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Postmodernism

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Title: Postmodernism


1
Postmodernism
2
Postmodernism
  • Postmodernism, like modernism, follows most of
    these same ideas, rejecting boundaries between
    high and low forms of art, rejecting rigid genre
    distinctions, emphasizing pastiche, parody,
    bricolage, irony, and playfulness. Postmodern art
    (and thought) favors reflexivity and
    self-consciousness, fragmentation and
    discontinuity (especially in narrative
    structures), ambiguity, simultaneity, and an
    emphasis on the destructured, decentered,
    dehumanized subject.

3
  • Modernism, for example, tends to present a
    fragmented view of human subjectivity and history
    (think of The Wasteland, for instance, or of
    Woolf's To the Lighthouse), but presents that
    fragmentation as something tragic, something to
    be lamented and mourned as a loss.

4
Difference
  • Many modernist works try to uphold the idea that
    works of art can provide the unity, coherence,
    and meaning which has been lost in most of modern
    life art will do what other human institutions
    fail to do. Postmodernism, in contrast, doesn't
    lament the idea of fragmentation, provisionality,
    or incoherence, but rather celebrates that. The
    world is meaningless? Let's not pretend that art
    can make meaning then, let's just play with
    nonsense.

5
Frederic Jameson
  • modernism and postmodernism are cultural
    formations which accompany particular stages of
    capitalism.
  • Three primary phases of capitalism which dictate
    particular cultural practices (including what
    kind of art and literature is produced).

6
3 primary phases of capitalism
  • 1. market capitalism
  • associated with particular technological
    developments, namely, the steam-driven motor, and
    with a particular kind of aesthetics, namely,
    realism
  • occurred from the eighteenth through the late
    nineteenth centuries in Western Europe, England,
    and the United States (and all their spheres of
    influence)

7
  • 2. monopoly capitalism
  • associated with electric and internal combustion
    motors, and with modernism
  • occurred from the late nineteenth century until
    the mid-twentieth century (about WWII) this
    phase,

8
  • The third, the phase we're in now, is
    multinational or consumer capitalism (with the
    emphasis placed on marketing, selling, and
    consuming commodities, not on producing them),
    associated with nuclear and electronic
    technologies, and correlated with postmodernism.

9
Postmodernity modernity
  • Like Jameson's characterization of postmodernism
    in terms of modes of production and technologies,
    the second facet, or definition, of postmodernism
    comes more from history and sociology than from
    literature or art history. This approach defines
    postmodernism as the name of an entire social
    formation, or set of social/historical attitudes
    more precisely,this approach contrasts
    "postmodernity" with "modernity," rather than
    "postmodernism" with "modernism."

10
The Difference
  • "Modernism" generally refers to the broad
    aesthetic movements of the twentieth century
    "modernity" refers to a set of philosophical,
    political, and ethical ideas which provide the
    basis for the aesthetic aspect of modernism.
  • "Modernity" is older than "modernism" the label
    "modern," first articulated in nineteenth-century
    sociology, was meant to distinguish the present
    era from the previous one, which was labeled
    "antiquity."

11
'Postmodernism' is a broad range of
  1. responses to modernism, especially refusals of
    some of its totalizing premises and effects, and
    of its implicit or explicit distinction between
    'high' culture and commonly lived life,
  2. responses to such things as a world lived under
    nuclear threat and threat to the geosphere, to a
    world of faster communication, mass mediated
    reality, greater diversity of cultures and mores
    and a consequent pluralism,

12
  • 3. acknowledgments of and in some senses
    struggles against a world in which, under a
    spreading technological capitalism, all things
    are commodified and fetishized (made the object
    of desire), and in which genuine experience has
    been replaced by simulation and spectacle,

13
  • 4. resultant senses of fragmentation, of
    discontinuity, of reality as a pastiche rather
    than as a weave,
  • 5. reconceptualizations of society, history and
    the self as cultural constructs, hence as
    rhetorical constructs.

14
  • a reaction to, refusal and diffusion of, the
    elements of modernist thought which are
    totalizing which suggest a master narrative or
    master code, i.e. an explanatory cohesion of
    experience the result may be
  • a sense of discontinuity, of the world as a field
    of contesting explanations none of which can
    claim any authority,
  • parodies of all sorts of meta-narrative and
    master-code elements, including genre and
    literary form,
  • the challenging of borders and limits, including
    those of decency,
  • the exploration of the marginalized aspects of
    life and marginalized elements of society.

15
Breaking down grand narratives
  • The 'problem' with grand narratives is that they
    bring all of experience under one explanatory and
    one implicitly or explicitly regulative order,
    and hence are potentially (some would say,
    inevitably) totalitarian and repressive
  • Is living without grand narratives an act of
    courage and freedom in the face of inevitable
    doubt and instability, or merely an opening of
    oneself to the worst forces of the libido and an
    abandonment of necessary principles?

16
  • the writing of reflexive or meta-fiction fiction
    which is in the first instance aware of itself as
    fiction and which may dramatize the false or
    constructed nature of fiction, on the one hand,
    or the inevitable fictionality of all experience,
    on the other.

17
  • a reaction to, refusal of, the totalizing of
    modernist form -- of the dominance in modernism
    of form and of the idea of the aesthetic, which
    concept created a 'special world' for art, cut
    off from the variety and everydayness of life (a
    negative judgment on this 'refusal' is that
    postmodernism simply aestheticizes everything,
    see the next point)

18
  • an attempt to integrate art and life -- the
    inclusion of popular forms, popular culture,
    everyday reality Bakhtin's notion of
    'carnival', of joyous, anti-authoritarian,
    riotous, carnal and liberatory celebration, makes
    sense in this context and adds a sense of energy
    and freedom to some post modern work

19
  • the notion of carnival is taken to the limit in
    the idea of transgression, the idea that to live
    and think beyond the structures of capitalist
    ideology and of totalizing concepts
  • Violate what appear to be standards of sense and
    decency, the methods of social and imaginative
    control
  • A more benign conception than transgression is
    the concept of the paralogical a revelation of
    the non-rational immediacy of life (considered
    thus to be implicitly revolutionary, liberating)
  • as with ideas such as carnival and transgression,
    the paralogical gives access to the energy of the
    world, and allows us to experience outside of the
    strictures of the grand narratives

20
  • the use of paradox, of undercutting, of radical
    shifts, in order to undercut any legitimization
    of reality, subject, ontological ground
  • a crossing or dissolving of borders -- between
    fiction and non-fiction, between literary genres,
    between high and low culture
  • a sense that the world is a world made up of
    rhetoric -- of language and cultural constructs
    and images and symbols, none of which have any
    necessary validity

21
  • achieved through the notion of carnival, of the
    turning upside-down of everything, and through
    the use of parody, play, black humour and wit
  • this refusal and these methods of undercutting
    seriousness are associated as well with
    fragmentation, as traditional notions of
    narrative coherence are challenged
  • The 'problem' with seriousness is that it has no
    room for the disruptions necessary to expose the
    oppressions and repressions of master narratives,
    in fact seriousness tends almost inevitably to
    reinforce them and hence the ideologies they
    support

22
  • a crossing or dissolving of borders -- between
    fiction and non-fiction, between literary genres,
    between high and low culture
  • a sense that the world is a world made up of
    rhetoric -- of language and cultural constructs
    and images and symbols, none of which have any
    necessary validity

23
  • a move away from perspectivism, from the located,
    unified 'subject' and the associated grounding of
    the authority of experience in the sovereign
    subject and its processes of perception and
    reflection
  • a fragmentation of the self (the unified,
    located subject), or a disappearance or flatness
    -- the self, or subject, is no longer a
    'psychological' reality but henceforth a cultural
    construction, located rhetorically (in terms of
    the kinds of language used, the subject matter,
    the situation), differently configured in
    different situations

24
A greater emphasis on the body, on the human as
incarnate, as physical beings in a physical world.
  • This is tied to postmodernism's distrust of
    rationalism and of the ideology of the
    Enlightenment. This emphasis on the physicality
    of our being leads in several directions,
    including
  • an emphasis on chance and contingency as
    fundamental conditions of our being and
  • a positing of aesthetics rather than rationalism
    as guide to truth, hence ultimately as the ground
    for ethics.

25
a rethinking of modernism's break with history.
There are (at least) two directions in which this
rethinking may go
  • 1. a greater awareness of history as a narrative,
    that is, a human construct history is accessible
    to us, but only as text -- its documents are
    texts, its institutions are social texts. This
    does not mean that history did not happen it
    means that what we know as history is known to us
    only through what is configured for our
    understandings by language, by narratives with
    their own shaping forces, by figures of speech.
  • 2 an insistence of the incarnate and the
    contingent, human life as located, specific,
    grounded in the body and in circumstance.

26
Postmodern literature
  • Postmodernism is a fact of everyday life. We live
    in a world of uncertainty, of lapses in--if not
    absence of--authority, of fragmentation, of
    visual and auditory overload, of the blurring of
    lines between mass culture and elite culture.
    Such features have found their way into
    contemporary literature and particularly into the
    literature labeled "postmodern."

27
  • The postmodern camp is inhabited by such writers
    as William Burroughs, Robert Coover, John Barth,
    Thomas Pynchon, Donald Barthelme, Kurt Vonnegut,
    Jr. and E. L. Doctorow and African American
    writer Ishmael Reed.

28
Features
  • a nonlinear plot, with jumps both in space and in
    time, and confuses the identity of ostensible
    author and the "I". Is the "I" the author?
    Another character? Planting the seeds of
    uncertainty in the reader regarding the identity
    of authors and their relationship to the text is
    one of the hallmarks of postmodernism. By
    extension, it prompts us to ask where "fiction"
    ends and "reality" begins.

29
  • postmodernism makes us question the organization
    of the text itself
  • blurring of the admittedly artificial line
    between historical narrative and fictional
    narrative
  • the problem of "author-ity" characterizes the
    text
  • both fiction and history are reconstructions and
    that historical "objectivity" is impossible

30
  • Postmodern fiction is challenging, pulling the
    rug out from under readers, juggling narrators,
    obscuring authorial voice, fragmenting plot lines
    so that the old plot diagram takes on bizarre
    geometric patterns and calls attention to its own
    fictionality, the result of which is known as
    metafiction.

31
Metafiction http//www.eng.fju.edu.tw/
Literary_Criticism/postmodernism/metafiction.htm
  • Metafiction is a term given to fictional writing
    which self-consciously and systematically draws
    attention to its status as an artifact in order
    to pose questions about the relationship between
    fiction and reality.  In providing a critique of
    their own methods of construction, such writings
    not only examine the fundamental structures of
    narrative fiction, they also explore the possible
    fictionality of the world outside the literary
    fictional text.  (Waugh 2)

32
  • Spectrum  Metafiction is thus an elastic term
    which cover a wide range of fictions.  There are
    those novels at one end of the spectrum which
    take    fictionality as a  theme to be explored .
    .. whose formal self-consciousness is limited. 
    At the center of this spectrum are those texts
    that manifest the symptoms of formal and
    ontological insecurity but allow their
    deconstructions to be finally recontextualized or
    'naturalized' and given a total  interpretation .
    . .Finally, at the furthest extreme that, in
    rejecting realism more thoroughly, posit the
    world as a fabrication of competing semiotic
    systems which never correspond to material
    conditions, ...(Waugh 18-19)

33
Metafictional techniques
  • Metafictional techniques include everything from
    the Dear-Reader convention to authors confessing
    to the reader that they are tired of a particular
    scene/character and want to move on. Ex.
    Virginia Woolf's Orlando
  • the authorial voice interrupts the narrative to
    observe that in situation X, the biographer
    usually does Y.

34
  • John Fowles' The French Lieutenant's Woman
    (1969) can be excerpted to illustrate Fowles'
    using and subverting the conventions of Victorian
    fiction and relying on a favorite postmodern
    strategy the inclusion of alternative endings.
  • Plot becomes fragmentary, characters are
    eccentric, tone inconsistent, and language
    frenetic, spiced with seemingly endless allusions
    to mass culture.

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  • Las Meninas Brown, Jonathan.  Velaquez Painter
    and Coutier.  New Haven Yale UP, 1986.
  • "Recent studies of Las Meninas, inspired by the
    ideas of Michel Foucault, have paid considerable
    attention to the seemingly novel relationship
    between the scene on the canvas and  the
    spectator.  These ideas tacitly assume that the
    picture was meant to be seen by the
    public-at-large., as if it were hanging in an
    important museum, as it is today.  ...However.
    the original placement indicates that this is not
    the case.  In 1666, the year after the death of
    Philip IV, Las Meninas was inventoried in a room
    known as ...the office in the summer quarters,
    ...a room destined for the personal use of the
    king." (Brown 259).
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