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Postmodernism
is an artistic, architectural, philosophical, and cultural movement
or condition, said to arise after and in reaction to modernism.
According to many commentators, whereas modernism frames itself
as the culmination of the Enlightenment's quest for an authoritatively-rational
aesthetics, ethics, and knowledge, postmodernism is concerned with
how the authority of those would-be-ideals, sometimes called metanarratives,
are subverted through fragmentation, consumerism, and deconstruction.
This dichotomy
is somewhat problematic, since it ignores the strong emphasis on
irrationalism and fragmentation within modernism. For this reason
postmodernism can equally be seen as a development of aspects of
modernism while rejecting others, in particular the emphasis on
authenticity.
Jean-François
Lyotard famously described postmodernism as an "incredulity
toward metanarratives" (Lyotard, 1984). Postmodernism attacks
the notions of monolithic universals and encourages fractured, fluid
and multiple perspectives and is marked by an increasing importance
in the ideas from the Sociology of knowledge.
A related term
is postmodernity, which refers to the state of things after modernity.
This includes a focus on the sociological, technological, and other
conditions that distinguish the Modern Age from what is thought
to have arisen thereafter. Postmodernism, on the other hand, denotes
intellectual, cultural, artistic, academic, and philosophical responses
to the condition of postmodernity. Another related term is postmodern,
an adjective used to describe either a condition of, or a response
to, postmodernity. For example, one may refer to postmodern architecture,
postmodern literature, postmodern culture, postmodern music and
postmodern philosophy.
Brief outline of postmodernism
Features of postmodern culture begin to arise in the 1920s with
the emergence of the dada movement, which featured collage and a
focus on the framing of objects and discourse as being as important,
or more important, than the work itself. Another strand which would
have tremendous impact on post-modernism would be the existentialists,
who placed the centrality of the individual narrative as being the
source of morals and understanding. However, it is with the end
of the Second World War that recognizably post-modernist attitudes
begin to emerge.
Central to these
is the focusing on the problems of any knowledge which is founded
on anything external to an individual. Post-modernism, while widely
diverse in its forms, almost invariably begins from the problem
of knowledge which is both broadly disseminated in its form, but
not limited in its interpretation. Post-modernism rapidly developed
a vocabulary of anti-enlightenment rhetoric, used to argue that
rationality was neither as sure or as clear as rationalists supposed,
and that knowledge was inherently linked to time, place, social
position and other factors from which an individual constructs their
view of knowledge. To escape from constructed knowledge, it then
becomes necessary to critique it, and thus deconstruct the asserted
knowledge. Jacques Derrida argued that to defend against the inevitable
self-deconstruction of knowledge, systems of power, called hegemony
would have to postulate an original utterance, the logos. This "privileging"
of an original utterance is called "logocentrism". Instead
of rooting knowledge in particular utterances, or "texts",
the basis of knowledge was seen to be in the free play of discourse
itself, an idea rooted in Wittgenstein's idea of a language game.
This emphasis on the allowability of free play within the context
of conversation and discourse leads postmodernism to adopt the stance
of irony, paradox, textual manipulation, reference and tropes.
Armed with this
process of questioning the social basis of assertions, postmodernist
philosophers began to attack unities of modernism, and particularly
unities seen as being rooted in the Enlightenment. Since Modernism
had made the Enlightenment a central source of its superiority over
the Victorian and Romantic periods, this attack amounted to an indirect
attack on the establishment of modernism itself. Perhaps the most
striking examples of this skepticism are to be found in the works
of French cultural theorist, Jean Baudrillard. In his book Simulations,
he contends that social 'reality' no longer exists in the conventional
sense, but has been supplanted by an endless procession of simulacra.
The mass media, and other forms of mass cultural production, generate
constant re-appropriation and re-contextualisation of familiar cultural
symbols and images, fundamentally shifting our experience away from
'reality', to 'hyperreality'. Along this line, it is significant
that the beginning of postmodern architecture is not considered
to be the construction of any great building, but the destruction
of the modernist Pruitt-Igoe housing project (see Minoru Yamasaki).
Postmodernism
therefore has an obvious distrust toward claims about truth, ethics,
or beauty being rooted in anything other than individual perception
and group construction. Utopian ideals of universally applicable
truths or aesthetics give way to provisional, decentered, local
petit recits which, rather than referencing an underlying universal
truth or aesthetic, point only to other ideas and cultural artifacts,
themselves subject to interpretation and re-interpretation. The
"truth", since it can only be understood by all of its
connections is perpetually "deferred", never reaching
a point of fixed knowledge which can be called "the truth"
This emphasis on construction and consensus is often used to attack
science, as the Sokal Affair shows.
Postmodernism
is often used in a larger sense, meaning the entire trend of thought
in the late 20th century, and the social and philosophical realities
of that period. Marxist critics argue that post-modernism is symptomatic
of "late capitalism" and the decline of institutions,
particularly the nation-state. Other thinkers assert that post-modernity
is the natural reaction to mass broadcasting and a society conditioned
to mass production and mass political decision making. The ability
of knowledge to be endlessly copied defeats attempts to constrain
interpretation, or to set "originality" by simple means
such as the production of a work. From this perspective, the schools
of thought labelled "postmodern" are not as widely at
odds with their time period as the polemics and arguments appear,
pointing, for example, to the shift of the basis of scientific knowledge
to a provisional consensus of scientists, as positted by Thomas
Kuhn. Post-modernism is seen, in this view, as being conscious of
the nature of the discontinuity between modern and post-modern periods
which is generally present.
Postmodernism
has manifestations in many modern academic and non-academic disciplines:
philosophy, theology, art, architecture, film, television, music,
theatre, sociology, fashion, technology, literature, and communications
are all heavily influenced by postmodern trends and ideas, and are
thoroughly scrutinised from postmodern perspectives. Crucial to
these are the denial of customary expectations, the use of non-orthogonal
angles in buildings such as the work of Frank Gehry, and the shift
in arts exemplified by the rise of minimalism in art and music.
Post-modern philosophy often labels itself as critical theory and
grounds the construction of identity in the mass media.
Note: "post-modern"
tends to be used by critics, "postmodern" by supporters.
This may be because postmodern is considered merely a symbol and
its meaning (as obtained through simple linguistic analysis) can
be ignored.
Postmodernism
was first identified as a theoretical discipline in the 1980s, but
as a cultural movement it predates them by many years. Exactly when
modernism began to give way to postmodernism is difficult to pinpoint,
if not simply impossible. Some theorists reject that such a distinction
even exists, viewing postmodernism, for all its claims of fragmentation
and plurality, as still existing within a larger 'modernist' framework.
The philosopher Jürgen Habermas is a strong proponent of this
view. Which has aspects of a lumpers/splitters problem: is the entire
20th century one period, or two distinct periods?
The theory gained
some of its strongest ground early on in French academia. In 1979
Jean-François Lyotard wrote a short but influential work
The Postmodern Condition : a report on knowledge. Jean Baudrillard,
Michel Foucault, and Roland Barthes (in his more post-structural
work) are also strongly influential in postmodern theory. Postmodernism
is closely allied with several contemporary academic disciplines,
most notably those connected with sociology. Many of its assumptions
are integral to feminist and post-colonial theory.
Some identify
the burgeoning anti-establishment movements of the 1960s as the
earliest trend out of cultural modernity toward postmodernism.
Tracing it further
back, some identify its roots in the breakdown of Hegelian idealism,
and the impact of both World Wars (perhaps even the concept of a
World War). Heidegger and Derrida were influential in re-examining
the fundamentals of knowledge, together with the work of Ludwig
Wittgenstein and his philosophy of action, Soren Kierkegaard's and
Karl Barth's important fideist approach to theology, and even the
nihilism of Nietzsche's philosophy. Michel Foucault's application
of Hegel to thinking about the body is also identified as an important
landmark. While it is rare to pin down the specific origins of any
large cultural shift, it is fair to assume that postmodernism represents
an accumulated disillusionment with the promises of the Enlightenment
project and its progress of science, so central to modern thinking.
The movement
has had diverse political ramifications: its anti-ideological insights
appear conducive to, and strongly associated with, the feminist
movement, racial equality movements, homosexual rights movements,
most forms of late 20th century anarchism, even the peace movement
and various hybrids of these in the current anti-globalization movement.
Unsurprisingly, none of these institutions entirely embraces all
aspects of the postmodern movement, but reflect or, in true postmodern
style, borrow from some of its core ideas.
Early usage of the term
In an essay From Postmodernism to Postmodernity: the Local/Global
Context, [1] (http:www.ihabhassan.com/postmodernism_to_postmodernity.htm)
Ihab Hassan points out a number of instances in which the term postmodernism
was used before the term became popular:
John Watkins
Chapman, an English salon painter, in the 1870s, to mean Post-Impressionism.
Federico de Onís, 1934, (postmodernismo) to mean a reaction
against the difficulty and experimentalism of modernist poetry.
Arnold J. Toynbee, in 1939, to mean the end of the "modern,"
Western bourgeois order dating back to the seventeenth century.
Bernard Smith, in 1945, to mean the movement of socialist realism
in painting.
Charles Olson, during the 1950s.
Irving Howe and Harry Levin, in 1959 and 1960, respectively, to
mean a decline in high modernist culture.
Also, many cite Charles Jencks' 1977 "The Language of Postmodern
Architecture" among the earliest works which shaped the use
of the term today.
Postmodernism in language
Postmodern philosophers are often regarded as difficult to read,
and the critical theory that has sprung up in the wake of postmodernism
has often been ridiculed for its stilted syntax and attempts to
combine polemical tone and a vast array of new coinages. However,
similar charges could be levelled at the works of previous eras,
such as the works of Immanuel Kant.
More important
to postmodernism's role in language is the focus on the implied
meaning of words and forms, the power structures that are accepted
as part of the way words are used, from the use of the word "Man"
with a capital "M" to refer to the collective humanity,
to the default of the word "he" in English as a pronoun
for a person of gender unknown to the speaker, or as a casual replacement
for the word "one". This, however, is merely the most
obvious example of the changing relationship between diction and
discourse which postmodernism presents.
An important
concept in postmodernism's view of language is the idea of "play".
In the context of postmodernism, play means changing the framework
which connects ideas, and thus allows the troping, or turning, of
a metaphor or word from one context to another, or from one frame
of reference to another. Since, in postmodern thought, the "text"
is a series of "markings" whose meaning is imputed by
the reader, and not by the author, this play is the means by which
the reader constructs or interprets the text, and the means by which
the author gains a presence in the reader's mind. Play then involves
invoking words in a manner which undermines their authority, by
mocking their assumptions or style, or by layers of misdirection
as to the intention of the author.
This view of
writing is not without harsh detractors, who regard it as needlessly
difficult, and a violation of the implicit contract of lucidity
between author and reader: that an author has something to communicate,
and shall choose words which transmit the idea as transparently
as possible to the reader.
Postmodernism in art
Where modernists hoped to unearth universals or the fundamentals
of art, postmodernism aims to unseat them, to embrace diversity
and contradiction. A postmodern approach to art thus rejects the
distinction between low and high art forms. It rejects rigid genre
boundaries and favours eclecticism, the mixing of ideas and forms.
Partly due to this rejection, it promotes parody, irony, and playfulness,
commonly referred to as jouissance by postmodern theorists. Unlike
modern art, postmodern art does not approach this fragmentation
as somehow faulty or undesirable, but rather celebrates it. As the
gravity of the search for underlying truth is relieved, it is replaced
with 'play'. As postmodern icon David Byrne, and his band Talking
Heads said: 'Stop making sense'.
Post-modernity,
in attacking the perceived elitist approach of Modernism, sought
greater connection with broader audiences. This is often labelled
'accessibility' and is a central point of dispute in the question
of the value of postmodern art. It has also embraced the mixing
of words with art, collage and other movements in modernity, in
an attempt to create more multiplicity of medium and message. Much
of this centers on a shift of basic subject matter: postmodern artists
regard the mass media as a fundamental subject for art, and use
forms, tropes, and materials - such as banks of video monitors,
found art, and depictions of media objects - as focal points for
their art. Andy Warhol is an early example of postmodern art in
action, with his appropriation of common popular symbols and "ready-made"
cultural artifacts, bringing the previously mundane or trivial onto
the previously hallowed ground of high art.
Postmodernism's
critical stance is interlinked with presenting new appraisals of
previous works. As implied above the works of the "Dada"
movement received greater attention, as did collagists such as Robert
Rauschenberg, whose works were initially considered unimportant
in the context of the modernism of the 1950s, but who, by the 1980s,
began to be seen as seminal. Post-modernism also elevated the importance
of cinema in artistic discussions, placing it on a peer level with
the other fine arts. This is both because of the blurring of distinctions
between "high" and "low" forms, and because
of the recognition that cinema represented the creation of simulacra
which was later duplicated in the other arts.
Postmodernism in architecture
Stuttgart State
Gallery - by James Stirling (1984)As with many cultural movements,
one of postmodernism's most pronounced and visible ideas can be
seen in architecture. The functional, and formalized, shapes and
spaces of the modernist movement are replaced by unapologetically
diverse aesthetics; styles collide, form is adopted for its own
sake, and new ways of viewing familiar styles and space abound.
Classic examples
of modern architecture are the Empire State building or the Chrysler
building in commercial space, and the architecture of Frank Lloyd
Wright or the Bauhaus movement in private or communal spaces. A
transitional example of postmodern architecture is the ATT building
in New York, which, like modernist architecture, is a skyscraper
relying on steel beams and with lots of windows, but, unlike modern
architecture, it borrows elements from classical Greek style as
well. A prime example of postmodern art through an architectural
medium lies along the Las Vegas Strip. The buildings along this
strip of road reflect innumerable art periods as well as cultural
referances all in a very playful collage.
Postmodern architecture
has also been described as "neo-eclectic", where reference
and ornament have returned to the facade, replacing the aggressively
unornamented modern styles as, for example, in this building from
Boston Massachusetts (http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~twp/architecture/postmoderncom/bldg4.JPG).
This electicism is often combined with the use of non-orthagonal
angles and unusual surfaces, most famously in the Stuttgart State
Gallery and the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao.
Modernist architects
regard post-modern buildings as vulgar and loaded with "gee-gaws".
Post-modern architects often regard modern spaces as soulless and
bland. The basic aesthetic differences reach down to the level of
the tectonicity of architecture, with Modernism rooted in the desire
to reduce the amount of material and cost of a structure, and standardize
its construction. Post-modernism has no such imperative, and seeks
exuberance in the use of building techniques, angles, references.
Postmodern architects
include: Philip Johnson (later works), John Burgee, Robert Venturi,
Ricardo Boffil, James Stirling and Frank Gehry.
Postmodernism in literature
In some ways, it can be said that postmodern literature does not
so much set itself against modernist literature, as develop and
extend the style, and make it self-conscious and ironic. Both modern
and postmodern literature represent a break from 19th century realism,
in which narrative told a story from an objective or omniscient
point of view. In character development, both modern and postmodern
literature explore subjectivism, turning from external reality to
examine inner states of consciousness, in many cases drawing on
modernist examples in the "stream of consciousness" styles
of Virginia Woolf and James Joyce. In addition, both modern and
postmodern literature explore fragmentariness in narrative- and
character-construction, often reference back to the works of Swedish
dramatist August Strindberg and the Italian author Luigi Pirandello.
Unlike postmodern
literature, however, modernist literature saw fragmentation and
extreme subjectivity as an existential crisis, or Freudian internal
conflict. In postmodern literature, however, this crisis is avoided.
The tortured, isolated anti-heroes of, say, Knut Hamsun or Samuel
Beckett, and the nightmare world of T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land,
make way in postmodernist writing for the self-consciously deconstructed
and self-reflexive narrators of novels by Vladimir Nabokov, John
Fowles, John Barth, or Julian Barnes. Meanwhile, authors such as
David Foster Wallace, Don DeLillo, and Thomas Pynchon in Gravity's
Rainbow, satirise the paranoid system-building of the kind associated,
by postmodernists, with Enlightenment modernity. This shift in the
role of the "inner narrative of the self", from the self
at war with itself, to the self as arbiter points back to the phenomenological
roots of post-modern thought.
Dubbed maximalism
by some critics, the sprawling canvas and fragmented narrative of
such writers as David Eggers has generated controversy on the "purpose"
of a novel as narrative and the standards by which it should be
judged. The post-modern position is that the novel must be adequeate
to that which it depicts and represents, and points back to such
examples in previous ages as Gargantua by François Rabelais
and the Odyssey of Homer, which Nancy Felson-Rubin hails as the
exemplar of the polytropic audience and its engagement with a work.
Many modernist critics attack the maximalist novel as being disorganized,
sterile and filled with language play for its own sake, empty of
value as a narrative, and therefore empty of value as a novel.
The post-modern
novel was also part of a larger social project: integration and
ending discrimination against women. From the perspective of post-modern
writers such as Maya Angelou, the life experiences of women had
been systematically suppressed, either by men who did not understand
them, or by women who engaged in self-censorship. The hard version
of this critique was that this suppression came from the use of
rape and incest as tools for the subjugation of women, and their
suppression in literature was designed, in an Orwellian sense, to
create an absence of language and meta-narrative to shape a response
to these realities. The softer version of this critique takes a
more modernist shape: that sexism and racism are hold overs from
another, less enlightened age, and need to be stamped out by exposure
and the creation of normative art.
This social
project has also been the root of a great deal of controversy. Proponents
see it as part of the progressive removal of barriers to social
participation in power and art. Opponents deride it as political
correctness, where moralizing takes the place of literary merit.
This debate reflects larger political conflicts, not only over what
is to be done, but how it is to be accomplished.
Deconstruction
Deconstruction
is a tool of postmodernism that was itself constructed by the philosopher
and textual artist Jacques Derrida. His work consists of wordplay
combined with unique combinations of punctuation to make points
about the meaninglessness of words and the ways in which we give
them meaning. Most people use deconstruction simply to mean the
analysis of the binaries within an idea.
Postmodernism in philosophy
Main article: Postmodern philosophy
Many figures
in the 20th century philosophy of mathematics are identified as
"postmodern" due to their rejection of mathematics as
a strictly neutral point of view. Some figures in the philosophy
of science, especially Thomas Samuel Kuhn and David Bohm, are also
so viewed. Some see the ultimate expression of postmodernism in
science and mathematics in the cognitive science of mathematics,
which seeks to characterize the habit of mathematics itself as strictly
human, and based in human cognitive bias.
Postmodernism and post-structuralism
In terms of frequently cited works, postmodernism and post-structuralism
overlap quite significantly. Some philosophers, such as Francois
Lyotard, can legitimately be classified into both groups. This is
partly due to the fact that both modernism and structuralism owe
much to the Enlightenment project.
Structuralism
has a strong tendency to be scientific in seeking out stable patterns
in observed phenomena - an epistemological attitude which is quite
compatible with Enlightenment thinking, and incompatible with postmodernists.
At the same time, findings from structuralist analysis carried a
somewhat anti-Enlightenment message, revealing that rationality
can be found in the minds of 'savage' people, just in forms differing
from those that people from 'civilized' societies are used to seeing.
Implicit here is a critique of the practice of colonialism, which
was partly justified as a 'civilizing' process by which wealthier
societies bring knowledge, manners, and reason to less 'civilized'
ones.
Post-structuralism,
emerging as a response to the structuralists' scientific orientation,
has kept the cultural relativism in structuralism, while discarding
the scientific orientations.
One clear difference
between postmodernism and poststructuralism is found in their respective
attitudes towards the demise of the project of the Enlightenment:
post-structuralism is fundamentally ambivalent, while postmodernism
is decidedly celebratory.
Another difference
is the nature of the two positions. While post-structuralism is
a position in philosophy, encompassing views on human beings, language,
body, society, and many other issues, it is not a name of an era.
Post-modernism, on the other hand, is closely associated with "post-modern"
era, a period in the history coming after the modern age.
Post-Modernity and digital communications
Technological utopianism is a common trait in Western history -
from the 1700's when Adam Smith essentially labelled technological
progress as the source of the Wealth of Nations, through the novels
of Jules Verne in the late 1800's, through Winston Churchill's belief
that there was little an inventor could not achieve. Its manifestation
in the post-modernity was first through the explosion of analog
mass broadcasting of television. Strongly associated with the work
of Marshall McLuhan who argued that the "the medium is the
message", the ability of mass broadcasting to create visual
symbols and mass action was seen as a liberating force in human
affairs, even at the same time others were calling television "a
vast wasteland".
The second wave
of technological utopianism associated with post-modern thought
came with the introduction of digital internetworking, and became
identified with Esther Dyson and such popular outlets as Wired Magazine.
According to this view digital communications makes the fragmentation
of modern society a positive feature, since individuals can seek
out those artistic, cultural and community experiences which they
regard as being correct for themselves.
The common thread
is that the fragmentation of society and communication gives the
individual more autonomy to create their own environment and narrative.
This links into the the post-modern novel, which deals with the
experience of structuring "truth" from fragments.
Postmodernism and its critics
Charles Murray, a strong critic of postmodernism, defines the term:
"By contemporary
intellectual fashion, I am referring to the constellation of views
that come to mind when one hears the words multicultural, gender,
deconstruct, politically correct, and Dead White Males. In a broader
sense, contemporary intellectual fashion encompasses as well the
widespread disdain in certain circles for technology and the scientific
method. Embedded in this mind-set is hostility to the idea that
discriminating judgments are appropriate in assessing art and literature,
to the idea that hierarchies of value exist, hostility to the idea
that an objective truth exists. Postmodernism is the overarching
label that is attached to this perspective."
Though Murray's arguments against postmodernism are far from facile,
critics have cautioned that Murray's own work in The Bell Curve
arrives at racist conclusions through research and argumentation
that show flagrant disregard for the very standards he defends.
One example
is the figure of Harold Bloom, who has simultaneously been hailed
as being against multiculturalism and contemporary "fads"
in literature, and also placed as an important figure in postmodernism.
If even the critics cannot keep score as to which side of a supposedly
clear line figures stand on, the best conclusion that can be drawn
is that conclusions about membership in the post-modern club are
provisional.
Central to the
debate is the role of the concept of "objectivity" and
what it means. In the broadest sense, denial of objectivity is held
to be the post-modern position, and a hostility towards claims advanced
on the basis of objectivity its defining feature. It is this underlying
hostility toward the concept of objectivity, evident in many contemporary
critical theorists, that is the common point of attack for critics
of postmodernism. Many critics characterise postmodernism as an
ephemeral phenomenon that cannot be adequately defined simply because,
as a philosophy at least, it represents nothing more substantial
than a series of disparate conjectures allied only in their distrust
of modernism.
This antipathy
of postmodernists towards modernism, and their consequent tendency
to define themselves against it, has also attracted criticism. It
has been argued that modernity was not actually a lumbering, totalizing
monolith at all, but in fact was itself dynamic and ever-changing;
the evolution, therefore, between 'modern' and 'postmodern' should
be seen as one of degree, rather than of kind - a continuation rather
than a 'break'. One theorist who takes this view is Marshall Berman,
whose book All That is Solid Melts into Air (a quote from Marx)
reflects in its title the fluid nature of 'the experience of modernity'.
As noted above
(see History of postmodernism), some theorists such as Habermas
even argue that the supposed distinction between the 'modern' and
the 'postmodern' does not exist at all, but that the latter is really
no more than a development within a larger, still-current, 'modern'
framework. Many who make this argument are left academics with Marxist
leanings, such as Terry Eagleton, Fredric Jameson, and David Harvey,
who are concerned that postmodernism's undermining of Enlightenment
values makes a progressive cultural politics difficult, if not impossible.
How can we effect any change in people's poor living conditions,
in inequality and injustice, if we don't accept the validity of
underlying universals such as the 'real world' and 'justice' in
the first place? How is any progress to be made through a philosophy
so profoundly skeptical of the very notion of progress, and of unified
perspectives?
Such critics
may argue that, in actual fact, such postmodern premises are rarely,
if ever, actually embraced — that if they were, we would be
left with nothing more than a crippling radical subjectivism. That
the projects of the Enlightenment and modernity are alive and well
can be seen in the justice system, in science, in political rights
movements, in the very idea of universities; and so on.
To some critics,
there seems, indeed, to be a glaring contradiction in maintaining
the death of objectivity and privileged position on one hand, while
the scientific community continues a project of unprecedented scope
to unify various scientific disciplines into a theory of everything,
on the other. Hostility toward hierarchies of value and objectivity
becomes similarly problematic when postmodernity itself attempts
to analyse such hierarchies with, apparently, some measure of objectivity
and make categorical statements concerning them.
Such critics
see postmodernism as, essentially, a kind of semantic gamesmanship,
more sophistry than substance. Postmodernism's proponents are often
criticised for a tendency to indulge in exhausting, verbose stretches
of rhetorical gymnastics, which critics feel sound important but
are ultimately meaningless. (Some postmodernists may argue that
this is precisely the point.) This tendency was highlighted by the
Sokal Affair in which Alan Sokal, a physicist, wrote a deliberately
nonsensical article purportedly about interpreting physics and mathematics
in terms of postmodern theory, which was nevertheless published
by Social Text, a journal of postmodern thought. Sokal also co-authored
Fashionable Nonsense, which criticizes the inaccurate use of scientific
terminology in intellectual writing and finishes with a critique
of some forms of postmodernism. Ironically, the purpose of many
books which are considered to be postmodern literature is the former,
with the exception that the format and structure of scientific writing
is mocked, to emphasize the distinction between the content and
the embodiment. That is, to say "This is not a pipe.",
as would the study of semiotics.
Some critics
feel that postmodernism is so strongly linked to politics that it
does not qualify as a philosophy. They argue that most of the adherents
of postmodern philosophy are Leftists. These critics claim that,
inasmuch as many postmodernist arguments rely on charges of racism
and ethnocentrism in traditional Western science, it is little more
than an attempt to impose their own political agenda on the sciences.
Whatever its
philosophical value, postmodern phenomena can be observed in nearly
all areas of Western capitalist cultures, and a postmodern theoretical
approach can help explain much of this cultural condition, irrespective
of whether it offers a coherent, functional epistemology.
Further reading
Berman, Marshall All That Is Solid Melts Into Air: The Experience
of Modernity (ISBN 0140109625)
Harvey, David The Condition of Postmodernity: An Enquiry into the
Origins of Cultural Change (ISBN 0631162941)
Jameson, Fredric Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism
(ISBN 0822310902)
Lyotard, Jean-Francois The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge
(ISBN 0816611734)
Sokal, Alan and Jean Bricmont Fashionable Nonsense: Postmodern Intellectuals'
Abuse of Science (ISBN 0312204078)
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