POSTMODERNISM
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PROFESSOR MARY KLAGES
129 Denison: 492-0596 e-mail: klages@spot.colorado.edu.
All materials on this website written by
the author remain the property of: Dr. Mary
Klages, Associate Professor of English, University
of Colorado at Boulder. Postmodernism |
Postmodernism is a complicated term, or set
of ideas, one that has only emerged as an
area of academic study since the mid-1980s.
Postmodernism is hard to define, because
it is a concept that appears in a wide variety
of disciplines or areas of study, including
art, architecture, music, film, literature,
sociology, communications, fashion, and technology.
It's hard to locate it temporally or historically,
because it's not clear exactly when postmodernism
begins.
Perhaps the easiest way to start thinking
about postmodernism is by thinking about
modernism, the movement from which postmodernism
seems to grow or emerge. Modernism has two
facets, or two modes of definition, both
of which are relevant to understanding postmodernism.
The first facet or definition of modernism
comes from the aesthetic movement broadly
labeled "modernism." This movement
is roughly coterminous with twentieth century
Western ideas about art (though traces of
it in emergent forms can be found in the
nineteenth century as well). Modernism, as
you probably know, is the movement in visual
arts, music, literature, and drama which
rejected the old Victorian standards of how
art should be made, consumed, and what it
should mean. In the period of "high
modernism," from around 1910 to 1930,
the major figures of modernism literature
helped radically to redefine what poetry
and fiction could be and do: figures like
Woolf, Joyce, Eliot, Pound, Stevens, Proust,
Mallarme, Kafka, and Rilke are considered
the founders of twentieth-century modernism.
From a literary perspective, the main characteristics
of modernism include:
1. an emphasis on impressionism and subjectivity
in writing (and in visual arts as well);
an emphasis on HOW seeing (or reading or
perception itself) takes place, rather than
on WHAT is perceived. An example of this
would be stream-of-consciousness writing.
2. a movement away from the apparent objectivity
provided by omniscient third-person narrators,
fixed narrative points of view, and clear-cut
moral positions. Faulkner's multiply-narrated
stories are an example of this aspect of
modernism.
3. a blurring of distinctions between genres,
so that poetry seems more documentary (as
in T. S. Eliot or ee cummings) and prose
seems more poetic (as in Woolf or Joyce).
4. an emphasis on fragmented forms, discontinuous
narratives, and random-seeming collages of
different materials.
5. a tendency toward reflexivity, or self-consciousness,
about the production of the work of art,
so that each piece calls attention to its
own status as a production, as something
constructed and consumed in particular ways.
6. a rejection of elaborate formal aesthetics
in favor of minimalist designs (as in the
poetry of William Carlos Williams) and a
rejection, in large part, of formal aesthetic
theories, in favor of spontaneity and discovery
in creation.
7. A rejection of the distinction between
"high" and "low" or popular
culture, both in choice of materials used
to produce art and in methods of displaying,
distributing, and consuming art.
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.
But--while postmodernism seems very much
like modernism in these ways, it differs
from modernism in its attitude toward a lot
of these trends. 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. 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.
Another way of looking at the relation between
modernism and postmodernism helps to clarify
some of these distinctions. According to
Frederic Jameson, modernism and postmodernism
are cultural formations which accompany particular
stages of capitalism. Jameson outlines three
primary phases of capitalism which dictate
particular cultural practices (including
what kind of art and literature is produced).
The first is market capitalism, which occurred
in the eighteenth through the late nineteenth
centuries in Western Europe, England, and
the United States (and all their spheres
of influence). This first phase is associated
with particular technological developments,
namely, the steam-driven motor, and with
a particular kind of aesthetics, namely,
realism. The second phase occurred from the
late nineteenth century until the mid-twentieth
century
(about WWII); this phase, monopoly capitalism,
is associated with electric and internal
combustion motors, and with modernism. 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.
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."
What's 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."
Scholars are always debating when exactly
the "modern" period began, and
how to distinguish between what is modern
and what is not modern; it seems like the
modern period starts earlier and earlier
every time historians look at it. But generally,
the "modern" era is associated
with the European Enlightenment, which begins
roughly in the middle of the eighteenth century.
(Other historians trace elements of enlightenment
thought back to the Renaissance or earlier,
and one could argue that Enlightenment thinking
begins with the eighteenth century. I usually
date "modern" from
1750, if only because I got my Ph. D. from
a program at Stanford called "Modern
Thought and Literature," and that program
focused on works written after 1750).
The basic ideas of the Enlightenment are
roughly the same as the basic ideas of humanism.
Jane Flax's article gives a good summary
of these ideas or premises (on p.
41). I'll add a few things to her list.
1. There is a stable, coherent, knowable
self. This self is conscious, rational, autonomous,
and universal--no physical conditions or
differences substantially affect how this
self operates.
2. This self knows itself and the world through
reason, or rationality, posited as the highest
form of mental functioning, and the only
objective form.
3. The mode of knowing produced by the objective
rational self is "science," which
can provide universal truths about the world,
regardless of the individual status of the
knower.
4. The knowledge produced by science is "truth,"
and is eternal.
5. The knowledge/truth produced by science
(by the rational objective knowing self)
will always lead toward progress and perfection.
All human institutions and practices can
be analyzed by science
(reason/objectivity) and improved.
6. Reason is the ultimate judge of what is
true, and therefore of what is right, and
what is good (what is legal and what is ethical).
Freedom consists of obedience to the laws
that conform to the knowledge discovered
by reason.
7. In a world governed by reason, the true
will always be the same as the good and the
right (and the beautiful); there can be no
conflict between what is true and what is
right (etc.).
8. Science thus stands as the paradigm for
any and all socially useful forms of knowledge.
Science is neutral and objective; scientists,
those who produce scientific knowledge through
their unbiased rational capacities, must
be free to follow the laws of reason, and
not be motivated by other concerns (such
as money or power).
9. Language, or the mode of expression used
in producing and disseminating knowledge,
must be rational also. To be rational, language
must be transparent; it must function only
to represent the real/perceivable world which
the rational mind observes. There must be
a firm and objective connection between the
objects of perception and the words used
to name them (between signifier and signified).
These are some of the fundamental premises
of humanism, or of modernism. They serve--as
you can probably tell--to justify and explain
virtually all of our social structures and
institutions, including democracy, law, science,
ethics, and aesthetics.
Modernity is fundamentally about order: about
rationality and rationalization, creating
order out of chaos. The assumption is that
creating more rationality is conducive to
creating more order, and that the more ordered
a society is, the better it will function
(the more rationally it will function). Because
modernity is about the pursuit of ever-increasing
levels of order, modern societies constantly
are on guard against anything and everything
labeled as "disorder," which might
disrupt order. Thus modern societies rely
on continually establishing a binary opposition
between "order" and "disorder,"
so that they can assert the superiority of
"order." But to do this, they have
to have things that represent "disorder"--modern
societies thus continually have to create/construct
"disorder." In western culture,
this disorder becomes "the other"--defined
in relation to other binary oppositions.
Thus anything non-white, non-male, non-heterosexual,
non-hygienic, non-rational, (etc.) becomes
part of "disorder," and has to
be eliminated from the ordered, rational
modern society.
The ways that modern societies go about creating
categories labeled as "order" or
"disorder" have to do with the
effort to achieve stability. Francois Lyotard
(the theorist whose works Sarup describes
in his article on postmodernism) equates
that stability with the idea of "totality,"
or a totalized system (think here of Derrida's
idea of "totality" as the wholeness
or completeness of a system). Totality, and
stability, and order, Lyotard argues, are
maintained in modern societies through the
means of "grand narratives" or
"master narratives," which are
stories a culture tells itself about its
practices and beliefs. A "grand narrative"
in American culture might be the story that
democracy is the most enlightened (rational)
form of government, and that democracy can
and will lead to universal human happiness.
Every belief system or ideology has its grand
narratives, according to Lyotard; for Marxism,
for instance, the "grand narrative"
is the idea that capitalism will collapse
in on itself and a utopian socialist world
will evolve. You might think of grand narratives
as a kind of meta-theory, or meta-ideology,
that is, an ideology that explains an ideology
(as with Marxism); a story that is told to
explain the belief systems that exist.
Lyotard argues that all aspects of modern
societies, including science as the primary
form of knowledge, depend on these grand
narratives. Postmodernism then is the critique
of grand narratives, the awareness that such
narratives serve to mask the contradictions
and instabilities that are inherent in any
social organization or practice. In other
words, every attempt to create "order"
always demands the creation of an equal amount
of "disorder," but a "grand
narrative" masks the constructedness
of these categories by explaining that "disorder"
REALLY IS chaotic and bad, and that "order"
REALLY IS rational and good. Postmodernism,
in rejecting grand narratives, favors "mini-narratives,"
stories that explain small practices, local
events, rather than large-scale universal
or global concepts. Postmodern "mini-
narratives" are always situational,
provisional, contingent, and temporary, making
no claim to universality, truth, reason,
or stability.
Another aspect of Enlightenment thought--the
final of my 9 points--is the idea that language
is transparent, that words serve only as
representations of thoughts or things, and
don't have any function beyond that. Modern
societies depend on the idea that signifiers
always point to signifieds, and that reality
resides in signifieds. In postmodernism,
however, there are only signifiers. The idea
of any stable or permanent reality disappears,
and with it the idea of signifieds that signifiers
point to. Rather, for postmodern societies,
there are only surfaces, without depth; only
signifiers, with no signifieds.
Another way of saying this, according to
Jean Baudrillard, is that in postmodern society
there are no originals, only copies--or what
he calls "simulacra." You might
think, for example, about painting or sculpture,
where there is an original work (by Van Gogh,
for instance), and there might also be thousands
of copies, but the original is the one with
the highest value (particularly monetary
value). Contrast that with cds or music recordings,
where there is no "original," as
in painting--no recording that is hung on
a wall, or kept in a vault; rather, there
are only copies, by the millions, that are
all the same, and all sold for (approximately)
the same amount of money. Another version
of Baudrillard's "simulacrum" would
be the concept of virtual reality, a reality
created by simulation, for which there is
no original. This is particularly evident
in computer games/simulations--think of Sim
City, Sim Ant, etc.
Finally, postmodernism is concerned with
questions of the organization of knowledge.
In modern societies, knowledge was equated
with science, and was contrasted to narrative;
science was good knowledge, and narrative
was bad, primitive, irrational (and thus
associated with women, children, primitives,
and insane people). Knowledge, however, was
good for its own sake; one gained knowledge,
via education, in order to be knowledgeable
in general, to become an educated person.
This is the ideal of the liberal arts education.
In a postmodern society, however, knowledge
becomes functional--you learn things, not
to know them, but to use that knowledge.
As Sarup points out (p. 138), educational
policy today puts emphasis on skills and
training, rather than on a vague humanist
ideal of education in general. This is particularly
acute for English majors. "What will
you DO with your degree?"
Not only is knowledge in postmodern societies
characterized by its utility, but knowledge
is also distributed, stored, and arranged
differently in postmodern societies than
in modern ones. Specifically, the advent
of electronic computer technologies has revolutionized
the modes of knowledge production, distribution,
and consumption in our society (indeed, some
might argue that postmodernism is best described
by, and correlated with, the emergence of
computer technology, starting in the 1960s,
as the dominant force in all aspects of social
life). In postmodern societies, anything
which is not able to be translated into a
form recognizable and storable by a computer--i.
e. anything that's not digitizable--will
cease to be knowledge. In this paradigm,
the opposite of "knowledge" is
not "ignorance," as it is the modern/humanist
paradigm, but rather "noise." Anything
that doesn't qualify as a kind of knowledge
is "noise," is something that is
not recognizable as anything within this
system.
Lyotard says (and this is what Sarup spends
a lot of time explaining) that the important
question for postmodern societies is who
decides what knowledge is (and what "noise"
is), and who knows what needs to be decided.
Such decisions about knowledge don't involve
the old modern/humanist qualifications: for
example, to assess knowledge as truth (its
technical quality), or as goodness or justice
(its ethical quality) or as beauty (its aesthetic
quality). Rather, Lyotard argues, knowledge
follows the paradigm of a language game,
as laid out by Wittgenstein. I won't go into
the details of Wittgenstein's ideas of language
games; Sarup gives a pretty good explanation
of this concept in his article, for those
who are interested.
There are lots of questions to be asked about
postmodernism, and one of the most important
is about the politics involved--or, more
simply, is this movement toward fragmentation,
provisionality, performance, and instability
something good or something bad? There are
various answers to that; in our contemporary
society, however, the desire to return to
the pre-postmodern era (modern/humanist/Enlightenment
thinking) tends to get associated with conservative
political, religious, and philosophical groups.
In fact, one of the consequences of postmodernism
seems to be the rise of religious fundamentalism,
as a form of resistance to the questioning
of the "grand narratives" of religious
truth. This is perhaps most obvious (to us
in the US, anyway) in muslim fundamentalism
in the Middle East, which ban postmodern
books--like Salman Rushdie's The Satanic
Verses --because they deconstruct such grand
narratives.
This association between the rejection of
postmodernism and conservatism or fundamentalism
may explain in part why the postmodern avowal
of fragmentation and multiplicity tends to
attract liberals and radicals. This is why,
in part, feminist theorists have found postmodernism
so attractive, as Sarup, Flax, and Butler
all point out.
On another level, however, postmodernism
seems to offer some alternatives to joining
the global culture of consumption, where
commodities and forms of knowledge are offered
by forces far beyond any individual's control.
These alternatives focus on thinking of any
and all action (or social struggle) as necessarily
local, limited, and partial--but nonetheless
effective. By discarding "grand narratives"
(like the liberation of the entire working
class) and focusing on specific local goals
(such as improved day care centers for working
mothers in your own community), postmodernist
politics offers a way to theorize local situations
as fluid and unpredictable, though influenced
by global trends. Hence the motto for postmodern
politics might well be "think globally,
act locally"--and don't worry about
any grand scheme or master plan.
All materials on this site are written by,
and remain the propery of, Dr. Mary Klages,
Associate Professor, English Department,
University of Colorado, Boulder. You are
welcome to quote from this essay, or to link
this page to your own site, with proper attribution.
For more information, see Citing Electronic
Sources.
The Flax article referred to is Jane Flax,
"Postmodernism and Gender Relations
in Feminist Theory," in Linda J. Nicholson,
ed., Feminism/Postmodernism, Routledge,
1990.
The Sarup article referred to is Chapter
6, "Lyotard and Postmodernism,"
in Madan Sarup's An Introductory Guide to Post-Structuralism
and Postmodernism, University of Georgia Press, 1993.
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