernity Nicolas Bourriaud altermodern and Alan Kirby digimodernism formerly called pseudo modernism None of these new theories or labels have so far gained very widespread acceptance Sociocultural anthropologist Nina Muller Schwarze offers neostructuralism as a possible direction 60 The exhibition Postmodernism Style and Subversion 1970 1990 at the Victoria and Albert Museum London 24 September 2011 15 January 2012 was billed as the first show to document postmodernism as a historical movement Philosophy EditMain article Postmodern philosophy In the 1970s a group of poststructuralists in France developed a radical critique of modern philosophy with roots discernible in Nietzsche Kierkegaard and Heidegger and became known as postmodern theorists notably including Jacques Derrida Michel Foucault Jean Francois Lyotard Jean Baudrillard and others New and challenging modes of thought and writing pushed the development of new areas and topics in philosophy By the 1980s this spread to America Richard Rorty and the world 61 Jacques Derrida Edit Main article Jacques Derrida Jacques Derrida was a French Algerian philosopher best known for developing a form of semiotic analysis known as deconstruction which he discussed in numerous texts and developed in the context of phenomenology 62 63 64 He is one of the major figures associated with post structuralism and postmodern philosophy 65 66 67 Derrida re examined the fundamentals of writing and its consequences on philosophy in general sought to undermine the language of presence or metaphysics in an analytical technique which beginning as a point of departure from Heidegger s notion of Destruktion came to be known as deconstruction 68 Michel Foucault Edit Main article Michel Foucault Michel Foucault was a French philosopher historian of ideas social theorist and literary critic First associated with structuralism Foucault created an oeuvre that today is seen as belonging to post structuralism and to postmodern philosophy Considered a leading figure of French theory fr his work remains fruitful in the English speaking academic world in a large number of sub disciplines The Times Higher Education Guide described him in 2009 as the most cited author in the humanities 69 Michel Foucault introduced concepts such as discursive regime or re invoked those of older philosophers like episteme and genealogy in order to explain the relationship between meaning power and social behavior within social orders see The Order of Things The Archaeology of Knowledge Discipline and Punish and The History of Sexuality 70 71 72 73 Jean Francois Lyotard Edit Main article Jean Francois Lyotard Influenced by Nietzsche 74 Jean Francois Lyotard is credited with being the first to use the term in a philosophical context in his 1979 work The Postmodern Condition A Report on Knowledge In it he follows Wittgenstein s language games model and speech act theory contrasting two different language games that of the expert and that of the philosopher He talks about the transformation of knowledge into information in the computer age and likens the transmission or reception of coded messages information to a position within a language game 3 Lyotard defined philosophical postmodernism in The Postmodern Condition writing Simplifying to the extreme I define postmodern as incredulity towards metanarratives 75 where what he means by metanarrative in French grands recits is something like a unified complete universal and epistemically certain story about everything that is Postmodernists reject metanarratives because they reject the concept of truth that metanarratives presuppose Postmodernist philosophers in general argue that truth is always contingent on historical and social context rather than being absolute and universal and that truth is always partial and at issue rather than being complete and certain 3 Richard Rorty Edit Main article Richard Rorty Richard Rorty argues in Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature that contemporary analytic philosophy mistakenly imitates scientific methods In addition he denounces the traditional epistemological perspectives of representationalism and correspondence theory that rely upon the independence of knowers and observers from phenomena and the passivity of natural phenomena in relation to consciousness Jean Baudrillard Edit Main article Jean Baudrillard Jean Baudrillard in Simulacra and Simulation introduced the concept that reality or the principle of the Real is short circuited by the interchangeability of signs in an era whose communicative and semantic acts are dominated by electronic media and digital technologies For Baudrillard simulation is no longer that of a territory a referential being or a substance It is the generation by models of a real without origin or reality a hyperreal 76 Fredric Jameson Edit Main article Fredric Jameson Fredric Jameson set forth one of the first expansive theoretical treatments of postmodernism as a historical period intellectual trend and social phenomenon in a series of lectures at the Whitney Museum later expanded as Postmodernism or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism 1991 77 Douglas Kellner Edit Main article Douglas Kellner In Analysis of the Journey a journal birthed from postmodernism Douglas Kellner insists that the assumptions and procedures of modern theory must be forgotten Extensively Kellner analyzes the terms of this theory in real life experiences and examples 78 Kellner used science and technology studies as a major part of his analysis he urged that the theory is incomplete without it The scale was larger than just postmodernism alone it must be interpreted through cultural studies where science and technology studies play a huge role The reality of the September 11 attacks on the United States of America is the catalyst for his explanation In response Kellner continues to examine the repercussions of understanding the effects of the 11 September attacks He questions if the attacks are only able to be understood in a limited form of postmodern theory due to the level of irony 79 The conclusion he depicts is simple postmodernism as most use it today will decide what experiences and signs in one s reality will be one s reality as they know it 80 Manifestations EditArchitecture Edit Main article Postmodern architecture Neue Staatsgalerie 1977 84 Stuttgart Germany designed by the British architects James Stirling and Michael Wilford showing the eclectic mix of classical architecture and colourful ironic detailing Ray and Maria Stata Center 2004 designed by the Canadian American architect Frank Gehry for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT Cambridge Massachusetts Modern Architecture as established and developed by Walter Gropius and Le Corbusier was focused on the attempted harmony of form and function 81 and the dismissal of frivolous ornament 82 83 page needed the pursuit of a perceived ideal perfection They argued for architecture that represented the spirit of the age as depicted in cutting edge technology be it airplanes cars ocean liners or even supposedly artless grain silos 84 Modernist Ludwig Mies van der Rohe is associated with the phrase less is more Critics of Modernism have argued that the attributes of perfection and minimalism are themselves subjective pointed out anachronisms in modern thought and questioned the benefits of its philosophy 85 full citation needed The intellectual scholarship regarding postmodernism and architecture is closely linked with the writings of critic turned architect Charles Jencks beginning with lectures in the early 1970s and his essay The Rise of Post Modern Architecture from 1975 86 His magnum opus however is the book The Language of Post Modern Architecture first published in 1977 and since running to seven editions 87 Jencks makes the point that Post Modernism like Modernism varies for each field of art and that for architecture it is not just a reaction to Modernism but what he terms double coding Double Coding the combination of Modern techniques with something else usually traditional building in order for architecture to communicate with the public and a concerned minority usually other architects 88 In their book Revisiting Postmodernism Terry Farrell and Adam Furman argue that postmodernism brought a more joyous and sensual experience to the culture particularly in architecture 89 Art Edit Main article Postmodern art Postmodern art is a body of art movements that sought to contradict some aspects of modernism or some aspects that emerged or developed in its aftermath Cultural production manifesting as intermedia installation art conceptual art deconstructionist display and multimedia particularly involving video are described as postmodern 90 Graphic design Edit April Greiman Early mention of postmodernism as an element of graphic design appeared in the British magazine Design 91 A characteristic of postmodern graphic design is that retro techno punk grunge beach parody and pastiche were all conspicuous trends Each had its own sites and venues detractors and advocates 92 Literature Edit Orhan Pamuk winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Literature Main article Postmodern literature Jorge Luis Borges 1939 short story Pierre Menard Author of the Quixote is often considered as predicting postmodernism 93 and is a paragon of the ultimate parody 94 Samuel Beckett is also considered an important precursor and influence Novelists who are commonly connected with postmodern literature include Vladimir Nabokov William Gaddis Umberto Eco Italo Calvino Pier Vittorio Tondelli John Hawkes William S Burroughs Kurt Vonnegut John Barth Robert Coover Jean Rhys Donald Barthelme E L Doctorow Richard Kalich Jerzy Kosinski Don DeLillo Thomas Pynchon 95 Pynchon s work has also been described as high modern 96 Ishmael Reed Kathy Acker Ana Lydia Vega Jachym Topol and Paul Auster In 1971 the American scholar Ihab Hassan published The Dismemberment of Orpheus Toward a Postmodern Literature an early work of literary criticism from a postmodern perspective that traces the development of what he calls literature of silence through Marquis de Sade Franz Kafka Ernest Hemingway Samuel Beckett and many others including developments such as the Theatre of the Absurd and the nouveau roman In Postmodernist Fiction 1987 Brian McHale details the shift from modernism to postmodernism arguing that the former is characterized by an epistemological dominant and that postmodern works have developed out of modernism and are primarily concerned with questions of ontology 97 McHale s second book Constructing Postmodernism 1992 provides readings of postmodern fiction and some contemporary writers who go under the label of cyberpunk McHale s What Was Postmodernism 2007 98 follows Raymond Federman s lead in now using the past tense when discussing postmodernism Music Edit American singer songwriter Madonna Main articles Postmodern music Postmodern classical music and Art pop Jonathan Kramer has written that avant garde musical compositions which some would consider modernist rather than postmodernist defy more than seduce the listener and they extend by potentially unsettling means the very idea of what music is 99 In the 1960s composers such as Terry Riley Henryk Gorecki Bradley Joseph John Adams Steve Reich Philip Glass Michael Nyman and Lou Harrison reacted to the perceived elitism and dissonant sound of atonal academic modernism by producing music with simple textures and relatively consonant harmonies whilst others most notably John Cage challenged the prevailing narratives of beauty and objectivity common to Modernism Author on postmodernism Dominic Strinati has noted it is also important to include in this category the so called art rock musical innovations and mixing of styles associated with groups like Talking Heads and performers like Laurie Anderson together with the self conscious reinvention of disco by the Pet Shop Boys 100 In the late 20th century avant garde academics labelled American singer Madonna as the personification of the postmodern 101 with Christian writer Graham Cray saying that Madonna is perhaps the most visible example of what is called post modernism 102 and Martin Amis described her as perhaps the most postmodern personage on the planet 102 She was also suggested by assistant professor Olivier Secardin of Utrecht University to epitomise postmodernism 103 Urban planning Edit Modernism sought to design and plan cities that followed the logic of the new model of industrial mass production reverting to large scale solutions aesthetic standardisation and prefabricated design solutions 104 Modernism eroded urban living by its failure to recognise differences and aim towards homogeneous landscapes Simonsen 1990 57 Jane Jacobs 1961 book The Death and Life of Great American Cities 105 was a sustained critique of urban planning as it had developed within Modernism and marked a transition from modernity to postmodernity in thinking about urban planning Irving 1993 479 The transition from Modernism to Postmodernism is often said to have happened at 3 32 pm on 15 July in 1972 when Pruitt Igoe a housing development for low income people in St Louis designed by architect Minoru Yamasaki which had been a prize winning version of Le Corbusier s machine for modern living was deemed uninhabitable and was torn down Irving 1993 480 Since then Postmodernism has involved theories that embrace and aim to create diversity It exalts uncertainty flexibility and change Hatuka amp D Hooghe 2007 and rejects utopianism while embracing a utopian way of thinking and acting 106 Postmodernity of resistance seeks to deconstruct Modernism and is a critique of the origins without necessarily returning to them Irving 1993 60 As a result of Postmodernism planners are much less inclined to lay a firm or steady claim to there being one single right way of engaging in urban planning and are more open to different styles and ideas of how to plan Irving 474 104 106 107 108 The postmodern approach to understanding the city were pioneered in the 1980s by what could be called the Los Angeles School of Urbanism centered on the UCLA s Urban Planning Department in the 1980s where contemporary Los Angeles was taken to be the postmodern city par excellence contra posed to what had been the dominant ideas of the Chicago School formed in the 1920s at the University of Chicago with its framework of urban ecology and emphasis on functional areas of use within a city and the concentric circles to understand the sorting of different population groups 109 Edward Soja of the Los Angeles School combined Marxist and postmodern perspectives and focused on the economic and social changes globalization specialization industrialization deindustrialization Neo Liberalism mass migration that lead to the creation of large city regions with their patchwork of population groups and economic uses 109 110 Criticisms EditMain article Criticism of postmodernism Criticisms of postmodernism are intellectually diverse including the argument that postmodernism is meaningless and promotes obscurantism In part in reference to post modernism conservative English philosopher Roger Scruton wrote A writer who says that there are no truths or that all truth is merely relative is asking you not to believe him So don t 111 Similarly Dick Hebdige criticized the vagueness of the term enumerating a long list of otherwise unrelated concepts that people have designated as postmodernism from the decor of a room or a scratch video to fear of nuclear armageddon and the implosion of meaning and stated that anything that could signify all of those things was a buzzword 112 The linguist and philosopher Noam Chomsky has said that postmodernism is meaningless because it adds nothing to analytical or empirical knowledge He asks why postmodernist intellectuals do not respond like people in other fields when asked what are the principles of their theories on what evidence are they based what do they explain that wasn t already obvious etc If these requests can t be met then I d suggest recourse to Hume s advice in similar circumstances to the flames 113 Christian philosopher William Lane Craig has said The idea that we live in a postmodern culture is a myth In fact a postmodern culture is an impossibility it would be utterly unliveable People are not relativistic when it comes to matters of science engineering and technology rather they are relativistic and pluralistic in matters of religion and ethics But of course that s not postmodernism that s modernism 114 American author Thomas Pynchon targeted postmodernism as an object of derision in his novels openly mocking postmodernist discourse 115 American academic and aesthete Camille Paglia has said The end result of four decades of postmodernism permeating the art world is that there is very little interesting or important work being done right now in the fine arts The irony was a bold and creative posture when Duchamp did it but it is now an utterly banal exhausted and tedious strategy Young artists have been taught to be cool and hip and thus painfully self conscious They are not encouraged to be enthusiastic emotional and visionary They have been cut off from artistic tradition by the crippled skepticism about history that they have been taught by ignorant and solipsistic postmodernists In short the art world will never revive until postmodernism fades away Postmodernism is a plague upon the mind and the heart 116 German philosopher Albrecht Wellmer has said that postmodernism at its best might be seen as a self critical a sceptical ironic but nevertheless unrelenting form of modernism a modernism beyond utopianism scientism and foundationalism in short a post metaphysical modernism 117 A formal academic critique of postmodernism can be found in Beyond the Hoax by physics professor Alan Sokal and in Fashionable Nonsense by Sokal and Belgian physicist Jean Bricmont both books discussing the so called Sokal affair In 1996 Sokal wrote a deliberately nonsensical article 118 in a style similar to postmodernist articles which was accepted for publication by the postmodern cultural studies journal Social Text On the same day of the release he published another article in a different journal explaining the Social Text article hoax 119 120 The philosopher Thomas Nagel has supported Sokal and Bricmont describing their book Fashionable Nonsense as consisting largely of extensive quotations of scientific gibberish from name brand French intellectuals together with eerily patient explanations of why it is gibberish 121 and agreeing that there does seem to be something about the Parisian scene that is particularly hospitable to reckless verbosity 122 Zimbabwean born British Marxist Alex Callinicos says that postmodernism reflects the disappointed revolutionary generation of 68 and the incorporation of many of its members into the professional and managerial new middle class It is best read as a symptom of political frustration and social mobility rather than as a significant intellectual or cultural phenomenon in its own right 123 Analytic philosopher Daniel Dennett said Postmodernism the school of thought that proclaimed There are no truths only interpretations has largely played itself out in absurdity but it has left behind a generation of academics in the humanities disabled by their distrust of the very idea of truth and their disrespect for evidence settling for conversations in which nobody is wrong and nothing can be confirmed only asserted with whatever style you can muster 124 American historian Richard Wolin traces the origins of postmodernism to intellectual roots in fascism writing postmodernism has been nourished by the doctrines of Friedrich Nietzsche Martin Heidegger Maurice Blanchot and Paul de Man all of whom either prefigured or succumbed to the proverbial intellectual fascination with fascism 125 Daniel A Farber and Suzanna Sherry criticised postmodernism for reducing the complexity of the modern world to an expression of power and for undermining truth and reason If the modern era begins with the European Enlightenment the postmodern era that captivates the radical multiculturalists begins with its rejection According to the new radicals the Enlightenment inspired ideas that have previously structured our world especially the legal and academic parts of it are a fraud perpetrated and perpetuated by white males to consolidate their own power Those who disagree are not only blind but bigoted The Enlightenment s goal of an objective and reasoned basis for knowledge merit truth justice and the like is an impossibility objectivity in the sense of standards of judgment that transcend individual perspectives does not exist Reason is just another code word for the views of the privileged The Enlightenment itself merely replaced one socially constructed view of reality with another mistaking power for knowledge There is naught but power 126 Richard Caputo William Epstein David Stoesz amp Bruce Thyer consider postmodernism to be a dead end in social work epistemology They write Postmodernism continues to have a detrimental influence on social work questioning the Enlightenment criticizing established research methods and challenging scientific authority The promotion of postmodernism by editors of Social Work and the Journal of Social Work Education has elevated postmodernism placing it on a par with theoretically guided and empirically based research The inclusion of postmodernism in the 2008 Educational Policy and Accreditation Standards of the Council on Social Work Education and its 2015 sequel further erode the knowledge building capacity of social work educators In relation to other disciplines that have exploited empirical methods social work s stature will continue to ebb until postmodernism is rejected in favor of scientific methods for generating knowledge 127 H Sidky pointed out what he sees as several inherent flaws of a postmodern antiscience perspective including the confusion of the authority of science evidence with the scientist conveying the knowledge its self contradictory claim that all truths are relative and its strategic ambiguity He sees 21st century anti scientific and pseudo scientific approaches to knowledge particularly in the United States as rooted in a postmodernist decades long academic assault on science Many of those indoctrinated in postmodern anti science went on to become conservative political and religious leaders policymakers journalists journal editors judges lawyers and members of city councils and school boards Sadly they forgot the lofty ideals of their teachers except that science is bogus 128 Criticism by postmodernists themselves Edit The French psychotherapist and philosopher Felix Guattari rejected its theoretical assumptions by arguing that the structuralist and postmodernist visions of the world were not flexible enough to seek explanations in psychological social and environmental domains at the same time 129 In an interview with Truls Lie Jean Baudrillard noted Transmodernism etc are better terms than postmodernism It is not about modernity it is about every system that has developed its mode of expression to the extent that it surpasses itself and its own logic This is what I am trying to analyze There is no longer any ontologically secret substance I perceive this to be nihilism rather than postmodernism 130 See also EditTheoryAnti foundationalism Term applied to any philosophy which rejects a foundationalist approach Integral theory Framework for integrating diverse theories Transmodernism Philosophical and cultural movementCulture and politicsDefamiliarization Artistic technique of presenting common things in an unfamiliar or strange way Disenchantment Cultural rationalization and devaluation of religion apparent in modern society Syncretism Assimilation of two or more originally discrete religious traditions PhilosophyPhilosophical skepticism Philosophical views that question the possibility of knowledge or certainty Idealism Philosophical viewReligionPostmodern religion Religion influenced by postmodernismHistorySecond modernity Industrial society transformed into a more reflexive network society or information societyOpposed byAltermodern term for art that reacts against standardisation and commercialismPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback RemodernismReferences Edit a b Nuyen A T 1992 The Role of Rhetorical Devices in Postmodernist Discourse Philosophy amp Rhetoric pp 183 194 a b Torfing Jacob 1999 New theories of discourse Laclau Mouffe and Z iz ek Oxford UK Malden Mass Blackwell Publishers ISBN 0 631 19557 2 a b c Aylesworth Gary 5 February 2015 1st pub 2005 Postmodernism In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy sep postmodernism Spring 2015 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 12 May 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k Duignan Brian Postmodernism Britannica com Retrieved 24 April 2016 a b Bryant Ian Rennie Johnston Robin Usher 2004 Adult Education and the Postmodern Challenge Learning Beyond the Limits Routledge p 203 postmodernism American Heritage Dictionary Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2019 Archived from the original on 15 June 2018 Retrieved 5 May 2019 via AHDictionary com Of or relating to an intellectual stance often marked by eclecticism and irony and tending to reject the universal validity of such principles as hierarchy binary opposition categorization and stable identity Bauman Zygmunt 1992 Intimations of postmodernity London New York Routledge p 26 ISBN 978 0 415 06750 8 a b Lyotard Jean Francois 1989 The Lyotard reader Oxford UK Cambridge Massachusetts Blackwell ISBN 0 631 16339 5 a b postmodernism Oxford Dictionary American English Archived from the original on 17 January 2013 via oxforddictionaries com a b Mura Andrea 2012 The Symbolic Function of Transmodernity Language and Psychoanalysis 1 1 68 87 doi 10 7565 landp 2012 0005 a b postmodern The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 4th ed 2000 Archived from the original on 9 December 2008 via Bartleby com a b Hutcheon Linda 2002 The politics of postmodernism London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 42605 0 a b Hatch Mary 2013 Organization theory modern symbolic and postmodern perspectives Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 964037 9 Hicks Stephen 2011 Explaining postmodernism skepticism and socialism from Rousseau to Foucault Roscoe Illinois Ockham s Razor Publishing ISBN 978 0 9832584 0 7 Brown Callum 2013 Postmodernism for historians London Routledge ISBN 978 1 315 83610 2 Bruner Edward M 1994 Abraham Lincoln as Authentic Reproduction A Critique of Postmodernism PDF American Anthropologist 96 2 397 415 doi 10 1525 aa 1994 96 2 02a00070 JSTOR 681680 S2CID 161259515 Archived from the original PDF on 27 February 2020 Callinicos Alex 1989 Against postmodernism a marxist critique Cambridge Polity Press ISBN 0 7456 0614 8 Devigne Robert 1994 Introduction Recasting conservatism Oakeshott Strauss and the response to postmodernism New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 06868 9 Sokal Alan Bricmont Jean 1999 Intellectual impostures postmodern philosophers abuse of science London Profile ISBN 1 86197 124 9 a b c Postmodernism Glossary Faith and Reason 11 September 1998 Retrieved 10 June 2019 via PBS org Harari Yuval Noah 2015 Sapiens A Brief History of Humankind Translated from Hebrew by the author with John Purcell and Haim Watzman London Penguin Random House UK p 270 ISBN 978 0 09 959008 8 OCLC 910498369 Kellner Douglas 1995 Media culture cultural studies identity and politics between the modern and the postmodern London New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 10569 2 Welsch Wolfgang Sandbothe Mike 1997 Postmodernity as a Philosophical Concept International Postmodernism Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages Vol XI p 76 doi 10 1075 chlel xi 07wel ISBN 978 90 272 3443 8 Hassan Ihab The Postmodern Turn Essays in Postmodern Theory and Culture Ohio University Press 1987 p 12ff Thompson J M Post Modernism The Hibbert Journal Vol XII No 4 July 1914 p 733 Dorsey Arris 2018 Origins of Sociological Theory Collier Readale p 211 ISBN 978 1 83947 426 2 Merriam Webster s Collegiate Dictionary 2004 Madsen Deborah 1995 Postmodernism A Bibliography Amsterdam Atlanta Georgia Rodopi Russell Kirk American Conservative University Press of Kentucky 9 November 2015 ISBN 9780813166209 Russello Gerald J 25 October 2007 The Postmodern Imagination of Russell Kirk University of Missouri Press ISBN 9780826265944 via Google Books Bell Bernard Iddings 1926 Postmodernism and Other Essays Milwaukie Morehouse Publishing Company Arnold J Toynbee A study of History Volume 5 Oxford University Press 1961 1939 p 43 Encyclopaedia Britannica 2004 Seah Isaac Post Modernism in Architecture Drucker Peter F 1957 Landmarks of Tomorrow New York Harper Brothers Archived from the original on 12 April 2019 Retrieved 2 August 2015 Bochner Mel 2008 Solar System amp Rest Rooms Writings and Interviews 1965 2007 USA The MIT Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 262 02631 4 Anderson Walter Truett 1996 The Fontana Postmodernism Reader See Barth John The Literature of Exhaustion The Atlantic Monthly August 1967 pp 29 34 Cf for example Huyssen Andreas After the Great Divide Modernism Mass Culture Postmodernism Bloomington Indiana University Press 1986 p 188 See Hutcheon Linda A Poetics of Postmodernism History Theory Fiction New York Routledge 1988 pp 3 21 See McHale Brian Postmodern Fiction London Methuen 1987 See Lyotard Jean Francois The Postmodern Condition A Report on Knowledge Minneapolis University of Minneapolis Press 1984 See Baudrillard Jean Simulacra and Simulations In Jean Baudrillard Selected Writings Stanford Stanford University Press 1988 pp 166 184 Potter Garry and Lopez Jose eds After Postmodernism An Introduction to Critical Realism London The Athlone Press 2001 p 4 Fjellestad Danuta Engberg Maria 2013 Toward a Concept of Post Postmodernism or Lady Gaga s Reconfigurations of Madonna Reconstruction Studies in Contemporary Culture 12 4 Archived from the original on 23 February 2013 DiVA 833886 Kirby Alan 2006 The Death of Postmodernism and Beyond Philosophy Now 58 34 37 Gibbons Alison 2017 Postmodernism is dead What comes next TLS Retrieved 17 February 2020 Kurzweil Edith 2017 The age of structuralism from Levi Strauss to Foucault London Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 30584 6 Levi Strauss Claude 1963 Structural Anthropology I ed USA New York Basic Books p 324 ISBN 0 465 09516 X Levi Strauss quoting D Arcy Westworth Thompson states To those who question the possibility of defining the interrelations between entities whose nature is not completely understood I shall reply with the following comment by a great naturalist In a very large part of morphology our essential task lies in the comparison of related forms rather than in the precise definition of each and the deformation of a complicated figure may be a phenomenon easy of comprehension though the figure itself has to be left unanalyzed and undefined Levi Strauss Claude Anthropologie Structurale Paris Editions Plon 1958 Levi Strauss Claude Structural Anthropology Trans Claire Jacobson and Brooke Grundfest Schoepf New York Basic Books 1963 228 TRANS Nr 11 Paul Michael Lutzeler St Louis From Postmodernism to Postcolonialism inst at Sarup Madan 1993 An introductory guide to post structuralism and postmodernism Athens University of Georgia Press ISBN 0 8203 1531 1 Yilmaz K 2010 Postmodernism and its Challenge to the Discipline of History Implications for History Education Educational Philosophy amp Theory 42 7 779 795 doi 10 1111 j 1469 5812 2009 00525 x S2CID 145695056 Culler Jonathan 2008 On deconstruction theory and criticism after structuralism London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 46151 1 Derrida 1967 Of Grammatology Part II Introduction to the Age of Rousseau section 2 That Dangerous Supplement title The Exorbitant Question of Method pp 158 59 163 Peeters Benoit Derrida A Biography pp 377 8 translated by Andrew Brown Polity Press 2013 ISBN 978 0 7456 5615 1 Mann Steve 2003 Decon2 Decon Squared Deconstructing Decontamination PDF Leonardo 36 4 285 290 doi 10 1162 002409403322258691 JSTOR 1577323 S2CID 57559253 Campbell Heidi A 2006 Postcyborg Ethics A New Way to Speak of Technology Explorations in Media Ecology 5 4 279 296 doi 10 1386 eme 5 4 279 1 Mann Steve Fung James Federman Mark Baccanico Gianluca 2002 PanopDecon Deconstructing decontaminating and decontextualizing panopticism in the postcyborg era Surveillance amp Society 1 3 375 398 doi 10 24908 ss v1i3 3346 Muller Schwarze Nina 2015 The Blood of Victoriano Lorenzo An Ethnography of the Cholos of Northern Cocle Province Jefferson North Carolina McFarland Press Best Steven Kellner Douglas 2 November 2001 The Postmodern Turn in Philosophy Theoretical Provocations and Normative Deficits UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies UCLA Retrieved 12 May 2019 Jacques Derrida Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 11 October 2018 Retrieved 14 May 2019 McCance Dawne 5 December 2014 2009 Equinox Derrida on Religion Thinker of Differance Key thinkers in the study of religion London Routledge p 7 ISBN 978 1 317 49093 7 OCLC 960024707 Peters Michael A Biesta Gert 2009 Derrida Deconstruction and the Politics of Pedagogy New York Peter Lang p 134 ISBN 978 1 4331 0009 3 OCLC 314727596 Bensmaia Reda 2006 Poststructuralism In Kritzman Lawrence D Reilly Brian J Debevoise M B eds The Columbia History of Twentieth Century French Thought New York Columbia University Press pp 92 93 ISBN 978 0 231 10790 7 Poster Mark 1989 Introduction Theory and the Problem of Context Critical Theory and Poststructuralism In Search of a Context Cornell University Press pp 4 6 ISBN 978 1 5017 4618 5 Leitch Vincent B 1 January 1996 Postmodernism Local Effects Global Flows SUNY series in postmodern culture Albany NY SUNY Press p 27 ISBN 978 1 4384 1044 9 OCLC 715808589 Retrieved 15 May 2019 Lurcza Zsuzsanna 2017 Deconstruction of the Destruktion Heidegger and Derrida Philobiblon Transylvanian Journal of Multidisciplinary Research in Humanities 22 2 doi 10 26424 philobib 2017 22 2 11 ISSN 1224 7448 The most cited authors of books in the humanities Times Higher Education THE World Universities Insights 2019 Foucault Michel 1926 1984 17 April 2018 The order of things an archaeology of the human sciences ISBN 978 1 317 33667 9 OCLC 1051836299 Foucault Michel 15 April 2013 Archaeology of Knowledge doi 10 4324 9780203604168 ISBN 978 0 203 60416 8 Foucault Michel 2020 Discipline and Punish the birth of the prison Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 241 38601 9 OCLC 1117463412 Foucault Michel 1926 1984 author The History of Sexuality an introduction ISBN 978 1 4114 7321 8 OCLC 910324749 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Continental Philosophy and Modern Theology An Engagement Wipf and Stock Publishers 18 January 2012 ISBN 9781610977494 Lyotard J F 1979 The Postmodern Condition A Report on Knowledge Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 944624 06 7 OCLC 232943026 Luke Timothy W 1991 Power and politics in hyperreality The critical project of Jean Baudrillard The Social Science Journal 28 3 347 367 doi 10 1016 0362 3319 91 90018 Y Jameson Fredric 1991 Postmodernism or The cultural logic of late capitalism Durham Duke University Press ISBN 0 8223 0929 7 Kellner Douglas 1988 Postmodernism as Social Theory Some Challenges and Problems Theory Culture amp Society 5 2 3 239 269 doi 10 1177 0263276488005002003 ISSN 0263 2764 S2CID 144625142 Lule Jack 2001 The Postmodern Adventure Book Review Journalism amp Mass Communication Quarterly 78 4 865 866 doi 10 1177 107769900107800415 S2CID 221059611 Danto AC 1990 The Hyper Intellectual New Republic Vol 203 no 11 12 pp 44 48 Sullivan Louis The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered published Lippincott s Magazine March 1896 Loos Adolf 1910 Ornament and Crime Tafuri Manfredo 1976 Architecture and Utopia Design and Capitalist Development PDF Cambridge MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 20033 2 Le Corbusier Towards a New Architecture Dover Publications 1985 1921 Venturi et al Jencks Charles 1975 The Rise of Post Modern Architecture Architectural Association Quarterly 7 4 3 14 Jencks Charles 1977 The language of post modern architecture New York Rizzoli ISBN 0 8478 0167 5 Jencks Charles The Language of Post Modern Architecture Academy Editions London 1974 Farrell Terry 2017 Revisiting Postmodernism Newcastle upon Tyne RIBA Publishing ISBN 978 1 85946 632 2 Lee Pamela 2013 New Games Postmodernism After Contemporary Art New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 98879 7 Poynor Rick 2003 No more rules graphic design and postmodernism New Haven CT Yale University Press p 18 ISBN 0 300 10034 5 Drucker Johanna and Emily McVarish 2008 Graphic Design History Pearson pp 305 306 ISBN 978 0 13 241075 5 Elizabeth Bellalouna Michael L LaBlanc Ira Mark Milne 2000 Literature of Developing Nations for Students L Z p 50 Stavans Ilan 1997 Antiheroes Mexico and Its Detective Novel Fairleigh Dickinson University Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 8386 3644 2 McHale Brian 2011 Pynchon s postmodernism In Dalsgaard Inger H Herman Luc McHale Brian eds The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon pp 97 111 doi 10 1017 CCOL9780521769747 010 ISBN 978 0 521 76974 7 Mail Events Screenings News 32 People bu edu Retrieved 4 April 2013 McHale B Postmodernist Fiction Abingdon on Thames Routledge 2003 McHale Brian 20 December 2007 What Was Postmodernism Electronic Book Review Retrieved 4 April 2013 Kramer Jonathan 2016 Postmodern music postmodern listening New York Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 5013 0602 0 Strinati Dominic 1995 An Introduction to Theories of Popular Culture London Routledge p 234 Brown Stephen 2003 On Madonna S Brand Ambition Presentation Transcript Association For Consumer Research pp 119 201 Archived from the original on 19 April 2017 Retrieved 1 April 2021 a b McGregor Jock 2008 Madonna Icon of Postmodernity PDF L Abri pp 1 8 Archived from the original PDF on 7 December 2020 Retrieved 29 March 2021 Brendan Canavan McCamley Claire February 2020 The passing of the postmodern in pop Epochal consumption and marketing from Madonna through Gaga to Taylor Journal of Business Research 107 222 230 doi 10 1016 j jbusres 2018 12 005 a b Goodchild Barry 1990 Planning and the Modern Postmodern Debate The Town Planning Review 61 2 119 137 doi 10 3828 tpr 61 2 q5863289k1353533 JSTOR 40112887 Jacobs Jane 1993 The death and life of great American cities New York Modern Library ISBN 0 679 64433 4 a b Hatuka Tali d Hooghe Alexander 2007 After Postmodernism Readdressing the Role of Utopia in Urban Design and Planning Places 19 2 20 27 Irving Allan 1993 The Modern Postmodern Divide and Urban Planning University of Toronto Quarterly 62 4 474 487 doi 10 3138 utq 62 4 474 S2CID 144261041 Simonsen Kirsten 1990 Planning on Postmodern Conditions Acta Sociologica 33 1 51 62 doi 10 1177 000169939003300104 JSTOR 4200779 S2CID 144268594 a b Soja Edward W 14 March 2014 My Los Angeles From Urban Restructuring to Regional Urbanization Univ of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 95763 3 Shiel Mark 30 October 2017 Edward Soja Mediapolis Retrieved 1 February 2020 Scruton Roger 1996 Modern philosophy an introduction and survey New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 024907 9 Dick Hebdige Postmodernism and the other side in Cultural Theory and Popular Culture A reader edited by John Storey London Pearson Education 2006 Noam Chomsky on Post Modernism bactra org Craig William Lane 3 July 2008 God is Not Dead Yet Christianity Today Retrieved 30 April 2014 Pohlmann Sascha 2019 The New Pynchon studies Cambridge pp 17 32 ISBN 978 1108474467 de Castro Eliana 12 December 2015 Camille Paglia Postmodernism is a plague upon the mind and the heart Fausto Mag Postmodernism is a plague upon the mind and the heart Wellmer Albrecht 1991 Introduction The persistence of modernity essays on aesthetics ethic and postmodernism Cambridge Mass MIT Press ISBN 0 262 23160 3 Sokal Alan D 1996 Transgressing the Boundaries Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity Social Text 46 47 46 47 217 252 doi 10 2307 466856 JSTOR 466856 archived from the original on 19 May 2017 retrieved 15 March 2008 Sokal Alan D 5 June 1996 A Physicist Experiments with Cultural Studies Lingua Franca archived from the original on 5 October 2007 Jedlitschka Karsten 5 August 2018 Guenter Lewy Harmful and Undesirable Book Censorship in Nazi Germany Oxford Oxford University Press 2016 Historische Zeitschrift 307 1 274 275 doi 10 1515 hzhz 2018 1368 ISSN 2196 680X S2CID 159895878 Nagel Thomas 2002 Concealment and Exposure amp Other Essays Oxford University Press p 164 ISBN 978 0 19 515293 7 Nagel p 165 Callinicos Alex 1990 Against postmodernism a Marxist critique New York N Y St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 04224 8 Dennett on Wieseltier V Pinker in the New Republic http edge org conversation dennett on wieseltier v pinker in the new republic Archived 5 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine Wolin Richard 2019 The seduction of unreason the intellectual romance with fascism from Nietzsche to postmodernism Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 19235 2 Daniel Farber and Suzanne Sherry Beyond All Reason The Radical Assault on Truth in American Law New York Times https www nytimes com books first f farber reason html Caputo Richard Epstein William Stoesz David Thyer Bruce 2015 Postmodernism A Dead End in Social Work Epistemology Journal of Social Work Education 51 4 638 647 doi 10 1080 10437797 2015 1076260 S2CID 143246585 Sidky H 2018 The War on Science Anti Intellectualism and Alternative Ways of Knowing in 21st Century America Skeptical Inquirer 42 2 38 43 Archived from the original on 6 June 2018 Retrieved 6 June 2018 Guattari Felix 1989 The three ecologies PDF New Formations 8 134 The art of disappearing BAUDRILLARD NOW 22 January 2021 Archived from the original on 22 January 2021 Retrieved 2 March 2022 Further reading Edit Graphic Design in the Postmodern Era Emigre 47 1998 Alexie Sherman 2000 The Toughest Indian in the World ISBN 0 8021 3800 4 Anderson Perry The origins of postmodernity London Verso 1998 Anderson Walter Truett The Truth about the Truth New Consciousness Reader New York Tarcher 1995 ISBN 0 87477 801 8 Arena Leonardo Vittorio 2015 On Nudity An Introduction to Nonsense Mimesis International Ashley Richard and Walker R B J 1990 Speaking the Language of Exile International Studies Quarterly v 34 no 3 259 68 Bauman Zygmunt 2000 Liquid Modernity Cambridge Polity Press Beck Ulrich 1986 Risk Society Towards a New Modernity Benhabib Seyla 1995 Feminism and Postmodernism in ed Nicholson Feminism Contentions A Philosophical Exchange New York Routledge Berman Marshall 1982 All That Is Solid Melts into Air The Experience of Modernity ISBN 0 14 010962 5 Bertens Hans 1995 The Idea of the Postmodern A History London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 06012 7 Best Steven and Douglas Kellner Postmodern Theory 1991 excerpt and text search Best Steven and Douglas Kellner The Postmodern Turn 1997 excerpt and text search Best Steven and Douglas Kellner The Postmodern Adventure Science Technology and Cultural Studies at the Third Millennium Guilford Press 2001 ISBN 978 1 57230 665 3 Bielskis Andrius 2005 Towards a Postmodern Understanding of the Political From Genealogy to Hermeneutics Palgrave Macmillan 2005 Brass Tom Peasants Populism and Postmodernism London Cass 2000 Butler Judith 1995 Contingent Foundations in ed Nicholson Feminist Contentions A Philosophical Exchange New York Routledge Callinicos Alex Against Postmodernism A Marxist Critique Cambridge Polity 1999 Dirlik Arif Zhang Xudong eds 2000 Postmodernism amp China Durham NC Duke University Press ISBN 0 8223 8022 6 OCLC 52341080 Drabble M The Oxford Companion to English Literature 6 ed article Postmodernism Farrell John Paranoia and Postmodernism the epilogue to Paranoia and Modernity Cervantes to Rousseau Cornell UP 2006 309 327 Featherstone M 1991 Consumer culture and postmodernism London Newbury Park Calif Sage Publications Giddens Anthony 1991 Modernity and Self Identity Cambridge Polity Press Gosselin Paul 2012 Flight From the Absolute Cynical Observations on the Postmodern West volume I Samizdat Flight From the Absolute Cynical Observations on the Postmodern West Volume I ISBN 978 2 9807774 3 1 Goulimari Pelagia ed 2007 Postmodernism What Moment Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 7308 3 Grebowicz Margaret ed Gender After Lyotard NY Suny Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 7914 6956 9 Greer Robert C Mapping Postmodernism IL Intervarsity Press 2003 ISBN 0 8308 2733 1 Groothuis Douglas Truth Decay Downers Grove Illinois InterVarsity Press 2000 Harvey David 1989 The Condition of Postmodernity An Enquiry into the Origins of Cultural Change ISBN 0 631 16294 1 Honderich T The Oxford Companion to Philosophy article Postmodernism Hutcheon Linda The Politics of Postmodernism 2002 online edition Jameson Fredric 1991 Postmodernism or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism ISBN 0 8223 1090 2 Jarzombek Mark 2016 Digital Stockholm Syndrome in the Post Ontological Age Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press Kimball Roger 2000 Experiments against Reality the Fate of Culture in the Postmodern Age Chicago I R Dee viii 359 p ISBN 1 56663 335 4 Kirby Alan 2009 Digimodernism New York Continuum Lash S 1990 The sociology of postmodernism London Routledge Lucy Niall 2016 A dictionary of Postmodernism ISBN 978 1 4051 5077 4 Lyotard Jean Francois 1984 The Postmodern Condition A Report on Knowledge ISBN 0 8166 1173 4 Lyotard Jean Francois 1988 The Postmodern Explained Correspondence 1982 1985 Ed Julian Pefanis and Morgan Thomas ISBN 0 8166 2211 6 Lyotard Jean Francois 1993 Scriptures Diffracted Traces In Theory Culture and Society Vol 21 1 2004 Lyotard Jean Francois 1995 Anamnesis Of the Visible In Theory Culture and Society Vol 21 1 2004 MacIntyre Alasdair After Virtue A Study in Moral Theory University of Notre Dame Press 1984 2nd edn Magliola Robert On Deconstructing Life Worlds Buddhism Christianity Culture Atlanta Scholars Press of American Academy of Religion 1997 Oxford Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 0 7885 0295 6 cloth ISBN 0 7885 0296 4 pbk Magliola Robert Derrida on the Mend Lafayette Purdue University Press 1984 1986 pbk 2000 ISBN I 55753 205 2 Manuel Peter Music as Symbol Music as Simulacrum Pre Modern Modern and Postmodern Aesthetics in Subcultural Musics Popular Music 1 2 1995 pp 227 239 McHale Brian 1992 Constructing Postmodernism NY amp London Routledge McHale Brian 2007 What Was Postmodernism electronic book review 1 Archived 18 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine McHale Brian 2008 1966 Nervous Breakdown or When Did Postmodernism Begin Modern Language Quarterly 69 3 391 413 McHale Brian 1987 Postmodernist Fiction London Routledge Mura Andrea 2012 The Symbolic Function of Transmodernity PDF Language and Psychoanalysis 1 68 87 doi 10 7565 landp 2012 0005 Archived from the original PDF on 8 October 2015 Murphy Nancey Anglo American Postmodernity Philosophical Perspectives on Science Religion and Ethics Westview Press 1997 Natoli Joseph 1997 A Primer to Postmodernity ISBN 1 57718 061 5 Norris Christopher 1990 What s Wrong with Postmodernism Critical Theory and the Ends of Philosophy ISBN 0 8018 4137 2 Pangle Thomas L The Ennobling of Democracy The Challenge of the Postmodern Age Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press 1991 ISBN 0 8018 4635 8 Park Jin Y ed Buddhisms and Deconstructions Lanham Rowland amp Littlefield 2006 ISBN 978 0 7425 3418 6 ISBN 0 7425 3418 9 Perez Rolando Ed Agorapoetics Poetics after Postmodernism Aurora The Davies Group Publishers 2017 ISBN 978 1 934542 38 5 Philip B Meggs Alston W Purvis 2011 22 Meggs History of Graphic Design 5 ed John Wiley amp Sons Incorporated ISBN 978 0 470 16873 8 Powell Jim 1998 Postmodernism For Beginners ISBN 978 1 934389 09 6 Sim Stuart 1999 The Routledge critical dictionary of postmodern thought ISBN 0 415 92353 0 Sokal Alan and Jean Bricmont 1998 Fashionable Nonsense Postmodern Intellectuals Abuse of Science ISBN 0 312 20407 8 Stephen Hicks 2014 Explaining Postmodernism Skepticism and Socialism from Rousseau to Foucault Expanded Edition Ockham s Razor Publishing Vattimo Gianni 1989 The Transparent Society ISBN 0 8018 4528 9 Veith Jr Gene Edward 1994 Postmodern Times A Christian Guide to Contemporary Thought and Culture ISBN 0 89107 768 5 Windschuttle Keith 1996 The Killing of History How Literary Critics and Social Theorists are Murdering Our Past New York The Free Press Woods Tim Beginning Postmodernism Manchester Manchester University Press 1999 Reprinted 2002 ISBN 0 7190 5210 6 Hardback ISBN 0 7190 5211 4 Paperback External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Postmodernism Look up postmodernism in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Postmodernism Discourses of Postmodernism Multilingual bibliography by Janusz Przychodzen PDF file Modernity postmodernism and the tradition of dissent by Lloyd Spencer 1998 Postmodernism and truth by philosopher Daniel Dennett Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy s entry on postmodernism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Postmodernism amp oldid 1143432162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.