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- From: vpiercy@indiana.edu (Van Piercy)
- Newsgroups: news.answers,alt.postmodern,alt.answers
- Subject: Alt.Postmodern FAQ
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 22 Oct 1996 17:23:57 GMT
- Organization: Indiana University, Bloomington
- Lines: 1598
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Message-ID: <54ivvd$drq@dismay.ucs.indiana.edu>
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- Summary: FAQ for alt.postmodern
- Keywords: postmodern, pomo, modernism, postmodernity, culture
- Archive-name: postmodern-faq
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
- Last-modified: 1996/6/28
- Version: 1.05
- Originator: vpiercy@ezinfo.ucs.indiana.edu
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu news.answers:85035 alt.postmodern:47222 alt.answers:21365
-
- {1.0}
- Permission to copy and share this file without monetary profit is
- granted provided this statement and the author's name appear in the
- file. NONE OF THE PUBLISHED SOURCES QUOTED HERE UNDER FAIR USE HAVE
- GIVEN THEIR WRITTEN PERMISSION TO BE QUOTED IN A FAQ FILE APPEARING ON
- THE NET. Please distribute this file with due recognition
- of copyright laws and original authors' and publishers' rights and
- credits. The purpose of this file is purely educational.
-
- Van Piercy
- English Dept., Indiana University
- Copyr. 1996. An alt.postmodern FAQ file, Version 1.05
-
-
- Other places to find this file:
- Anonymous ftp and web sites:
- ftp.seas.gwu.edu/pub/rtfm/alt/postmodern/An_Alt.Postmodern_FAQ
- http://helios.augustana-edu/%7Egmb/postmodern/faq1.html
-
- {1.01}
- LATEST VERSION CHANGES
-
- In versions 1.01 through 1.05 most of the changes are cosmetic. Typos
- have been corrected, elements of format have been made more consistent,
- the digest streamlined and supplemented, and a few additions made to the
- bibliography sections. Any corrections, errors, bad links, etc., should
- be made known to VPIERCY@INDIANA.EDU.
-
- {1.02}
- FUTURE INTENDED CHANGES
-
- Some suggestions for changes to this FAQ include: expanding the digest
- section to include different threads and voices on the group; a resource
- guide for items on the internet that discuss the postmodern; and more
- bibliographic sections and short introductory essays on topics closely
- associated with ideas about the postmodern, e.g., semiotics,
- architecture, fiction, fine arts, etc.
-
- My gratitude to everyone who has been in e-mail contact with me
- discussing this FAQ, its plusses and minuses. If you'd like to author a
- section in this FAQ or have ideas about it contact VPIERCY@INDIANA.EDU.
-
-
- WHAT THIS FILE CONTAINS:
- *****
- 1.0 Statement of limited copyright and notice of fair use.
- 1.01 Latest version changes.
- 1.02 Future intended changes to this FAQ.
- 1.1 A discussion of what this FAQ is trying to do and its philosophy for
- doing it.
- 2.0 How to find out more about what "postmodern" means.
- 2.1 Two basic issues central to many discussions of the postmodern.
- 2.2 A very short bibliographic essay on Nietzsche, Foucault, Derrida and
- Deleuze.
- 3.0 Three reference work definitions of the postmodern.
- 4.0 Twenty statements about postmodernism by published authors.
- 5.0 A short bibliography and note on other bibliographies.
- 5.1 Some principal or primary sources.
- 5.2 General works, anthologies, and secondary sources.
- 5.3 A list of works on modernity, modernism and the avant-garde.
- 5.4 A minimal list of writings on postmodernism and its relation to
- religion, Japan and cyberpunk.
- 6.0 A digest of an alt.postmodern newsgroup thread on aestheticism,
- fascism, futurism, Benjamin, and landscape design.
- 6.1 Final word.
-
- *****
-
- {1.1}
- This is a "FAQ" (Frequently Asked Questions) file that has few of
- the questions in it but tries to enlist many of the various answers.
- It is not exhaustive.
-
- A number of users cruising this newsgroup before have asked for a
- FAQ file, and while this particular FAQ file cannot hope to be
- definitive, it does try to meet that basic, initial need for information
- to the most common questions, "What is postmodernism?" "How do I find
- out more about it?"
-
- This FAQ should be of use for research into the question of the
- postmodern, and I hope that even experienced students of postmodernism
- will find it a serviceable source of reference. I have tried to include
- detailed and accurate information on the bibliographic entries.
-
- This file is not meant to be monolithically definitive or singularly
- authoritative, nor is it meant to supplant the knowledge or opinions
- of others on this group, many of whom might have serious questions or
- reservations about elements or assumptions of this file. This FAQ is
- only one person's take on a very broad and evolving field of cultural
- dispute, and is offered in a spirit of collegiality and general
- education.
-
- This FAQ can be read at least on three distinct levels each
- corresponding to one of its major sections: 1) as a relatively quick
- overview of the term "postmodern" as it is found in some standard
- reference works; 2) as a bibliography and research aid for the student
- of postmodernism, and 3) as an examination of what published and
- varyingly "recognized" authorities have to say about the subject in
- their own words. Reading these crystallized statements of what
- postmodernism is taken to be by accomplished writers in the field should
- introduce a sense of the thematics and semantics, the "language games"
- and politics, at play in even attempting to define what the postmodern
- is. For my part, in organizing and selecting the quotations I have
- tried to present conservative positions, traditionalist, humanist and
- reactionary positions, as well as Nietzschean, progressive, socialist,
- feminist and Marxian and neo-Marxian positions on the postmodern. To my
- mind, it is easier for a document of this type to err on the side of
- exclusivity and ideological purity than it is to err on the side of
- pluralism and report of the variety of serious opinion on the topic.
-
- Ideally, there will be future additions to this file, and perhaps
- even other FAQ files will be made that compete with this file and
- construct the field in different ways. Imagine a newsgroup with four or
- five different, partly overlapping, lengthy FAQ files all ostensibly
- covering the same topic (and not just well established or recognized
- sub-topics or specialist fields)! I submit that that is a reasonable
- possibility in an alt.postmodern newsgroup.
-
- {2.0}
- HOW DO I FIND OUT MORE ABOUT POSTMODERNISM?
- (Or, "What should I know about this stuff?")
-
-
- Either of these is a daunting question. My answer would
- be for you to read this FAQ file, read some of the books listed in this
- FAQ file, follow the exchanges on this newsgroup, put questions to the
- newsgroup's posters, and, as a productive exercise, find out what
- modernism is or is supposed to have been, and what values and
- assumptions it championed. To that end, I've included a bibliographic
- section on modernity and the avant-garde to offer some assistance. Some
- especially serious critics of postmodern thought can be found there
- (Habermas, Giddens, Taylor, Williams). These writers in particular
- insist on the complex and on-going nature of the modernist enterprise
- and reject the notion that postmodernism represents any sustained and
- substantial break from it. Readers can further enact for themselves a
- similar political and ideological confrontation that can be said to have
- occurred in the American context between modernist and postmodernist in
- the conjuncture between Lionel Trilling's _The Liberal Imagination_
- (Viking 1950) and Susan Sontag's _Against Interpretation_ (Laurel 1969).
-
- {2.1}
- The opportunity to generate polemic in any discussion of the
- postmodern is prodigious. Keeping an eye on the two following basic
- issues can often help orient one to the various politics and agendas
- that tend to cloud or obscure different discussions of the postmodern.
- One is the problem of critical distance and the other is a problem of
- nomenclature.
-
- 1) What is the author's take on the idea that critical distance and
- the potential for real objectivity are unattainable? This question can
- be seen at work in both Haraway's comments (see below) about what she
- sees as Jameson's main thesis on postmodernism, and in Laclau's mapping
- of an "analytic terrain" where the "given" is no longer a viable myth.
- Pejoratively put, this collapse of critical distance is decried as
- "aestheticist" or as aestheticizing ideology in many discussions
- (Norris). The usual implication is that the culprits are decadent,
- apolitical and dangerously irrational. The historical antecedents
- referred to are often Walter Pater and Oscar Wilde's "dandyism" and the
- "Art for Art's sake" movement. Whereas for many differently oriented
- commentators those same decriers of aestheticism are often themselves
- denounced as totalitarian rationalists, modernists, "mere" moralizers,
- reactionaries and unsophisticated know-nothings (Haraway; Giroux).
-
- 2) The terms postmodern, postmodernity and postmodernism can be seen
- to associate or conjure different meanings: the term postmodern is
- inclusively ambiguous of what people mean when they talk about issues
- that come up in discussions of postmodernity and postmodernism.
- Postmodernity is a sign for contemporary society, for the stage of
- technological and economic organization which our society has reached.
- Postmodernism then can be, as Eco says, a "spiritual" category rather
- than a discrete period in history; a "style" in the arts and in culture
- indebted to ironic and parodic pastiche as well as to a sense of history
- now seen less as a story of lineal progression and triumph than as a
- story of recurring cycles.
-
- Analogously, and only for purposes of illustration, the condition
- of modernity is often spoken of as the rapid pace and texture of life
- in a society experienced as the result of the industrial revolution
- (Berman). However, modern_ism_ is a movement in culture and the arts
- usually identified as a period and style beginning with impressionism as
- a break with Realism in the fine arts and in literature. Prior to
- modernism one finds periods and styles associated with other distinct
- aesthetic movements, e.g., Romanticism and Realism. For instance, both
- Blake and Balzac, Romantic and Realist representatives respectively,
- could be said to have had some experience of modernity, to have lived
- during the early stages of the expansion of bourgeois or industrial
- capitalism and technology and science, whereas no one thinks of their
- respective arts or modes of expression as obviously "modernist."
-
- {2.2}
- Finally, I must emphasize that certain influential figures who
- converge in discussions of the postmodern, themselves rarely use the word
- "postmodern" and do not describe their theories or discourses in that way.
- Their theories can't be simply reduced to "postmodernism" without
- controversy, and yet their arguments are drawn on and criticized very
- often in the name of what goes by the "postmodern." The works of Friedrich
- Nietzsche, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze are
- prevalent in discussions on the postmodern (and this insistent close
- association probably explains the oft-remarked failure to distinguish
- between post-structuralism and post- modernism).
-
- I'd suggest that it is important for following discussions of
- postmodern theory to study and know Nietzsche's philosophy and espe-
- cially his short essay on history, _On the Advantage and Disadvantage
- of History for Life_ (transl. Peter Preuss. Indianapolis: Hackett,
- 1980). An acquaintance with the writings of Foucault, Derrida and
- Deleuze can be useful. They have all been profound students or readers
- of Nietzsche, part of a "return to Nietzsche" or the "New Nietzsche"
- movement in France in the 1960s. There's a nice collection of
- Foucault's writings edited by Paul Rabinow titled _The Foucault Reader_
- published by Pantheon Books, 1984. For Derrida, to pick a citation for
- him almost at random, see the essay "Differance" in _Margins of
- Philosophy_ (transl. Alan Bass. Chicago UP, 1982). On Deleuze, the best
- way into his ideas is to dive into one of his texts and keep going. The
- most rewarding introduction to his work that I've seen is by Brian
- Massumi, who translated _Milles Plateaux_, titled _A User's Guide to
- Capitalism and Schizophrenia: Deviations from Deleuze and Guattari_
- (MIT Press, 1992). By no means is this group of suggested readings
- intended to be limiting or exhaustive. I am only pointing out what seem
- particularly plausible or telling routes of entry into these writers'
- ideas.
-
- {3.0}
- WHAT IS POSTMODERNISM?
-
- Here are three published definitions from "standard" reference
- works (cross-references are cited below in the FAQ bibliography section):
-
- (A) "Post-modernism[:] 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 focussing 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.
- "It must be realized though, that post-modernism has many
- interpretations and that no single definition is adequate. Different
- disciplines have participated in the post-modernist movement in
- varying ways, for example, 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.
- "Its all-embracing nature thus makes post-modernism as relevant to
- street events as to the *avant garde*, and as such is one of the major
- focal points in the emergence of interdisciplinary and cultural
- studies." (THE PRENTICE HALL GUIDE TO ENGLISH LITERATURE, Ed.
- Marion Wynne-Davies. First Prentice Hall edition, copyright 1990 by
- Bloomsbury Publishing Ltd. 812-13)
-
-
- (B) "Postmodernism and postmodernity[,] a cultural and ideological
- configuration variously defined, with different aspects of the general
- phenomenon emphasized by different theorists, postmodernity is seen as
- involving an end of the dominance 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. Associated also with the
- idea of a postindustrial age (compare POSTINDUSTRIAL SOCIETY [Daniel
- Bell]), theorists such as BAUDRILLARD (1983) and Lyotard (1984) make
- central to postmodernity 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. Lyotard, for example,
- speaks especially of the replacement of any *grand narrative* [les
- grands recits] by more local `accounts' of reality as distinctive of
- postmodernism and postmodernity. Baudrillard talks of the `triumph of
- signifying culture.' Capturing the new orientation characteristic of
- postmodernism, compared with portrayals of modernity as an era or a
- definite period, the advent of postmodernity is often presented as a
- `mood' or `state of mind' (see Featherstone, 1988). If modernism as a
- movement in literature and the arts is also distinguished by its
- rejection of an emphasis on representation, postmodernism carries this
- movement a stage further. Another feature of postmodernism seen by
- some theorists is that the boundaries between `high' and `low' culture
- tend to be broken down, for example, motion pictures, jazz, and rock
- music (see Lash, 1990). 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, for
- example, `expressive professions' within the service class (see Lash and
- Urry, 1987)." (David Jary and Julia Jary. eds. THE HARPER COLLINS
- DICTIONARY OF SOCIOLOGY. New York: HarperCollins, 1991. 375-6)
-
-
- (C) "Postmodernism[:] A portmanteau term encompassing a variety of
- developments in intellectual culture, the arts and the fashion industry
- in the 1970s and 1980s. Among the characteristic gestures of
- postmodernist thinking is a refusal of the `totalizing' or
- `essentialist' tendencies of earlier theoretical systems, especially
- classic Marxism, with their claims to referential truth, scientificity,
- and belief in progress. Postmodernism, on the contrary, is committed to
- modes of thinking and representation which emphasize fragmentations,
- discontinuities and incommensurable aspects of a given object, from
- intellectual systems to architecture.
- "Postmodernist analysis is often marked by forms of writing that are
- more literary, certainly more self-reflexive, than is common in critical
- writing - the critic as self-conscious creator of new meanings upon the
- ground of the object of study, showing that object no special respect.
- It prefers montage to perspective, intertextuality to referentiality,
- `bits-as-bits' to unified totalities. It delights in excess, play,
- carnival, asymmetry, even mess, and in the emancipation of meanings
- >from their bondage to mere lumpenreality.
- Theorists of postmodernism include Jean Baudrillard, Gilles Deleuze
- and Felix Guattari, Fredric Jameson, Paul Virilio, Dick Hebdige,
- Jean-Francois Lyotard, among others; a list whose maleness has not
- gone unnoticed (see Propyn 1987), but which may immediately be countered
- by reading the exemplary essay by Meaghan Morris (1988) which moves
- easily among postmodernism's sense of multiple mobilities, bodily,
- temporal and textual, without ever claiming postmodernist status for
- itself." (Tim O'Sullivan, John Hartley, Danny Saunders, Martin
- Montgomery and John Fisk. eds. KEY CONCEPTS IN COMMUNICATION AND
- CULTURAL STUDIES. 2nd ed. New York: Routledge, 1994. 234-4)
-
-
- {4.0} PASSAGES FROM FREQUENTLY (and not so frequently) CITED COM-
- MENTATORS AND POSTMODERNIST THEORY THEORISTS (Or, a slide-show of twenty
- statements on the postmodern)
-
- **
-
- (1) "The case for its [postmodernism's] existence depends on the
- hypothesis of some radical break or *coupure*, generally traced
- back to the end of the 1950s or the early 1960s.
- "As the word itself suggests, this break is most often related
- to notions of the waning or extinction of the hundred-year-old
- modern movement (or to its ideological or aesthetic repudiation).
- Thus abstract expressionism in painting, existentialism in
- philosophy, the final forms of representation in the novel, the
- films of the great *auteurs*, or the modernist school of poetry
- (as institutionalized and canonized in the works of Wallace
- Stevens) all are now seen as the final, extraordinary flowering
- of a high-modernist impulse which is spent and exhausted with
- them. The enumeration of what follows, then, at once becomes
- empirical, chaotic, and heterogeneous: Andy Warhol and pop art,
- but also photorealism, and beyond it, the `new expressionism'; the
- moment, in music, of John Cage, but also the synthesis of classi-
- cal and `popular' styles found in composers like Phil Glass and
- Terry Riley, and also punk and new wave rock (the Beatles and the
- Stones now standing as the high-modernist moment of that more
- recent and rapidly evolving tradition); in film, Godard, post-
- Godard, and experimental cinema and video, but also a whole new
- type of commercial film...; Burroughs, Pynchon, or Ishmael Reed,
- on the one hand, and the French *nouveau roman* and its succes-
- sion, on the other, along with alarming new kinds of literary
- criticism based on some new aesthetic of textuality or *ecri-
- ture*... The list might be extended indefinitely; but does it
- imply any more fundamental change or break than the periodic
- style and fashion changes determined by an older high-modernist
- imperative of stylistic innovation?" (Jameson 1-2)
-
- **
-
- (2) "For many theorists occupying various positions on the
- political spectrum, the current historical moment signals less a
- need to come to grips with the new forms of knowledge, experi-
- ences, and conditions that constitute postmodernism than the
- necessity to write its obituary. The signs of exhaustion are in
- part measured by the fact that postmodernism has gripped two gen-
- erations of intellectuals who have pondered endlessly over its
- meaning and implications as a `social condition and cultural
- movement' (Jencks 10). The `postmodern debate' has spurned little
- consensus and a great deal of confusion and animosity. The themes
- are, by now, well known: master narratives and traditions of
- knowledge grounded in first principles are spurned; philosophical
- principles of canonicity and the notion of the sacred have become
- suspect; epistemic certainty and the fixed boundaries of
- academic knowledge have been challenged by a `war on totality'
- and a disavowal of all-encompassing, single, world-views; rigid
- distinctions between high and low culture have been rejected by
- insistence that the products of the so-called mass culture, popu-
- lar, and folk art forms are proper objects of study; the
- Enlightenment correspondence between history and progress and the
- modernist faith in rationality, science, and freedom have
- incurred a deep-rooted skepticism; the fixed and unified identity
- of the humanist subject has been replaced by a call for narrative
- space that is pluralized and fluid; and, finally, though far from
- complete, history is spurned as a unilinear process that moves
- the West progressively toward a final realization of freedom.
- While these and other issues have become central to the post-
- modern debate, they are connected through the challenges and
- provocations they provide to modernity's conception of history,
- agency, representation, culture, and the responsibility of
- intellectuals. The postmodern challenge constitutes not only a
- diverse body of cultural criticism, it must also be seen as a
- contextual discourse that has challenged specific disciplinary
- boundaries in such fields as literary studies, geography, educa-
- tion, architecture, feminism, performance art, anthropology,
- sociology, and many other areas. Given its broad theoretical
- reach, its political anarchism, and its challenge to `legislat-
- ing' intellectuals, it is not surprising that there has been a
- growing movement on the part of diverse critics to distance them-
- selves from postmodernism." (Giroux 1-2)
-
- **
-
- (3) "A provocative, comprehensive argument about the politics and
- theories of `postmodernism' is made by Fredric Jameson (1984),
- who argues that postmodernism is not an option, a style among
- others, but a cultural dominant requiring radical reinvention of
- left politics from within; there is no longer any place from
- without that gives meaning to the comforting fiction of critical
- distance. Jameson also makes clear why one cannot be for or
- against postmodernism, an essentially moralist move. My position
- is that feminists (and others) need continuous cultural reinven-
- tion, postmodernist critique, and historical materialsm; only a
- cyborg would have a chance. The old dominations of white capi-
- talist patriarchy seem nostalgically innocent now: they normal-
- ized heterogeneity, into man and woman, white and black, for
- example. `Advanced capitalism' and postmodernism release
- heterogeneity without a norm, and we are flattened, without sub-
- jectivity, which requires depth, even unfriendly and drowning
- depths." (Donna Haraway. _Simians, Cyborgs, and Women_. New York:
- Routledge, 1991. 244-5, n4.)
-
-
- **
-
- (4) "The spectacle is the moment when the commodity has attained
- the *total occupation* of social life. Not only is the relation
- to the commodity visible but it is all one sees: the world one
- sees is its world. Modern economic production extends the dic-
- tatorship extensively and intensively. In the least industri-
- alized places, its reign is already attested by a few star com-
- modities and by the imperialist domination imposed by regions
- which are ahead in the development of productivity. In the
- advanced regions, social space is invaded by a continuous super-
- imposition of geological layers of commodities. At this point in
- the `second industrial revolution,' alienated consumption becomes
- for the masses a duty supplementary to alienated production. It
- is *all the sold labor* of a society which globally becomes the
- *total commodity* for which the cycle must be continued. For
- this to be done, the total commodity has to return as a fragment
- to the fragmented individual, absolutely separated from the pro-
- ductive forces operating as a whole. Thus it is here that the
- specialized science of domination must in turn specialize: it
- fragments itself into sociology, psycho-technics, cybernetics,
- semiology, etc., watching over the self-regulation of every level
- of the process." (Debord 1977, paragraph 42)
-
- **
-
- (5) "The frenzied expansion of the mass media [is a mark of our
- postmodernity and] has political consequences which are not so
- wholly negative. This becomes most apparent when we look at rep-
- resentations of the Third World. No longer can this be confined
- to the realist documentary, or the exotic televisual voyage. The
- Third World refuses now, to `us,' in the West, to be reassuringly
- out of sight. It is as adept at using the global media as the
- old colonialist powers." (Angela McRobbie, "Postmodernism and
- Popular Culture," in _Postmodernism: ICA documents_. Ed. Lisa
- Appignanesi. London: FAB, 1989. 169.)
-
- **
-
- (6) "Postmodernism questions the efficacy of strategies of trans-
- formation associated with autonomy, declaring that modernism
- inexorably reaches a dead end. The modernist hope and belief
- that intellectuals can occupy a space outside capitalist society
- is not only illusionary but also artistically and politically
- sterile. The purity of the alienated artist forecloses his [sic]
- access to the energies and disputes that are lived within the
- culture, while also severing his connection to any audience
- beyond the purlieu of the artistic elite. The modernist places
- himself high and dry. Mass or popular culture inevitably springs
- up to fill the vacuum created by the elitist artists' divorce
- >from a wide audience. By following the path of its own aesthetic
- revolution and its fetishistically precious values, modern art
- distances itself from any social group large enough, central
- enough, or powerful enough to effect a social revolution. Post-
- modernism must entirely rethink the relation of intellectuals to
- the rest of society. A model of engagement must replace the
- model of alienation...." (McGowan 25)
-
- **
-
- (7) "What I want to call postmodernism in fiction paradoxically
- uses and abuses the conventions of both realism and modernism,
- and does so in order to challenge their transparency, in order to
- prevent glossing over the contradictions that make the postmodern
- what it is: historical and metafictional, contextual and self-
- reflexive, ever aware of its status as discourse, as a human con-
- struct." (Hutcheon 1988, 53)
-
- **
-
- (8) "Postmodernism is the somewhat weasel word now being used to
- describe the garbled situation of art in the '80s. It is a term
- which nobody quite fully understands, because no clear-cut
- definition of it has yet been put forward. Its use arose
- synonymously with that of pluralism toward the end of the '70s,
- and at that point it referred to the loss of faith in a stylistic
- mainstream, as if the whole history of styles had suddenly come
- unstuck. Since then, under the more recent umbrella of Neo-
- expressionism, the old stylistic divisions now mix, blend, and
- alternate interchangeably with each other: dogmatism and exclu-
- sivity have given way to openness and coexistence. Pluralism
- abolishes controls; it gives the impression that everything is
- permitted. Meeting with no limitation, the artist is free to
- express himself in whatever way he wishes.
- "If modernism was ideological at heart--full of strenuous dic-
- tates about what art could, and could not, be--postmodernism is
- much more eclectic, able to assimilate, and even plunder, all
- forms of style and genre and circumstance, and tolerant of multi-
- plicity and conflicting values." (Gablik 73)
-
- **
-
- (9) "Simplifying to the extreme, I define *postmodern* as
- incredulity toward metanarratives." (Lyotard 1984, xxiv)
-
- **
-
- (10) "Lyotard explains the necessity of thinking in `open
- systems' without internal unity on the basis of the disintegra-
- tion of the possibility of maintaining a universal metalanguage.
- This possibility presupposes that the individual language games
- through which we perspectively live our Being-in-the-world can be
- gone beyond by some sort of speech that itself is not relative.
- Such nonrelative speech, for its part, presupposes an authority
- that modern metaphysics conceives as `the Absolute.' If it can
- be demonstrated--and Derrida has shown this more clearly than
- Lyotard--that the thought of the Absolute itself cannot escape
- the `structurality of structure,' then one can no longer lay
- claim to a transhistorical frame of orientation beyond linguistic
- differentiality. Systems without internal unity and without
- absolute center become the inescapable condition of our *Dasein*
- and our orientation in the world." (Manfred Frank. _What is
- Neostructuralism?_. Trans. Sabine Wilke and Richard Gray. Min-
- neapolis: U of Minn. Press, 1989. Transl. of _Was ist Neostruk-
- turalismus?_. 1984.)
-
- **
-
- (11) "The postmodern would be that which, in the modern, puts
- forward the unpresentable in presentation itself; that which
- denies itself the solace of good forms, the consensus of taste
- which would make it possible to share collectively the nostalgia
- for the unattainable; that which searches for new presentations,
- not in order to enjoy them but in order to impart a stronger
- sense of the unpresentable. A postmodern artist or writer is in
- the position of a philosopher: the text he writes, the work he
- produces are not in principle governed by preestablished rules,
- and they cannot be judged according to a determining judgment, by
- applying familiar categories to the text or to the work. Those
- rules and categories are what the work of art itself is looking
- for. The artist and the writer, then, are working without rules
- in order to formulate the rules of what *will have been done*.
- Hence the fact that work and text have the characters of an
- *event*; hence also, they always come too late for their author,
- or, what amounts to the same thing, their being put into work,
- their realization (*mise en oeuvre*) always begin too soon.
- *Post modern* would have to be understood according to the
- paradox of the future (*post*) anterior (*modo*)." (Lyotard 1984,
- 81)
-
- **
-
- (12) "The unity of all that allows itself to be attempted today
- through the most diverse concepts of science and of writing, is,
- in principle, more or less covertly yet always, determined by an
- historico-metaphysical epoch of which we merely glimpse the
- *closure*. I do not say the *end*. [...]
- "Perhaps patient meditation and painstaking investigation on
- and around what is still provisionally called writing, far from
- falling short of a science of writing or of hastily dismissing it
- by some obscurantist reaction, letting it rather develop its
- positivity as far as possible, are the wanderings of a way of
- thinking that is faithful and attentive to the ineluctable world
- of the future which proclaims itself at present, beyond the
- closure of knowledge.
- "The future can only be anticipated in the form of an absolute
- danger. It is that which breaks absolutely with constituted
- normality and can only be proclaimed, *presented*, as a sort of
- monstrosity. For that future world and for that within it which
- will have put into question the values of sign, word, and writ-
- ing, for that which guides our future anterior, there is as yet
- no exergue." (Jacques Derrida, from the "Exergue" to _Of Gram-
- matology_. Trans. G. C. Spivak. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1974,
- 1976. 4-5. Transl. of _De la Grammatologie_. 1967.) (Note:
- "Exergue (ig-zurg), n. the small space beneath the principal
- design on a coin or medal for the insertion of a date, etc."
- _Websters_, Pocket Books-Simon & Schuster, 1990.)
-
- **
-
- (13) "Postmodernity does not imply a *change* in the values of
- Enlightenment modernity but rather a particular weakening of
- their absolutist character. It is therefore necessary to delimit
- an analytic terrain from whose standpoint this weakening is
- thinkable and definable. This terrain is neither arbitrary nor
- freely accessible to the imagination, but on the contrary it is
- the historical sedimentation of a set of traditions whose common
- denominator is the collapse of the immediacy of the *given*. We
- may thus propose that the intellectual history of the twentieth
- century was constituted on the basis of three illusions of
- immediacy (the referent, the phenomenon, and the sign) that gave
- rise to the three intellectual traditions of analytical
- philosophy, phenomenology, and structuralism. The crisis of that
- illusion of immediacy did not, however, result solely from the
- abandonment of those categories but rather from a weakening of
- their aspirations to constitute full presences and from the ensu-
- ing proliferation of language-games which it was possible to
- develop around them. This crisis of the absolutist pretensions
- of `the immediate' is a fitting starting point for engaging those
- intellectual operations that characterize the specific
- `weakening' we call postmodernity." (Ernesto Laclau, "Politics
- and the Limits of Modernity," in Docherty, op cit., 332).
-
- **
-
- (14) "Perhaps the clearest formulation of the difference of post-
- modern invention from modernist innovation comes in _The Post-
- modern Condition_, where Lyotard distinguishes the *paralogism*
- that characterizes pagan or postmodern aesthetic invention from
- the merely *innovative* function of art that is characteristic of
- the modernist understanding of the avant-garde. Innovation seeks
- to make a new move with the rules of the language game `art', so
- as to revivify the truth of art. Paralogism seeks the move that
- will displace the rules of the game, the `impossible' or
- unforeseeable move. Innovation refines the efficiency of the
- system, whereas the paralogical move changes the rules in the
- pragmatics of knowledge. It may well be the fate of a paralogi-
- cal move to be reduced to innovation as the system adapts itself
- (one can read Picasso this way), but this is not the necessary
- outcome. The invention may produce more inventions. Roughly
- speaking, the condition of art is postmodern or paralogical when
- it both is and is not art at the same time (e.g., Sherri Levine's
- appropriative rephotographings of `art photography')." (Bill
- Readings. _Introducing Lyotard: Art and Politics_. New York:
- Routledge, 1991. 73-4)
-
- **
-
- (15) "Postmodern architecture finds itself condemned to undertake
- a series of minor modifications in a space inherited from modern-
- ity, condemned to abandon a global reconstruction of the space of
- human habitation. The perspective then opens onto a vast
- landscape, in the sense that there is no longer any horizon of
- universality, universalization, or general emancipation to greet
- the eye of postmodern man, least of all the eye of the architect.
- The disappearance of the Idea that rationality and freedom are
- progressing would explain a `tone,' style, or mode specific to
- postmodern architecture. I would say it is a sort of
- `bricolage': the multiple quotation of elements taken from ear-
- lier styles or periods, classical and modern; disregard for the
- environment; and so on." (Lyotard 1993, 76)
-
- **
-
- (16) "There is ... a wholesale espousal of aesthetic ideology in
- the name of `postmodernism' and its claim to have moved way
- beyond the old dispensation of truth, critique, and suchlike
- enlightenment values. Perhaps the most depressing aspect of this
- current intellectual scene is the extent to which fashionable
- `left' alternatives (like the ideas canvassed in MARXISM TODAY)
- have set about incorporating large chunks of the Thatcherite
- cultural and socio-political agenda while talking portentously of
- `New Times' and claiming support from postmodernist gurus like
- Baudrillard. For we have now lived on - so these thinkers urge -
- into an epoch of pervasive `hyperreality', an age of mass-media
- simulation, opinion-poll feedback, total publicity and so forth,
- with the result that it is no longer possible (if indeed it ever
- was) to distinguish truth from falsehood, or to cling to those
- old `enlightenment' values of reason, critique, and adequate
- ideas. Reality just *is* what we are currently given to make of
- it by these various forms of seductive illusion. In fact we might
- as well give up using such terms, since they tend to suggest that
- there is still some genuine distinction to be drawn between truth
- and untruth, `science' and `ideology', knowledge and what is pre-
- sently `good in the way of belief'. On the contrary, says
- Baudrillard: if there is one thing we should have learned by now
- it is the total obsolescence of all such ideas, along with the
- enlightenment meta-narrative myths - whether Kantian-liberal,
- Hegelian, Marxist or whatever - that once underwrote their
- delusive claims. What confronts us now is an order of pure
- `simulacra' which no longer needs to disguise or dissimulate the
- absence of any final truth-behind-appearances." (Norris 1990;
- 23)
-
- **
-
- (17) "I begin with what appears to be the most startling fact
- about postmodernism: its total acceptance of the ephemerality,
- fragmentation, discontinuity, and the chaotic that formed the one
- half of Baudelaire's conception of modernity. But postmodernism
- responds to the fact of that in a very particular way. It does
- not try to transcend it, counteract it, or even to define the
- `eternal and immutable' elements that lie within it. Post-
- modernism swims, even wallows, in the fragmentary and the chaotic
- currents of change as if that is all there is. Foucault [in the
- "Preface" to Deleuze and Guattari's _Anti-Oedipus_ (U of Minn.
- Press, 1983. xiii)] instructs us, for example, to `develop
- actions, thought, and desires by proliferation, juxtaposition,
- and disjunction,' and `to prefer what is positive and multiple,
- difference over uniformity, flows over unities, mobile arrange-
- ments over systems. Believe that what is productive is not
- sedentary but nomadic.' To the degree that it does try to legit-
- imate itself by reference to the past, therefore, postmodernism
- typically harks back to that wing of thought, Nietzsche in par-
- ticular, that emphasizes the deep chaos of modern life and its
- intractability before rational thought. This does not imply,
- however, that postmodernism is simply a version of modernism;
- real revolutions in sensibility can occur when latent and
- dominated ideas in one period become explicit and dominant in
- another. Nevertheless, the continuity of the condition of frag-
- mentation, ephemerality, discontinuity, and chaotic change in
- both modernist and postmodernist thought is important." (Harvey
- 44)
-
- **
-
- (18) "Postmodernism, then, is a mode of consciousness (and *not*,
- it should be emphasized, a historical period) that is highly
- suspicious of the belief in shared speech, shared values, and
- shared perceptions that some would like to believe form our cul-
- ture but which in fact may be no more than empty, if necessary,
- fictions." (Olsen 143)
-
- **
-
- (19) "The point is that there *are* new standards, new standards
- of beauty and style and taste. The new sensibility is defiantly
- pluralistic; it is dedicated both to an excruciating seriousness
- and to fun and wit and nostalgia. It is also extremely history-
- conscious; and the voracity of its enthusiasms (and of the super-
- cession of these enthusiasms) is very high-speed and hectic.
- >From the vantage point of this new sensibility, the beauty of the
- machine or of the solution to a mathematical problem, of a paint-
- ing by Jasper Johns, of a film by Jean-Luc Godard, and of the
- personalities and music of the Beatles is equally accessible."
- (Sontag 304)
-
- **
-
- (20) "All my life I have worked to establish distinctions with
- the areas covered by umbrella-terms such as iconism, code,
- presupposition, etc. Naturally I am intrigued by the term
- `postmodern.' It is my impression that it is applied these days
- to everything the speaker approves of. On the other hand, there
- seems to be an attempt to move it backwards in time; first it
- seemed to suit writers or artists active in the last twenty
- years, then gradually it was moved back to the beginning of the
- century, then even further back, and the march goes on; before
- long Homer himself will be considered postmodern.
- But I believe that this tendency is to some extent justified.
- I agree with those who consider postmodern not a chronologically
- circumscribed tendency but a spiritual category, or better yet a
- *Kunstwollen* (a Will-to-Art), perhaps a stylistic device and/or
- a world view. We could say that every age has its own post-
- modern, just as every age has its own form of mannerism (in fact,
- I wonder if postmodern is not simply the modern name for
- *Manierismus*...). I believe that every age reaches moments of
- crisis like those described by Nietzsche in the second of the
- _Untimely Considerations_, on the harmfulness of the study of
- history. The sense that the past is restricting, smothering,
- blackmailing us." (Umberto Eco, "A Correspondence on Post-
- modernism" with Stefano Rosso in Hoesterey, op cit., pp. 242-3)
-
-
- {5.0}
- A SHORT BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
- Note: There is a huge and growing literature on postmodernism. This
- bibliography is selective and reflects the author's own interests and
- background. It is more devoted to cultural theory and philosophy than
- to fiction and the arts generally, though see Ferguson and Gablik for
- extended interviews and discussions on the fine arts and performance
- arts, and see Venturi and Portoghesi on architecture. For the relations
- between postmodernism and science, I suggest that there are worse places
- to start than the works of Thomas Kuhn, Paul Feyerabend, Bruno Latour,
- Michel Serres, Katherine Hayles, Gregory Bateson and Donna Haraway. For
- a good review of Latour see especially an essay by Robert Koch, "The
- Case of Latour" in _Configurations_ V. 3 No. 3, Fall 1995.
- One of the most extensive bibliographies on postmodernism
- available, though only for material published prior to 1989, is in
- Connor (cited below). Other useful bibliographies are in Hutcheon
- (1989; see especially the "Concluding Note: Some Directed Reading,"
- 169-70) and Docherty, which offers more recent information (1993).
- Some people have asked for a section on performance theory and
- I'd be glad to oblige anyone who wants to put one together and have it
- attributed to them in this FAQ. If you're waiting for me to do it, it
- will be some time. It will require coverage of popular culture studies,
- media studies, video art, drama and music--you get the picture.
-
-
- {5.1}
- SOME PRINCIPAL THEORISTS
-
- Baudrillard, Jean. _Simulations_. New York: Semiotext(e), 1983.
-
- Debord, Guy. _Society of the Spectacle_. English Transl. 1970.
- Rev. Transl. Detroit: Black & Red, 1977. Rpt. 1983. Transl. of
- _La societe du spectacle_. 1967.
-
- ---. _Comments on the Society of the Spectacle_. Transl. Malcolm
- Imrie. London: Verso, 1990. Transl. of _La Societe du spec-
- tacle_. 1988.
-
- Jameson, Fredric. _Postmodernism or, The Cultural Logic of Late
- Capitalism_. Durham, NC: Duke UP, 1991.
-
- Lyotard, Jean-Francois. _The Postmodern Condition: A Report on
- Knowledge_. Transl. Geoff Bennington and Brian Massumi. Foreword
- by Fredric Jameson. Minneapolis: U of Minn. Press, 1984. Transl.
- of _La Condition postmoderne: rapport sur le savoir_. 1979.
-
- ---. _The Postmodern Explained: Correspondence 1982-1985_. Ed.
- Julian Pefanis and Morgan Thomas. Transls. by Don Barry,
- Bernadette Maher, Julian Pefanis, Virginia Spate, and Morgan
- Thomas. Afterword by Wlad Gozich. Minneapolis: U. of Minnesota
- Press, 1993. Transl. of _Le Postmoderne explique aux enfants_.
- 1988.
-
- Portoghesi, Pier Paolo. _Aftern Modern Architecture_. New York:
- Rizzoli, 1982.
-
- Vattimo, Gianni. _The Transparent Society_. Transl. David Webb.
- Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1992. Transl. of _La societa
- trasparente_. 1989.
-
- Venturi, Robert, and Denise Scott and Steven Izenor. _Learning
- >from Las Vegas_. 1972. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1977.
-
-
- {5.2}
- GENERAL WORKS, ANTHOLOGIES, INTERVENTIONS
-
- Appignanesi, Lisa, ed. _Postmodernism: ICA documents_. London:
- Free Association Books, 1989.
-
- Best, Steven, and Douglas Kellner. _Postmodern Theory: Critical
- Interrogations_. New York: Guilford Press, 1991.
-
- Connor, Steven. _Postmodernist Culture: An Introduction to
- Theories of the Contemporary_. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1989.
-
- Docherty, Thomas. ed. _Postmodernism: a reader_. New York: Colum-
- bia UP, 1993.
-
- Elam, Diane. _Romancing the Postmodern_. New York: Routledge,
- 1992.
-
- Featherston, M., ed. _Postmodernism_ London: SAGE, 1988.
-
- Ferguson, Russell, et al., eds. _Discourses: Conversations in
- Postmodern Art and Culture_. Cambridge: MIT Press; New York: The
- New Museum of Contemporary Art, 1990.
-
- Foster, Hal, ed. _The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on Postmodern
- Culture_. Seatle, WA: Bay Press, 1985.
-
- Foster, Hal. _Recodings: Art, Spectacle, Cultural Politics_.
- Seatle, WA: Bay Press, 1985.
-
- Foster, Stephen William. "Symbolism and the Problematics of Postmodern
- Representation," _Victor Turner and the Construction of Cultural
- Criticism_. Ed. Kathleen M. Ashley. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1990.
- 117-37.
-
- Giroux, Henry A. "Slacking Off: Border Youth and Postmodern
- Education." JAC ISSUE 14.2 FALL 1994.
- http://nsferau.cas.usf.edu/JAC/archive/dir142.html
-
- Harvey, David. _The Condition of Postmodernity_. Oxford: Basil
- Blackwell, 1989.
-
- Hoesterey, Ingeborg, ed. _Zeitgeist in Babel: The Postmodernist
- Controversy_. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1991.
-
- Hutcheon, Linda. _The Politics of Postmodernism_. New York: Rout-
- ledge, 1989.
-
- ---. _A Poetics of Postmodernism: History, Theory, Fiction_.
- New York: Routledge, 1988.
-
- Huyssen, Andreas. _After the Great Divide: Modernism, Mass Cul-
- ture, Postmodernism_. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press,
- 1986.
-
- Jencks, Charles. "The Postmodern Agenda," in _The Postmodern
- Reader_. Ed. Charles Jencks. New York: St. Martin's, 1992. 10-
- 39.
-
- Lash, Scott. _The Sociology of Postmodernism._ New York: Rout-
- ledge, 1990.
-
- McGowan, John. _Postmodernism and Its Critics_. Ithaca: Cornell
- UP, 1991.
-
- Morris, Meaghan. "At Henry Parkes Motel," _Cultural Studies_
- (1988) 2:1-47
-
- Norris, Christopher. _What's Wrong with Postmodernism?_.
- Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1990.
-
- ---. _The Truth about Postmodernism_. London: Blackwell, 1993.
-
- Palmer, Richard. "The Postmodernity of Heidegger," _Martin Heidegger and
- the Question of Literature: Toward a Postmodern Literary Hermeneutics_.
- Ed. William V. Spanos. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1979. 71-92.
-
- Probyn, E. "Bodies and anti-bodies: feminism and postmodernism,"
- _Cultural Studies_ (1987) 1:3, 349-60.
-
- Rowe, John Carlos. "Postmodernist Studies," _Redrawing the Boundaries_.
- Eds. Stephen Greenblatt and Giles Gunn. New York: Modern Language
- Association, 1992. 179-208. Contains a short annotated bibliography.
-
- Squires, Judith. _Principled Positions: Postmodernism and the
- Rediscovery of Value_. London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1993.
-
- Zavarzadeh, Mas'ud and Donald Morton. _Theory, (Post)Modernity,
- Opposition: An "Other" Introduction to Literary and Cultural
- Theory_. Washington, D.C.: Masionneuve Press, 1991.
-
- {5.3}
- ON MODERNITY, MODERNISM AND THE AVANT-GARDE
-
- Berman, Marshall. _All That Is Solid Melts Into Air: The Experi-
- ence of Modernity_. NY: Viking-Penguin, 1982. New Pref. 1988.
-
- Bradbury, Malcolm, and James McFarlane, eds. _Modernism: A Guide
- to European Literature, 1890-1930_. 1976. New Preface. New
- York: Penguin Books, 1991.
-
- Burger, Peter. _The Theory of the Avant-Garde_. Transl. Michael
- Shaw. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota Press, 1984. Transl. of
- _Theorie der Avantgarde_. 1974.
-
- Calinescu, Matei. _Five Faces of Modernity: Modernism, Avant-
- Garde, Decadence, Kitsch, Postmodernism_. 1977. Rev. ed. Durham,
- NC: Duke UP, 1987.
-
- Eysteinsson, Astradur. _The Concept of Modernism_. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1990.
-
- Faulkner, Peter. _Modernism_. London: Methuen, 1977.
-
- Gablik, Susan. _Has Modernism Failed?_. London: Thames and Hudson,
- 1984.
-
- Giddens, Anthony. _Modernity and Self Identity_. Oxford: Polity Press,
- 1991.
-
- Habermas, Jurgen. _The Philosphical Discourse of Modernity:
- Twelve Lectures_. Transl. Frederick G. Lawrence. Cambridge, MA:
- MIT Press, 1987. Transl. of _Der philosophische Diskurs der Moderne:
- Zwolf Vorlesungen_. 1985.
-
- Naremore, James, and Patrick Brantlinger. _Modernity and Mass
- Culture_. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1991.
-
- Perloff, Margorie. "Modernist Studies," _Redrawing the Boundaries_.
- Eds. Stephen Greenblatt and Giles Gunn. New York: Modern Language
- Association, 1992. 154-78. Contains a short annotated bibliography.
-
- Taylor, Charles. _Sources of the Self_. Cambridge: Harvard UP,
- 1989.
-
- Williams, Raymond. _The Politics of Modernism: Against the New
- Conformists_. London: Verso, 1989.
-
-
- {5.4}
- POSTMODERNISM AND RELIGION
-
- Smith, Huston. _Beyond the Post-Modern Mind_. 1982. New York:
- Crossroad Publishing; Wheaton, IL: Quest-Theosophical Publishing
- House, 1984.
-
-
- POSTMODERNISM AND JAPAN
-
- Miyoshi, Masao and H. D. Harootunian, eds. _Postmodernism and
- Japan_. Durham, NC: Duke UP, 1989.
-
-
- POSTMODERNISM AND CYBERPUNK
-
- Olsen, Lance. "Cyberpunk and the Crisis of Postmodernity," in
- _Fiction 2000: Cyberpunk and the Future of Narrative_. Eds.
- George Slusser and Tom Shippey. Athens, GA: U of Georgia Press,
- 1992. 142-152.
-
-
- {6.0}
- ******
-
- DIGEST OF TWO EXCHANGES ON AN ALT.POSTMODERN
- (Contributors: Omar Haneef, Mark Weinles, Gordon Fitch, David F. Black,
- Michael McGee, N.S. "Cris" Brown, PRJHC@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU, Andy Perry,
- Allan Liska and Gene Angelcyk)
-
- ******
-
- alt.postmodern
-
- From: haneef@engin.swarthmore.edu (Omar Haneef
- Re: aesthetics and contemporary culture
- Date: Thu Feb 09 01:02:31 EST 1995
-
- david black f (dblack@mach1.wlu.ca) wrote:
- > An unfortunate condition of contemporary culture is the
- general
- > aestheticization of experience--where images and aesthetic
- criteria for
- > interpreting those images come to dominate public life. This
- phenomenon
- > has a history.
-
- Unfortunate? What you proncounce the "aestheticization of
- experience" is really the end of logocentricism. The word is
- dead, long live the image. The reasons probably have a lot to do
- with saturation of information and the way pictures carry more
- information than words. The written word became very important
- when the printing press was estabilished because monks carried
- around the medieval equivelant of powerbooks with more informa-
- tion then anyone could carry in their heads and the elite proba-
- bly enjoyed their exclusive ability to read. Now everybody reads,
- there is more information "in the ether" then we can handle and
- images are cheaply and easily recreated just like words. Welcome
- to the era of the image. Why is this unfortunate? This might be
- slightly more democratic since we all decode images at roughly
- the same rate and the word is so huge and pretentious that it,
- perhaps, deserves to die. The "kill your TV" anxiety that you
- seemed to be faced with is a hiccup of Leavisism and his mass
- cultural fear which probably dates back to the French Revolu-
- tion's fear of the masses. You are not alone, there are proabably
- plenty of others who agree with you "Amusing Ourselves to Death"
- - Neil Postman is a recent example of this line of thinking.
-
- > If modernity meant that the aesthetic category was sepa-
- rated from
- > moral (ethics) and practical (logic) reason (the breakdown of
- the unified
- > sensibility that T.S. Eliot mourned), the postmodern has seen
- the revenge
- > of the aesthetic, as a culture of images, spectacle and simula-
- tion has
- > subsumed the other two fundamental elements in human
- sensibility. The
- > aesthetic has become the dominant element in contemporary cul-
- ture, and the
- > difficult business of making value choices reduced to who or
- what looks
- > good.
-
- But postmodernity called me up yesterday and explained to
- me that it has collapsed these distinctions. The moral, the
- aesthetic and the practical are ONE. Pomo does not revel in the
- aesthetic, it revels in all three.
-
- > The revenge of the aesthetic can be dated at least to
- some
- > of the early 20th century artistic modernisms. The example of
- the
- > Futurists--under their leader and muse, Marinetti--is instruc-
- tive. In
- > offering this example, of course, I am indebted to Walter Ben-
- jamin's
- > famous analysis of fascist aesthetics in his essay "Art in the
- Age of
- > Mechanical Reproduction." Susan Sontag has also written on the
- > topic--with reference to Hitler's filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl--
- in her
- > Under the Sign of Saturn, an essay entitled "Fascinating Fas-
- cism."
- > Not for nothing did Futurism enjoy special patronage in
- Benito
- > Mussolini's fascism regime. For although direct collaboration
- between
- > Futurism and Fascism was limited, Futurism offered an ideology
- of use to
- > Fascism. Notably, it allowed politics--normally the place
- where ethics
- > and logic are brought to bear on human reality--to be
- aestheticized. In
- > celebrating speed, machines, the annihilation of history,
- danger and
- > energy, the group of Italian artists, writers, and thespians
- identifying
- > as "Futurists" offered myths, images, slogans and other
- ideological props
- > for a fledgling Italian Fascist system.
- > The Futurists' oft-quoted slogan from Marinetti's 1909
- "Foundation
- > Manifesto of Futurism"--"We will glorify war--the world's only
- > hygiene--militarism, patriotism, the destructive gestures of
- freedom
- > bringers, beautiful ideas worth dying for, and scorn for
- women"--could
- > have been written by any one of the contemporary New Right.
- Neo-conservative
- > politicians today have been especially adept at taking
- advantage of po-mo
- > aestheticization; witness Reagan's mastery of the TV medium,
- Newt
- > Gingrich's information society utopianism (with debts to fellow
- neo-cons
- > Daniel Bell and Alvin Toffler).
-
- Whoah! Postmodernism is aesthetic and relies on images. The
- fascists relied on images. Pomos are fascists? Uh-uh. This is a
- huge stretch. Everyone has always employed images: the com-
- munists, the american, the christians, the muslims, the hindus,
- the nazis, the lesbians, the jews, the academics, the media, the
- law. Notice how an image may pop into your head when I mention
- these "movements" : hammer and sickle, apple pie, the cross, the
- crescent, that swastika looking symbol, the swastika, the pink
- triangle (or more specificall, black), star of david, pen and
- book?, the camera, the balance etc. This hardly means they are
- all postmodern.
- On the contrary, postmodernity is concerned with a
- PROLIFERATION of images so that no one image stands out. It is
- concerned with the multiplicity of images, a mass of images. It
- is anti-fascist in that sense.
-
- (When one talks of the postmodern aesthetic, I can only think of
- MTV)
-
- > I find in Cultural Studies a means to engage and decode
- the
- > aestheticization of experience, and a way to talk about values
- while
- > admitting that such discussion has now to take place with
- reference to a
- > world we know largely in picture form.
-
- The world has ALWAYS been "largely in picture form". With
- postmodernity DISCOURSE ITSELF is "largely in picture form."
- Cultural studies is concerned, partly, with looking at this pic-
- toral DISCOURSE while the rest of Lit Crit remains logocentric
- examining the written word (even after Derrida pretty much killed
- it).
-
- > But a clinical separation of
- > moral, practical and aesthetic reason I find impractical.
-
- Then why do you do it?
-
- -Omar Haneef
-
-
- #2709
- From: <PRJHC@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU>
- Re: aesthetics and contemporary culture
- Date: Sun Feb 12 09:20:27 EST 1995
-
- In article <3hcb5n$ndg@larch.cc.swarthmore.edu>,
- haneef@engin.swarthmore.edu (Omar Haneef '96) says:
- >david black f (dblack@mach1.wlu.ca) wrote:
- >> The Futurists' oft-quoted slogan from Marinetti's 1909
- "Foundation
- >> Manifesto of Futurism"--"We will glorify war--the world's only
- >> hygiene--militarism, patriotism, the destructive gestures of
- freedom
- >> bringers, beautiful ideas worth dying for, and scorn for
- women"--could
- >> have been written by any one of the contemporary New Right.
- [...]
- >>
-
- The futurists glorified war because they thought it would gener-
- ate class struggle which would lead to revolution. (see Perloff's
- The Futurist Moment.) Perhaps their mistake was being naive
- enough to assume they could somehow use the fascists to their own
- ends... but then again, who could have anticipated the
- holocaust....? Especially if you were a futurist with positivist
- leanings and associated technical progress with civilized behav-
- ior?
- I think it is the luxury of your position, looking backwards
- at the futurists through the holocaust, that enables you to
- accuse them of supporting crimes they didn't even believe were
- possible. There were many circumstances in which the Futurists
- DIRECTLY confronted fascist policy. See Robert Motherwell's
- anthology Dada. An excerpt from the diary of Mohol-Nagy's wife
- (whose name I can't remember) describes a Nazi dinner party in
- which Manaretti made a mockery of the occasion by reading
- phonetic poetry and tipping the contents of the entire banquet
- table onto the laps of the Nazi brass... including Goering him-
- self.
- I'm not sure what this anecdote really demonstrates besides
- an equally valid reading of Futurism as a form of proto-
- deconstruction perhaps. I would avoid statements such as
- futurism=fascism. Everything the Nazi's touched didn't turn into
- fascism... that is giving them far too much credit.
-
- > On the contrary, postmodernity is concerned with a
- PROLIFERATION of
- >images so that no one image stands out. It is concerned with the
- >multiplicity of images, a mass of images. It is anti-fascist in
- that sense.
- >
-
- On the other hand, Adorno describes fascism (In Freudian Theory
- and the Pattern of Fascist Propaganda) as relying on the
- proliferation of images. It is the tactic of fascism to repeat an
- image endlessly and everywhere in order to generate an atmosphere
- which will not only make it seem true, but restrict the range of
- possible readings.
-
- MTV, it might be added, is radically different than fascism
- because it depends on the ability to posture as anti-
- establishment. MTV is more concerned with encapsulating rebel-
- lion. It is liberal. Fascist propaganda overtly rationalized mass
- movements as normative...which means different things if you
- really think about it.
-
- #2716
- From: gcf@panix.com (Gordon Fitch)
- Date: Sun Feb 12 18:51:17 EST 1995
-
- <PRJHC@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU>:
- | ...
- | On the other hand, Adorno describes fascism (In Freudian Theory
- and the
- | Pattern of Fascist Propaganda) as relying on the proliferation
- of images.
-
- I think this is a tactic of all forms of totalitarianism,
- including, of course, our own, as a glance at a newsstand or
- the supermarket shelves will tell you. The industrialism of
- Authority, I suppose. What i[s] the cyberneticization of
- Authority?
-
- -- >< Gordon Fitch >< gcf@panix.com ><
-
-
- #2741
- From: <PRJHC@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU>
- [1] Re: aesthetics and contemporary culture
- Date: Tue Feb 14 08:37:24 EST 1995
-
- gcf@panix.com (Gordon Fitch) says:
-
- >| > I think this is a tactic of all forms of totalitarianism,
- >| > including, of course, our own, as a glance at a newsstand or
- >| > the supermarket shelves will tell you. The industrialism of
- >| > Authority, I suppose. What it the cyberneticization of
- >| > Authority?
-
- In terms of aesthetic, I imagine it is much "faster" than facsist
- propaganda. Jameson, in Late Capitalism, says something about how
- the postmodern aesthetic can only be flawed by an interuption of
- its ceaseless transformations... this makes me think of a liq-
- uid... perhaps able to flow around everything. Fascist
- propaganda, which I've seen, was rarely aqueous however.
-
- >Andrew_Perry@Brown.edu (Andy Perry):
- >| I
- >| would assume that the proliferation of images would expand,
- rather than
- >| restrict, the range of possible readings, since each image
- would be
- >| disseminated through more disparate interpretive contexts...
-
- The spewing of propaganda excites and directs... and generates a
- sort of backdrop for the leader which not only reinforces
- validity, but encourages individualism and narcissism through
- identification, which, in turn, limits interpretation. The group,
- then, becomes a fragmented collection of little dictators
- undermining any kind of interaction which might lead to critical
- thinking. The presence of the dictator is a bit like the author
- function for all propaganda as well as an author/model for ones
- own behavior...which, of course, comes into play when interpret-
- ing the propaganda. Advertising functions in a similar way by
- making commodities for "you alone" and by appealing to standards
- of normalcy... but it is not quite as centralized... I don't
- think.
-
-
- #2662
- From: Mark.Weinles@launchpad.unc.edu (Mark Weinles)
- Re: aesthetics and contemporary culture
- Date: Thu Feb 09 05:24:22 EST 1995
-
- In article <D3n8yI.GJ4@info.uucp> dblack@mach1.wlu.ca (david
- black f) writes:
-
- "An unfortunate condition of contemporary culture is the
- general aestheticization of experience--where images and
- aesthetic criteria for interpreting those images come to dominate
- public life. This phenomenon has a history. [...] The aesthetic
- has become the dominant element in contemporary culture, and the
- difficult business of making value choices reduced to who or what
- looks good. [...]"
-
- Much as I admire Benjamin, I find his suggestion that
- fascism is "the aestheticization of politics" to be one of the
- least illuminating ideas that he ever set down. It may offer a
- handy way to analyze Futurism, but I'd like to know why you
- believe that it has a larger value, or, to put it another way,
- why you consider that "the aesthetizing of experience" is neces-
- sarily a misfortune. What about the other possibility that
- "existence and the world are justified _only_ as an aesthetic
- phenomenon"? (Emphasis mine.) And what do you think of the
- criticism that your position derives from an animosity to
- _style_?
-
- -- Mark Weinles
-
-
- #2703
- From: nsbrown@news.IntNet.net (NS Brown)
- Re: aesthetics and contemporary culture
- Date: Sat Feb 11 18:38:40 EST 1995
-
- Cris here. :)
-
- [In response to David Black's post on the aestheticization of
- politics and Futurism (essentially bemoaning the rise of style
- over substance), Mark Weinless wrote:]
-
- : Much as I admire Benjamin, I find his suggestion that
- fascism
- : is "the aestheticization of politics" to be one of the least
- illuminat-
- : ing ideas that he ever set down. It may offer a handy way to
- analyze
- : Futurism, but I'd like to know why you believe that it has a
- larger
- : value, or, to put it another way, why you consider that "the
- aesthetiz-
- : ing of experience" is necessarily a misfortune.
- [...]
-
- Mark, I don't know what David will have to say to your assertion
- that "existence and the world are justified _only_ as an
- aesthetic phenomenon," but I concur wholeheartedly. I even end
- up arguing that we've constructed the "laws of science" the way
- we have more because of *us* and our need for order, rather than
- because of anything "writ large on the cosmos." The Universe, if
- it can be said to exist as an "it," is a canvas upon which we
- paint our experience.
-
- Cris
-
-
- From: nsbrown@news.IntNet.net (NS Brown)
- Date: Mon Feb 13 08:29:21 EST 1995
-
- Cris here. :)
-
- [I wrote to Mark Weinles:]
- : > Mark, I don't know what David will have to say to your asser-
- tion
- : > that "existence and the world are justified _only_ as an
- aesthetic
- : > phenomenon," but I concur wholeheartedly. I even end up
- arguing
- : > that we've constructed the "laws of science" the way we have
- more
- : > because of *us* and our need for order, rather than because
- of
- : > anything "writ large on the cosmos." The Universe, if it can
- be
- : > said to exist as an "it," is a canvas upon which we paint our
- : > experience.
-
- [Andy Perry replies:]
- : Note, however, that order does not equal beauty. There are
- many theories
- : of perception, truth, etc. which argue that the "laws of
- science" are
- : constructed based upon human needs for order or prediction,
- which have
- : nothing to do with aesthetics. Of course, since I've already
- shown my
- : Nietzschean colors around here on numerous occasions, you may
- have
- : gathered that I too have an occasional sympathy for the
- aestheticization
- : of life...
-
- I would agree that "order does not equal beauty," if by that
- you mean that the two are not equivalent terms. They're not,
- by any means. I think "beauty" is a superset, and "order"
- one of its subsets. That is to say, I think we find beauty
- in order, but we can also find beauty in not-order.
-
- When we pass a carefully manicured lawn, freshly mowed and
- edged, many are likely to say "What a beautiful lawn!" And
- they're using the word "beautiful" correctly; for many see
- that kind of order as beauty. (C.f.: an unkempt lawn with
- shin-high grass, garbage lying around and a rusty old car
- up on cinderblocks.)
-
- Yet, most of us would find a perfectly conical mountain
- "unnatural" and "ugly" compared to the rugged peaks of the
- Rockies, and urban planners learned decades ago that
- meandering streets have more "charm" than perfect grid-
- work designs. Curiously, the field of fractal geometry
- has shown that these seeming non-orders have an order of
- their own, but you have to leave integer-dimensionality
- to see that order. Fractal-generated music seems to be
- aesthetically pleasing to many listeners; it's modelled
- in 1.5 dimensions and if given a bit *more* order in terms
- of repeating passages and movements, it's difficult to
- distinguish from human-generated music. (See Peitgen &
- Saupe, Eds., _The Science of Fractal Images_, (1988)
- at 42-44.)
-
- We rarely find *utter* randomness to be "beautiful."
-
- Cris
-
-
- From: mcmcgee@isocrates.win.net (michael calvin mcgee)
- Date: Tue Feb 14 02:24:11 EST 1995
- Re: aesthetics and contemporary culture
-
- In article <3hjhq0$lbu@xcalibur.IntNet.net>, NS Brown
- (nsbrown@news.IntNet.net) writes:
-
- >[In response to David Black's post on the aestheticization of
- >politics and Futurism (essentially bemoaning the rise of style
- >over substance), Mark Weinless wrote:]
- >
- >: Much as I admire Benjamin, I find his suggestion that
- fascism
- >: is "the aestheticization of politics" to be one of the least
- illuminat-
- >: ing ideas that he ever set down.
- [...]
-
- >Mark, I don't know what David will have to say to your assertion
- >that "existence and the world are justified _only_ as an
- >aesthetic phenomenon," but I concur wholeheartedly.
-
- Lest we forget, gentlemen, the association of fascism with this
- thread of argument is not simply flaming. Mussolini especially,
- and also Hitler, theorized "cultural politics" as the way both
- to excite and to control the "experience of the masses." Insofar
- as fascism is characterized by +any+ ideological uniformity, it
- would be the firm commitment that politics (and even science) had
- to be "aestheticized." When "existence and the world" are argued
- for solely on a construction that they are "aesthetic phenomena,"
- nothing is left to give the "artist" pause. Not only can this be
- dangerous politically, but it is also a questionable stance from
- an aesthetic viewpoint, because +negation is a necessary posture+
- for all artists. "Pure creativity" cannot be "art," for it has
- no means to reject its "false starts." Without such terms as
- "grace," "eloquence," "style," etc. +you can't have an
- aesthetic,+ and without an aesthetic, you have no justification
- for your experientialism.
-
- michael
-
-
- #2776
- From: nsbrown@news.IntNet.net (NS Brown)
- Re: aesthetics and contemporary culture
- Date: Wed Feb 15 20:51:52 EST 1995
-
- [Michael Calvin McGee replies:]
- : Lest we forget, gentlemen, the association of fascism with this
- : thread of argument is not simply flaming. Mussolini espe-
- cially,
- : and also Hitler, theorized "cultural politics" as the way both
- : to excite and to control the "experience of the masses."
-
- Viewing life as an aesthetic (experiential) phenomena is not
- at the root of facism. Indeed, experientialism notes that we
- each construct our *own* experiences, and that there is no
- Absolute Truth by which we can determine whose experiences are
- true or false. This would *not* fit well in a facist state,
- because they *do* believe there is Absolute Truth ... and
- they've found it!
-
- Facism is a distinctly *modern* political scheme. It takes the
- notion of a mechanistic universe and applies it to the body
- politic. It claims to have Absolute Truth, and demands that
- every aspect of society be subservient to and directed toward
- that Absolute Truth. Art becomes propaganda (rhetoric), yet
- another cog in the wheels of politics. Minorities and unde-
- sirables are systematically "Othered" to provide a scapegoat
- for the ills that remain.
-
- Notions of certainty are crucial to the formation of facism.
- Notions of certainty are notably lacking in the idea that we
- construct our own experiences.
-
- : Not only can this be
- : dangerous politically, but it is also a questionable stance
- from
- : an aesthetic viewpoint, because +negation is a necessary pos-
- ture+
- : for all artists. "Pure creativity" cannot be "art," for it has
- : no means to reject its "false starts." Without such terms as
- : "grace," "eloquence," "style," etc. +you can't have an
- aesthetic,+
- : and without an aesthetic, you have no justification for your
- : experientialism.
-
- Interesting statement, though it has little to do with exper-
- ientialism. That is, you're arguing against positions that
- I don't hold ... swinging at straw men of your own creation.
-
- Cris
-
-
- #2691
- From: nsbrown@news.IntNet.net (NS Brown)
- Date: Fri Feb 10 22:12:08 EST 1995
-
- Cris here. :)
-
- [David Black wrote:]
- : [...]
- Neo-conservative
- : politicians today have been especially adept at taking
- advantage of po-mo
- : aestheticization; witness Reagan's mastery of the TV medium,
- Newt
- : Gingrich's information society utopianism (with debts to fellow
- neo-cons
- : Daniel Bell and Alvin Toffler).
-
- Sloganeering and image-over-substance are hardly new phenomena.
- They are the traditional tools of political minorities, who are
- in the fortunate position of being able to make a lot of noise
- without having to *do* anything. Now that the rad-cons are at
- the helm, they'll be backing down from their tall talk in short
- order. It's already happening, as clause after clause of the
- Contract With (On!) America is being quietly shuffled off to the
- shredder.
-
- It's easy to quote Shakespeare's "Power corrupts; absolute power
- corrupts absolutely" when one is one step removed from the
- throne. Once one takes the throne, the truth of the statement
- becomes apparent (at least to everyone else).
-
- Just an opinion, worth what you paid for it. :)
-
- Cris
-
-
- From: gcf@panix.com (Gordon Fitch)
- Date: 26 Feb 1996 18:32:13 -0500
-
- gene angelcyk wrote:
- >For those who subscribe to the notion that we are living in the postmodern
- >age ... wake up! The word "post" means after and the word "modern" means
- >in the present; thus, the term is an oxymoron.
-
- allanl@genie.com (Allan Liska):
-
- |not in this case. in this case, "modern" refers to an idea that there
- |is some sort of grand narrative which is overarching and guiding human
- |development along some preset path.
-
- |very loosely, the post-modern age signals the end of the grand
- |narrative, or the realization that there never was a grand
- |narrative..but to try and define postmodernity is difficult, because
- |each theorist, and each person has a different perspective.
-
- In my view, the term _postmodern_ came into use because the dominant
- school of the plastic arts, and of architecture, in the first half of
- the 20th century was called "Modernism." People needed a different
- category to put, say, Andy Warhol or Nikki de Saint-Phalle in. They
- might have been called _paramodern_ because, actually, there was a lot
- of non-Modernist stuff going on beside Modernism, but since it _seemed_
- as if it came after, _post_ was pegged for the prefix. The other
- _modern_ of which something might be post- is modern in the sense of
- "from around the Enlightenment on until around the present. This sense
- of postmodern was apparently first used in 1945 (by Lewis Mumford?) and
- seems to apply more to lit, lit crit, cult crit, and philosophy, than to
- the plastic arts.
-
- I thought we were going to have a FAQ to answer questions like these,
- sparing me from this sort of recitation.
- --
- }"{ Gordon Fitch }"{ gcf@panix.com }"{
-
-
- *****************************************************************
- ******
- ##END## ##OF## ##DIGEST##
- ******
- *****************************************************************
-
- {6.1}
- A FINAL WORD
-
- That concludes this FAQ file. Send comments, complaints, additions,
- suggestions, recommendations, ideas to "vpiercy@indiana.edu".
- 9/30/95; 6/26/96
-
- --
- "The scientist has no unique right to ignore the likely consequences of
- what he does." --Noam Chomsky. _The Chomsky Reader_. Ed. James Peck. New
- York: Pantheon, 1987. 201.
-