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Postmodernism

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Title: Postmodernism


1
Postmodernism Postmodernist Literature
  • English 11

2
What is Postmodernism?
3
Postmodernism Definition
  • Coined in 1949
  • To describe a dissatisfaction with modern
    architecture, founding the postmodern
    architecture
  • Any of several movements (as in art,
    architecture, or literature) reacting against the
    philosophy and practices of modern movements

4
Postmodernist Literature Overview
  • After World War II
  • A series of reactions against the perceived
    failure
  • Reaction against modernism

5
Postmodernist Literature Overview
  • Important Works
  • Catch-22 by Joseph Heller (1961)
  • Lost in the Funhouse by John Barth (1968)
  • Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut (1969)
  • Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon (1973)
  • Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger

6
First, what is modern? Depends on Discipline.
  • The break away from 19th-century values is often
    classified as modernism, and carries the
    connotations of transgression and rebellion.
    However, the last twenty years has seen a change
    in this attitude towards focusing upon a series
    of unresolvable philosophical and social debates,
    such as race, gender and class.
  • Rather than challenging and destroying cultural
    definitions, as does modernism, post-modernism
    resists the very idea of boundaries. It regards
    distinctions as undesirable and even impossible,
    so that an almost Utopian world, free from all
    constraints, becomes possible.

7
Modernism Vs Postmodernism
  • A break from 19th century realism
  • A story was told from an objective or omniscient
    point of view
  • Character development
  • Both literature explore subjectivism
  • Turning from external reality to examine inner
    states of consciousness
  • Drawing on modernist examples in the stream of
    consciousness styles of Virginia Woolf and James
    Joyce

8
Modernism Vs Postmodernism Poems (Not limited
to poems)
  • The Waste Land by T S Eliot
  • Fragmentary
  • Employing pastiche like much postmodern
    literature
  • Speaker in The Waste Land "these fragments I
    have shored against my ruins"
  • Modernist literature fragmentation and extreme
    subjectivity as an existential crisis, or
    Freudian internal conflict

9
Modernism Vs Postmodernism
  • A problem that must be solved, and the artist
    often cited as the one to solve it
  • Postmodernists this chaos is insurmountable the
    artist is impotent, and the only recourse against
    "ruin" is to play within the chaos.
  • Playfulness becomes central and the actual
    achievement of order and meaning becomes unlikely

10
Modernism Vs Postmodernism
  • Explore fragmentariness in narrative- and
    character-construction
  • Characterized by allusive difficulty, paradox,
    and indifference or outright hostility to the
    democratic ethos
  • More and more in jeopardy since the rise of
    fascism and dictatorial communism.

11
  • Modern
  • Linear progress in history
  • Boundaries, social class, race and gender
  • Formality, emphasis on authoritarian perspectives
  • Scientific rationality, unified theory of
    progress
  • Essentialism, seeking real essences
  • Prescription
  • Normative
  • Postmodern
  • Historicity, historicization, socio-cultural
    locatedness of moments in history
  • Critical study of class, race, and gender uses
    other perspectives
  • Intertextuality, self-reflexivity, montage,
    pastiche
  • Signs, image, reproductive social order
  • Local accounts
  • Description

12
  • Post-modernism has many interpretations and no
    single definition is adequate. Different
    disciplines have participated in the
    post-modernist movement in varying ways in
    architecture, traditional limits have become
    indistinguishable, so that what is commonly on
    the outside of a building is placed within, and
    vice versa.
  • In literature, writers adopt a self-conscious
    intertextuality sometimes verging on pastiche,
    which denies the formal propriety of authorship
    and genre. In commercial terms post-modernism
    may be seen as part of the growth of consumer
    capitalism into multinational and technological
    identity.

13
  • postmodernity (involves) the end of an
    overarching belief in scientific rationality and
    a unitary theory of progress, the replacement of
    empiricist theories of representation and truth,
    and increased emphasis on the importance of the
    unconscious, on free-floating signs and images,
    and a plurality of viewpoints a shift from a
    productive' to a reproductive social order, in
    which simulations and models -- and more
    generally, signs -- increasingly constitute the
    world, so that any distinction between the
    appearance and the real is lost.

14
  • Another feature of postmodernism seen by some
    theorists is that the boundaries between high'
    and low' culture tend to be broken down.
    According to many theorists, postmodernist
    cultural movements, which often overlap with new
    political tendencies and social movements in
    contemporary society, are particularly associated
    with the increasing importance of new class
    fractions.

15
Common Themes Techniques
  • Irony, playfulness, black humor, hyperreality,
    temporal distortion, metacognition/metafiction,
    paranoia
  • Postmodern fiction characterized by the ironic
    quote marks,
  • Postmodern novelists labeled black humorists
    John Barth, Joseph Heller, William Gaddis, Kurt
    Vonnegut, Bruce Jay Friedman
  • Common to treat serious subjects in a playful and
    humorous way

16
Common Themes Techniques
  • Pastiche
  • To combine, or "paste" together, multiple
    elements.
  • An homage to or a parody of past styles
  • A representation of the chaotic, pluralistic, or
    information-drenched aspects of postmodern
    society
  • A combination of multiple genres to create a
    unique narrative or to comment on situations in
    postmodernity
  • William S. Burroughs science fiction, detective
    fiction, westerns
  • Margaret Atwood science fiction and fairy tales

17
Common Themes Techniques
  • Metafiction (metacognition)
  • Writing about writing or "foregrounding the
    apparatus"
  • Making the artificiality of art or the
    fictionality of fiction apparent to the reader
  • Generally disregards the necessity for willful
    suspension of disbelief
  • To undermine the authority of the author, for
    unexpected narrative shifts
  • To advance a story in a unique way, for emotional
    distance
  • To comment on the act of storytelling

18
Common Themes Techniques
  • Historiographic metafiction
  • Fictionalize actual historical events or figures
  • The General in His Labyrinth by Gabriel Garcia
    Marquez (about Simón Bolívar)
  • Ragtime by E. L. Doctorow (featuring such
    historical figures as Archduke Franz Ferdinand of
    Austria and Sigmund Freud)

19
Common Themes Techniques
  • Temporal distortion
  • Central features Fragmentation and non-linear
    narratives
  • Temporal distortion for the sake of irony
  • Example Historiographic metafiction
  • Distortions in time in Kurt Vonnegut's non-linear
    novels Billy Pilgrim in Slaughterhouse Five
    coming "unstuck in time

20
Common Themes Techniques
  • Anachronisms Abraham Lincoln using a telephone
    In his flight to Canada (Ishmael Reed)
  • Time may also overlap, repeat, or bifurcate into
    multiple possibilities.
  • "The Babysitter" from Pricksongs Descants by
    Robert Coover multiple possible events occurring
    simultaneously -- in one section the babysitter
    is murdered while in another section nothing
    happens and so on

21
Common Themes Techniques
  • Technoculture and hyperreality
  • Fredric Jameson society has moved past the
    industrial age and into the information age.
  • Jean Baudrillard postmodernity was defined by a
    shift into hyperreality in which simulations have
    replaced the real.
  • People are inundated with information
  • Technology as a central focus in many lives

22
Common Themes Techniques
  • Paranoia
  • The belief that there is an ordering system
    behind the chaos of the world
  • Postmodernist no ordering system exists, so a
    search for order is fruitless and absurd.
  • Often coincides with the theme of technoculture
    and hyperreality.
  • Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnegut the
    character Dwayne Hoover becomes violent when he
    is convinced that everyone else in the world is a
    robot and he is the only human

23
Time to go
  • Thank you!
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