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Introduction to Postmodernism

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Title: Introduction to Postmodernism


1
Introduction toPostmodernism Contemporary
Literary Theory
2
Agenda
  • POSTMODERNISM
  • LITERARY THEORY
  • New Criticism
  • Structuralism
  • Archetypal / myth criticism
  • Marxist / ideological
  • Psychoanalytical
  • Poststructuralism
  • Deconstruction theory
  • Cultural materialism
  • Feminism
  • Queer theory
  • Postcolonialism

3
Why Reality Isnt What It Used to Be
4
Questions
  • 1. What is postmodernism?
  • 2. Why should we care about it?
  • 3. Have you received a modern or postmodern
    education?
  • 4. What does postmodernism have to say about
    your identity?
  • 5. What does postmodernism have to say about
    truth, beauty, and goodness?
  • 6. How is postmodernism is impacting K-12
    education, religion, the arts, and our daily
    lives?
  • 7. How are postmodern scholars trying to change
    the way we understand contemporary literature
    and film?

5
Modernity
Newtonian Order
  • The Renaissance and Enlightenment project of
    Western civilization
  • God, reason and progress
  • There was a center to the universe.
  • Progress is based upon knowledge, and man is
    capable of discerning objective absolute truths
    in science and the arts.
  • Modernism is linked to capitalismprogressive
    economic administration of world
  • Modernization of 3rd world countries (imposition
    of modern Western values)

TRADITIONAL WESTERN MODERN THINKING
6
Western Humanist View of Language
What Is Language?
as
  • People are the same everywhere
  • There are universal laws and truths
  • Knowledge is objective, independent of culture,
    gender, etc.
  • Language is a man-made tool that refers to real
    things / truths
  • I, the subject, speak language
  • I have a discernible self
  • The self is the center of existence

TRADITIONAL WESTERN MODERN THINKING
7
Western Humanist View of Literature
Purpose of Literature
  • Good literature is of timeless significance.
  • A literary work is "sincere," meaning it is
    honest, true to experience and human nature, and
    thus can speak the truth about the human
    condition.
  • The literary text contains its own meaning within
    itself.

TRADITIONAL WESTERN MODERN THINKING
8
Evolution of Western Thought
Timeline
as
TRADITIONAL WESTERN MODERN THINKING
9
Modernity
Timeline
  • RENAISSANCE TO ABOUT 1900 (/- 30 years)
  • Baudrillard
  • Early modernity Renaissance to Industrial
    Revolution
  • Modernity Industrial Revolution
  • Postmodernity Period of mass media
  • The world according to white Anglo-Saxon males
    from Europe

TRADITIONAL WESTERN MODERN THINKING
10
Your Place in History
Timeline
14th C 1900
2000
  • Modern
  • Modernism
  • Postmodernism

TRADITIONAL WESTERN MODERN THINKING
11
Your Place in History
Timeline
as
14th C 1900
2000
  • Modern
  • Modernism
  • Postmodernism

Your teachers were / are here
TRADITIONAL WESTERN MODERN THINKING
12
Modernism
Death of the Old Order
  • Early 1900s
  • World War I
  • Worldwide poverty exploitation
  • Intellectual upheaval
  • Freud psychoanalysis
  • Marx class struggle
  • Kierkegaard, Heidegger, Neitzsche
  • Picasso, Stravinsky, Kafka, Proust, Brecht,
    Joyce, Eliot

PRECURSORS OF POSTMODERNISM
TRADITIONAL WESTERN MODERN THINKING
13
Relativism
The Bending of Time Space
  • Einstein relativity, quantum mechanics
  • Refutation of Newtonian science
  • Time is relative
  • Matter and energy are one
  • Light as both particle and wave
  • Universe is strange

Emc2
PRECURSORS OF POSTMODERNISM
TRADITIONAL WESTERN MODERN THINKING
14
Modernist Art
Breaking the Rules
  • Cubism
  • Surrealism
  • Dadaism
  • Expressionism
  • Different ways of depicting reality
  • Fragmentation of reality
  • BUT STILL A BELIEF IN AN OBJECTIVE REALITY (for
    the most part)

PRECURSORS OF POSTMODERNISM
15
Modernist Art
Breaking the Rules
  • Cubism
  • Surrealism
  • Dadaism
  • Expressionism

PRECURSORS OF POSTMODERNISM
16
Modernist Art
Breaking the Rules
  • Cubism
  • Surrealism
  • Dadaism
  • Expressionism

PRECURSORS OF POSTMODERNISM
17
Modernist Art
Breaking the Rules
  • Cubism
  • Surrealism
  • Dadaism
  • Expressionism

PRECURSORS OF POSTMODERNISM
18
Modernist Literature
A World with No Center
  • Things fall apart,The centre cannot hold,Mere
    anarchy is loosed upon the world.
  • --Yeats, The Second Coming

PRECURSORS OF POSTMODERNISM
19
Modernist Literature
Breaking the Rules
  • Emphasis on impressionism and subjectivity
  • Movement away from objective third-party
    narration
  • Tendency toward reflexivity and
    self-consciousness
  • Obsession with the psychology of self
  • Rejection of traditional aesthetic theories
  • Experimentation with language

PRECURSORS OF POSTMODERNISM
20
What is Postmodernism?
Acceptance of a New Age
  • A term applied to all human sciences
    anthropology, psychology, architecture, history,
    etc.
  • Anti-foundational, anti-reason, anti-progress
  • No center to the world

POSTMODERNISM
21
Postmodernism Basic Concepts
The End of Master Narratives
  • Rejection of all master narratives
  • All truths are contingent cultural constructs
  • Skepticism of progress anti-technology bias
  • Sense of fragmentation and decentered self
  • Multiple conflicting identities
  • Mass-mediated reality
  • Life just is

POSTMODERNISM
22
Postmodernism Basic Concepts
The End of Master Narratives
  • All versions of reality are SOCIAL CONSTRUCTS
  • Concepts of good and evil
  • Metaphors for God
  • Language
  • The self
  • Gender
  • EVERYTHING!

POSTMODERNISM
23
Modernity PostModern
One vs. Many
  • History as fact
  • Faith in social order
  • Family as central unit
  • Authenticity of originals
  • Mass consumption
  • Written by the victors
  • Cultural pluralism
  • Alternate families
  • Hyper-reality (MTV)
  • Niches small group identity

POSTMODERNISM
24
What is Postmodernism?
Acceptance of a New Age
  • Continuation of modernist view
  • Does not mourn loss of history, self, religion,
    center
  • A term applied to all human sciences
    anthropology, psychology, architecture, history,
    etc.
  • Reaction to modernism systematic skepticism
  • Anti-foundational

POSTMODERNISM
25
What is Postmodernism?
Acceptance of a New Age
  • The Enlightenment project is dead.

POSTMODERNISM
26
Frederick Jameson
Culture Capital
  • Modernism and postmodernism are cultural
    formations that accompany specific stages of
    capitalism
  • 1. Market capitalism 18th-19th C. Steam
    locomotive Realism
  • 2. Monopoly capitalism Late 19th C to
    WWII Electricity and automobile Modernism
  • 3. Multinational/consumer capitalism Nuclear
    and electronics Postmodernism

POSTMODERNISM
27
Postmodernism Basic Concepts
The End of Master Narratives
  • Life just is
  • Rejection of all master narratives
  • All truths are contingent cultural constructs
  • Skepticism of progress anti-technology bias
  • Sense of fragmentation and decentered self
  • Multiple conflicting identities
  • Mass-mediated reality

POSTMODERNISM
28
Postmodernism Basic Concepts
The End of Master Narratives
  • All versions of reality are SOCIAL CONSTRUCTS
  • Concepts of good and evil
  • Metaphors for God
  • Language
  • The self
  • Gender
  • EVERYTHING!

POSTMODERNISM
29
Postmodernism Basic Concepts
Language As Social Construct
  • Language is a social construct that speaks
    identifies the subject
  • Knowledge is contingent, contextual and linked to
    POWER
  • Truth is pluralistic, dependent upon the frame of
    reference of the observer
  • Values are derived from ordinary social
    practices, which differ from culture to culture
    and change with time.
  • Values are determined by manipulation and
    domination

POSTMODERNISM
30
Richard Rorty (1931-)
Relativism Pluralism
  • A pragmatic philosopher
  • Anti-foundationalist
  • No reality independent of our minds
  • Truth is the result of inter-subjective agreement
    between members of a community
  • We must choose between self-defeating relativism
    or solidarity of thought within our group
  • The goal of the search for truth is to help us
    carry out practical tasks and create a fairer and
    more democratic society

POSTMODERNISM
31
Postmodern View of Language
The Observer is King
  • Observer is a participant/part of what is
    observed
  • Receiver of message is a component of the message
  • Information becomes information only when
    contextualized
  • The individual (the subject) is a cultural
    construct
  • Consider role of own culture when examining
    others
  • All interpretation is conditioned by cultural
    perspective and mediated by symbols and practice

POSTMODERNISM
32
PostModern Literature
Play and Parody
  • Extreme freedom of form and expression
  • Repudiation of boundaries of narration genre
  • Self-reflexive (this is only a work of art)
  • Intrusive author
  • Parodies of meta-narratives
  • Deliberate violation of standards of sense and
    decency (which are viewed as methods of social
    control)
  • Integration of everyday experience, pop culture

POSTMODERNISM
33
PostModern Literature
Fragmented Identities
  • Parody, play, black humor, pastiche
  • Nonlinear, fragmented narratives
  • Ambiguities and uncertainties
  • Conspiracy and paranoia
  • Ironic detachment
  • Linguistic innovations
  • Postcolonial, global-English literature

POSTMODERNISM
34
PostModern Literature
Fragmented Identities
  • Parody, play, black humor, pastiche
  • Nonlinear, fragmented narratives
  • Ambiguities and uncertainties
  • Conspiracy and paranoia
  • Ironic detachment
  • Linguistic innovations
  • Postcolonial, global-English literature

POSTMODERNISM
35
Modernity PostModern
Binary Oppositions
  • History as fact
  • Faith in social order
  • Family as central unit
  • Authenticity of originals
  • Broadway musicals
  • Mass consumption
  • Hierarchy between high and low cultures
  • Written by the victors
  • Cultural pluralism
  • Alternate families
  • Hyper-reality (simulacrum)
  • Music videos
  • Niches small group identity
  • Mixing of high and low disruption of high by pop
    culture

POSTMODERNISM
36
Modernity PostModern
Binary Oppositions
  • Belief in real, lasting truths
  • Seriousness of intention middle-class
    earnestness
  • Red Skelton
  • New York skyline
  • Moral boundaries in art
  • Truth contingent and localizedbooks as marketed
    productswhoever is hot at the moment
  • Irony challenge to anything serious
  • Jon Stewart
  • Las Vegas
  • Anything goes

POSTMODERNISM
37
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
38
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
39
Modern or Postmodern?
  • POSTMODERN
  • Breathless
  • Natural Born Killers
  • Blue Velvet
  • Pulp Fiction
  • Blade Runner
  • The Matrix
  • Moulin Rouge
  • POST-POSTMODERN (Post-Punk)
  • American Beauty
  • Being John Malkovich
  • Magnolia
  • Memento
  • Fight Club

POSTMODERNISM
40
Modern or Postmodern?
  • POSTMODERN
  • Cynicism
  • Irony
  • Playful deconstruction of the rules
  • Mixing of real and hyper-real
  • No sincere attachment to characters
  • Story not important
  • POST-POSTMODERN (Post-Punk)
  • Visually radical, but...
  • Nostalgic for some mythic, uncomplicated,
    preconsumer culture movement
  • A new sincerity
  • Postmodern metaphors of self-reference, irony,
    sumulation absorbed into American culture
  • Narrative matters
  • Nicholas Rombes

POSTMODERNISM
41
Modern or Postmodern?
  • POSTMODERN
  • Retro-styles homage to classic films and
    directors
  • Mixing and reinterpreting the old and the new
  • Playing with old myths and old stories (nothing
    new)
  • Characters occupy different worlds at the same
    time
  • E.g., Blue Velvet, Run Lola Run, Brazil, Blade
    Runner
  • Mixture of truth and fiction (e.g., JFK)

POSTMODERNISM
42
Modern or Postmodern?
  • POSTMODERN POP CULTURE
  • Homer Simpson
  • Hip Hop
  • Civil unions
  • Diversity training
  • Casual wear in formal places
  • Body piercing

POSTMODERNISM
43
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
44
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
45
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
46
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
47
Modern or Postmodern?
A gay Southern Baptist who practices Buddhist
meditation and believes in the Big Bang theory.
POSTMODERNISM
48
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
49
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
50
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
51
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
52
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
53
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
54
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
55
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
56
Modern or Postmodern?
POSTMODERNISM
57
PostModernism
An Epochal Shift in Thinking
  • The narrative is unravelled, the author is dead,
    the Enlightenment project is toast, and history
    is history.
  • An epochal shift in the basic condition in
    being.
  • --Geoffrey Nunberg

POSTMODERNISM
58
PostModernism
Battle of World Views
  • A Global Battle THE OBJECTIVISTS vs.
    THE CONSTRUCTIVISTS

POSTMODERNISM
59
PostModernism
My Way
  • OBJECTIVISTS

When I said during my presidential bid that I
would only bring Christians and Jews into the
government, I hit a firestorm. How dare you
maintain that those who believe in the
Judeo-Christian values are better qualified to
govern America than Hindus and Muslims?' My
simple answer is, Yes, they are.' -from
Pat Robertson's "The New World Order"
POSTMODERNISM
60
PostModernism
Metaphors Kill
  • People were burned at the stake for believing
    there was more than one version of reality.

POSTMODERNISM
61
PostModernism
God is Not Dead
  • Our public schools have become a postmodern
    battleground.

POSTMODERNISM
62
PostModernism
God is Not Dead
  • You can be a Christian (or Buddhist, or
    Hindu, etc.) in the postmodern world.

POSTMODERNISM
63
PostModernism
We Live in the Middle
  • We all slip and slide between the objective and
    constructive views
  • 1. We live in a world of naïve realism.
  • 2. But when we think about things, or
    have to explain our views, we become
    constructivists.

POSTMODERNISM
64
How Popular Culture Changes
as
  • RAYMOND WILLIAMS
  • Dominant ideology controls
  • Human agency people work together to bring
    about change
  • Takes into account pluralismof a culture

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
65
How Popular Culture Changes
Acceptance of Pluralism
Playboy Bunnies June Cleaver
Carrie in Sex The City
Samantha in Sex The City
Monica in Friends
Courtney Love
66
PostModernism
Celebrating Diversity
  • THE HOPE OF POSTMODERNISTS
  • The deconstruction of foundational views will
    lead to a recognition and acceptance of a
    pluralistic worldview.
  • Create a truly global civilization.

POSTMODERNISM
67
PostModernism
Celebrating Diversity
  • DOOM-SAYERS
  • A Godless world.
  • Late capitalism will lead to the complete
    digitization of hyper-reality no hope for an
    alienated, fragmented world duped by the
    machinations of a commodity culture
  • We become simulacra the cloned robots win.

POSTMODERNISM
68
Literary Theory
69
Modernity PostModern
Universality vs. localism
  • Literature as expression of universal truths
    contained in archetypal metaphors
  • Literature as an ideological expression of local,
    culturally constructed truths that are highly
    fluid and dependent on the readers perspective
    in time and place

POSTMODERNISM
70
Modernity PostModern
Universality vs. localism
  • Art is representational
  • Language and imagery can be used to evoke the
    real
  • Metaphysics of presence (I, the speaker, am
    present and impose order on the universe
    presence or being is central to all systems of
    thought)
  • Language is a system of relations from which the
    referent is absent
  • Signification without representation
  • I am just a part of the signifying system of
    language language speaks me

POSTMODERNISM
71
So What?
Now What?
  • The white-Western-male view of the world is dead
  • Truth, identity, gender, etc. are social
    constructs, contingent and local
  • Its all relative and pluralistic
  • Anything goes?

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
72
The Dangers of Postmodernism
Proceed with Caution
  • Can lead to intellectual nihilism cynicism
  • From the comfortable foundation of humanism to
    absolute relativism and pluralism
  • Is humanism really all that bad?
  • Its all theory
  • How do we use theory? Apply all to all texts?
  • Glib, hip intellectualism

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
73
Where Do We Go from Here?
Proceed with Caution
  • Has the progress of history come to a
    dead-end?(as Foucault and Lyotard suggest)
  • Have we reached the point of self-defeating moral
    relativism?
  • Jameson
  • We need narratives, and some sort of history
  • We need to re-endow the individual
  • History, literature have important functions
  • Sarup
  • We need to keep the Enlightenment project alive

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
74
Literary Theory
Three Perspectives
  • THE AUTHOR

75
Literary Theory
Three Perspectives
  • THE AUTHOR
  • THE TEXT

76
Literary Theory
Three Perspectives
  • THE AUTHOR
  • THE TEXT
  • THE READER

77
Literary Theory
Celebrating Diversity
  • Different constructs of reality
  • Lenses through which we see the world

?
POSTMODERNISM
78
Aristotle (384-322 B.C.)
Ancient History
as
  • POETICS Mimetic Theory (learn through example
    representation)
  • History represents the particular
  • Poetry represents the universal
  • Complete and unified action, beginning middle
    and end, short memorable stories
  • Good plot reversal of fortune
  • Anagnorsis recognition of an unknown truth
  • Tragic mimesis Great characters that evoke pity
    and fear
  • Comedy Flawed characters

79
New Criticism
The Sanctity of the Text
as
  • View literature as a valid form of knowledge and
    as a communicator of truths inaccessible via
    scientific and other discourse
  • A work of literature has an organic structure
  • Objective way of analyzing literature
  • Authors intentions are irrelevant

TEXTUAL THEORY
80
Ferdinand de Sausurre (1857-1913)
Structural Linguistics
as
  • Course in General Linguistics (1916)
  • General structures by which language, myths and
    literatures work
  • Language is a system of signs
  • Individual units of a linguistic structure only
    have meaning in relationship to other units
  • Meaning is in the structure not the content

STRUCTURALISM
81
Ferdinand de Sausurre
Signifier Signified
as
  • SIGNIFIED
  • Meaning
  • SIGNIFIER
  • Sound or written word

STRUCTURALISM
82
Ferdinand de Sausurre
Signifier Signified
as
  • SIGNIFIED
  • Meaning
  • SIGNIFIER
  • Sound or written word

SIGNM
STRUCTURALISM
83
Ferdinand de Sausurre
Signifier Signified
as
  • SIGNIFIED
  • Meaning
  • SIGNIFIER
  • Sound or written word

The bond between the two is arbitrary
SIGNM
STRUCTURALISM
84
Ferdinand de Sausurre
Signifier Signified
as
May or may not exist not important to
structuralist only how system of language gives
order to what we perceive as reality
  • SIGNIFIED
  • Meaning
  • SIGNIFIER
  • Sound or written word

Dog / Cat
STRUCTURALISM
85
Ferdinand de Sausurre
Signifier Signified
as
  • SIGNIFIED
  • Meaning
  • SIGNIFIER
  • Sound or written word

Dog / Cat
STRUCTURALISM
86
Ferdinand de Sausurre
Signifier Signified
as
  • SIGNIFIED
  • Meaning
  • SIGNIFIER
  • Sound or written word

Dog / Cat
Freedom
STRUCTURALISM
87
Ferdinand de Sausurre
Binary Oppositions
  • Differencethe relation that creates value
  • Binary oppositionsThe idea of difference is
    based upon the concept of opposing binary pairs
  • Day / night
  • Male / female
  • Goodness / evil
  • Reason / madness
  • Spiritual / earthly

STRUCTURALISM
88
Ferdinand de Sausurre
Language Speaks Us
as
  • LANGUAGE SPEAKS US

STRUCTURALISM
89
Claude Levi-Strauss (1908-)
The Savage Mind
as
  • French anthropologist
  • Took Saussures theories about language and
    applied them to the study of myth and culture
  • Savage mind civilized mind
  • Man obeys laws that are inherent in the brain
  • Myths are not made by an individualbut by the
    collective human consciousness

STRUCTURALISM
90
Claude Levi-Strauss
The Grammar of Myth
  • Every culture organizes knowledge into binary
    pairs
  • Different myths are all variations on a number of
    very basic themes
  • A kind of grammar for narratives inherent in the
    human mind
  • Certain constant universal structures called
    mythemes

STRUCTURALISM
91
Claude Levi-Strauss
The Same Old Stories
  • LANGUAGE predates the individual
  • REALITY is a product of language
  • Jonah and Christ are the same story
  • Thus all myths are timeless
  • Hero needs to overcome an obstacle
  • A story about a guy who loves a girl who is
    inaccessible
  • Woman wants to make chicken soup has no chicken
  • SAME STORY incomplete/completeness

STRUCTURALISM
92
Archetypal
Myths Archetypes
as
  • NORTHROP FRYE, Anatomy of Criticism (1957)
  • Literature formed an objective system that could
    be analyzed scientifically
  • Laws archetypes, myths, genres are basic
    structures (universal patterns)
  • Four narrative categories
  • Comic Spring
  • Romantic Summer
  • Tragic Autumn
  • Ironic Winter

PRECURSORS OF POSTMODERNISM
93
Archetypal
The Universal Conscious
as
  • NORTHROP FRYE, Anatomy of Criticism (1957)
  • All these patterns spring from the COLLECTIVE
    UNCONSCIOUS to reveal universal archetypes
  • Myth Hero is superior
  • Romance Superior in degree
  • Tragedy and epic Superior in degree but not to
    others
  • Comedy and realism Equal to rest of us
  • Satire and irony Inferior

STRUCTURALISM
94
Archetypal
Archetypal Genres
as
  • NORTHROP FRYE, Anatomy of Criticism (1957)
  • Tragedy About human isolation
  • Comedy Human integration

STRUCTURALISM
95
Structuralism
Hidden Structures
  • Reaction against fragmentation of Modernism
  • The forces governing human behavior are hidden
    but detectable
  • Search for underlying hidden structures
  • Science grand unifying theory
  • Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Anthropology universal archetypes
  • Language

PRECURSORS OF POSTMODERNISM
96
Structuralism
Language Creates Us
  • Language and culture produce subjects(the I is
    decentered)
  • Binary oppositions
  • Literature reflects universal psyche of the
    human mind

STRUCTURALISM
97
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
Repressed Truths
as
  • KEY CONCEPTS
  • Id, Superego, Ego
  • Resolution of Oedipus complex gt the Self
  • Repression
  • Dreams displacement and condensation(metaphor
    and metonomy)
  • Neurosis and psychosis
  • Transference

PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM
98
Jacques Lacan (1901-81)
Language Is Us
as
  • Self and identity are social constructions.
  • Our unconscious is just not inside us.
  • It is formed by language which is outside us and
    constructs our sense of self.
  • Language, our parents, the unconscious, the
    symbolic order represent the OTHER.

PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM
99
Jacques Lacan (1901-81)
We Want Our Mothers
as
  • IMAGINARY PHASE One with mother (Oedipal)
  • MIRROR STAGE We recognize a separate being in
    mirror, feel lack for mother recognition of
    OTHER but not SELF birth of the never-fulfilled
    ego (ideal self-image)
  • SYMBOLIC (Oedipal crisis) World of language and
    authority Father rules reason and order
    unconscious is formed emergence of desire
  • REAL Ultra-conscious experiences that lie beyond
    Language such as death, terror, ecstasy, love
    inexpressible Kants thing in itself the
    complete unattainable world

PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM
100
Jacques Lacan (1901-81)
We Want Our Mothers
as
  • Phallogocentric view of life
  • Male bias of authority
  • God the Father
  • We move from the lost plenitude of the originary
    mother-infant symbiotic state to a state
    dominated by Language and Logos (reason,
    knowledge, systems of order
  • This provokes a sense of desire
  • Feminists based theories upon Lacan

PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM
101
Jacques Lacan (1901-81)
We Want Our Mothers
as
  • IMAGINARY Privileges fantasies and dreams
  • SYMBOLIC Tries to make sense of the sensory
    through cultural authority policeable by the
    intellect
  • (Freud tried to translate the Imaginary Order
    into the conceptual Symbolic Order)

PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM
102
Jacques Lacan (1901-81)
The Unconscious As Other
as
  • There is no separation between self and society.
  • Society inhabits the individual.
  • Humans continue to look for an imaginary
    wholeness and unity
  • We have a perpetual lack of wholeness.

PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM
103
Jacques Lacan (1901-81)
The Unconscious As Other
as
  • We constantly negate our identities.

PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM
104
Jacques Lacan (1901-81)
The Voice of the Father
as
  • How does the language of the text signify
    something other than what it says?
  • What aspects of the text reflect the Imaginary,
    Symbolic or Real orders?
  • Is there a voice of a mother or father present?
  • Is the mothers voice (less structured, more
    associational, more fluid) suppressed by a
    phallogocentric symbolic order?
  • Evidence of a splintered, constructed self?

PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM
105
B. F. Skinner (1904-1990)
Behavior Modification
as
  • We cant know the mind--so why worry about it?
  • Focus on behavior what is observable
  • Perceptions, thoughts, images, feelings are
    subjective and immune to measurement
  • Operant conditioning (aversive reinforcing
    stimuli)
  • Skinner Box-- rat in a cage
  • Walden II (utopian vision)

PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM
106
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
Class Struggle
as
  • Communist Manifesto
  • Saw capitalism as a driving force of history
  • Predicted that it would conquer the world
  • Lead to globalization of national economies and
    cultures
  • Would divide world between haves and
    have-nots
  • Class struggle
  • Advocated abolition of private property,
    traditional marriage, concentration of political
    power in the hands of the proletariat

IDEOLOGICAL CRITICISM
107
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
Silent Ideologies
  • APPLICATION TO LITERARY THEORY
  • Hermeneutics of suspicion
  • Focus on what the text hides (ideology is silent)
  • Hegemony A pervasive system of assumptions,
    meanings and valuesthat shapes the way things
    look, what they mean, and what reality is for the
    majority of people within a given culture
    (Antonio Gramsci)
  • How characters are shaped and controlled by
    economics

IDEOLOGICAL
IDEOLOGICAL CRITICISM
108
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
Text as Power
  • Questions a Marxist literary critic would ask
  • Who was the text written for? Is it a power
    play on the part of one class to dominate
    another?
  • What is the underlying ideology?
  • Does the main character affirm or resist
    bourgeoise values?
  • Whose story gets told? Who is left out?
  • In what way are characters or groups of
    peoplecommodified?
  • Role of media consumerism?

IDEOLOGICAL
IDEOLOGICAL CRITICISM
109
Jean Baudrillard (1929-)
You Are What You Consume
  • Cultural materialist
  • Consumer objects signs that differentiate the
    population
  • Our postmodern society is no longer real. It is
    a simulation of the real.
  • Mass media consumerism have created a new myth
    of reality that we accept as real.
  • We live in a state of hyper-reality.

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
110
Jean Baudrillard (1929-)
The Myth of America
  • America is a spectacle
  • An illusionary paradise
  • TV is the world
  • Advertising gives consumers illusion of freedom
  • All is well is the party line
  • Illusion perpetuated by media culture

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
111
Jean Baudrillard (1929-)
The Matrix
  • Simulacrum a copy of a copy whose relation to
    the model has become so attenuated that it can no
    longer properly be said to be a copy. It stands
    on its own as a copy without a model.
  • The airless atmosphere has asphyxiated the
    referent, leaving us satellites in aimless orbit
    around an empty center. We breathe an ether of
    floating images that no longer bear a relation to
    any reality whatsoever.

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
112
Jean Baudrillard (1929-)
The Matrix
  • In The Matrix, people are living what has
    already been lived and reproduced with no reality
    anymore but that of the cannibalized image (Paul
    Martin).
  • Neo hides illegal software in Baudrillards book,
    Simulacra and Simulation (like Western gun
    fighters hid gins in Bibles).
  • The virtual replaces the real.

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
113
Poststructuralism
Rejection of Essentialism
as
  • POSTMODERN LITERARY THEORY
  • Not a unified school A group of theoretical
    positions
  • Self-reflexive discourse that is aware of the
    tentativeness, slipperiness, ambiguities and
    complex interrelations between texts and
    meanings. (Lye)
  • Rejects
  • Totalizing view All phenomenon under one concept
  • Essentialist concept Reality independent of
    language
  • Foundationalism Stable signifying systems rooted
    in human thought

POSTMODERNISM
114
Poststructuralism
All Truths Are Cultural
as
  • STRUCTURALISM
  • The individual is sacred
  • The mind as the realm of meaning
  • Universal laws and essences
  • Inherent universal meanings that precede the text
  • POSTSTRUCTURALISM
  • The subject is a cultural construct
  • Mind created from interactions as situated
    symbolic beings
  • Truth is local language creates reality
  • Meaning is intertextual, determined by social
    discourse changes with history

POSTMODERNISM
115
Poststructuralism
A Rose is Not a Cow
as
  • Meanings are often hidden in the texts
  • Real meaning can be unlocked by deconstructing
    the text
  • Must consider psychological, cultural,
    ideological, gender and other power positions
    of author, characters, intended readers
  • Words are an endless chain of signifiers,
    pointing to nothing but themselves

POSTMODERNISM
116
Roland Barthes (1915-80)
The Author Is Dead
as
  • The author is dead.
  • The text is a multi-dimensional space in which a
    variety of writings, none of them original, blend
    and clash.
  • The reader produces a text on his or her own
    terms, forging meanings from what has already
    been read, seen, done, lived.

PRECURSORS OF POSTMODERNISM
117
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
Down with Descartes
as
Deconstruction is a theory of reading which aims
to undermine the logic of opposition within
texts.
  • Skeptical postmodernist
  • Attacks fundamental principles of Western
    philosophy
  • Influenced by Nietzsche and Heidegger
  • Attacks from a structuralist foundation
  • Agrees that meaning is not inherent in signs
  • Strongly disagrees with bifurcation of
    structuralism

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
118
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
Language as Metaphor
  • Nietzsche influence
  • Language is radically metaphorical in nature
  • Every idea originates through an equating of the
    unequal
  • Metaphors are essentially groundless
  • All assumptions must be questioned
  • Must consider vast plurality of wills to power

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
119
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
The Dangers of Dualism
as
  • STRUCTURALISM is inherently flawed
  • Argues that all STRUCTURES have an implied center
  • All systems have binary oppositions
  • One part more important than another (good/evil,
    male/female)
  • This is logocentrismbasic to all Western thought
    since Plato

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
120
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
Whats Black Is White
as
  • LANGUAGE MEANING
  • A meaning is always temporal and part of a
    network of meanings, part of a chain of meanings
    in a chain or system to which it belongs which is
    always changing.

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
121
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
Viv Le Difference
as
  • THE SELF AS FICTION
  • Our self-presence is a fiction, we are in a
    constant state of differing and deferrence. As
    our center is not really a center, our
    self-presence is a fiction we create to disguise
    the play of opposition and displacement within
    which we live.

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
122
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
Ecriture
as
  • INTERTEXTUALITY
  • All texts refer to other texts (just as signs
    refer to other signs).
  • No interpretations are final.
  • The authority of any text is provisional.

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
123
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
No Final Signified
as
  • STRUCTURALISM
  • Signified
  • Signifier

DECONSTRUCTION Signified Signifier
Signifier Signifier
POSTSTRUCTURALISM
124
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
The Unsaid Truth
as
  • DECONSTRUCTIVE INTERPRETATION
  • Find binary opposition and implied center
  • Refute claims
  • Find contradictions, self-imposed logic that is
    faulty
  • Focus on what text is saying is other than what
    it appears to be saying
  • Look for gaps, margins, figures, echoes,
    digressions, discontinuities

Malerationalism
Femaleemotions
POSTSTRUCTURALISM
125
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
Deconstructing Rousseau
as
  • BINARY OPPOSITIONS
  • Nature / culture
  • Health / disease
  • Purity / contamination
  • Simplicity / complexity
  • Good / evil
  • Speech / writing
  • ASSUMED CENTER
  • Nature is good
  • WHAT HE IS REALLY SAYING
  • Theme of lost innocence
  • Naïve romantic illusion
  • Western guilt overcolonization

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
126
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
Male Domination
as
  • Exclusions and repressions as important as what
    is saidin fact are more central they point to
    the contingency of a central part
  • What is not said provides clues to authors real
    views of power
  • Male Western authorities have encoded within
    their work silence about women and others
    (rationalized exploitation of others without
    knowing it).

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
127
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
Under Erasure
as
  • Man can find truth in nature.

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
128
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
Richness of Language
  • FREEDOM FROM TYRANNY
  • Meaning circulates by difference, by being other.
  • It is creative and inventive.
  • Affirms multiplicity, paradoxes, richness of our
    life .
  • Frees ourselves from tyrannies of univocal
    readings.
  • Opposes humanism, which puts man at the center.
    One can talk about ideas and work with views that
    man is at the center only by placing them under
    erasure.
  • Closer to reality, less artificial

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
129
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
Destruction is Good
as
  • "If anything is destroyed in a deconstructive
    reading, it is not the text, but the claim to
    unequivocal domination of one mode of signifying
    over another. A deconstructive reading is a
    reading which analyses the specificity of a
    text's critical difference from itself."

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
130
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
Fuzzy Reality
as
  • Some literature that recognizes the highly
    mediated nature of our experience, and are
    playful, ironic, explicitly intertextual and
    deconstruct themselves may be closer to reality.

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
131
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
What is Truth?
  • What, therefore, is truth? A mobile army of
    metaphors, metonymies, anthropomorphisms truths
    are illusions of which one has forgotten that
    they are illusions
  • -- Nietzsche

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
132
Jaques Derrida (1930-)
A Long Way from Aristotle
  • TRADITIONAL THEORIES
  • Mimetic
  • Didactic
  • Expressive of truths
  • DECONSTRUCTION
  • The author is dead
  • History and literature become processes of
    intertextuality
  • The careful reader is king

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
133
Feminist Literary Theory
The Second Sex
  • SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR (1908-1986)
  • The Second Sex
  • Questioned the othering of women by Western
    philosophy
  • Rediscovery of forgotten womens literature
  • Revolutionary advocacy of sexual politics
  • Questioning of underlying phallocentric, Western,
    rational ideologies
  • Pluralism gender, sexual, cultural, ethnicity,
    postcolonial perspectives

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
134
Feminist Literary Theory
Gender As a Social Construct
  • Exorcise the male mind
  • Deconstructs logocentricism of male discourse
  • Sees gender as a cultural construct
  • So are stereotypes
  • Focus on unique problems of feminism
  • History and themes of women literature
  • Female language
  • Psycho-dynamics of female creativity

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
135
Feminist Literary Theory
Feminizing Freud
  • JULIA KRISTEVA (1941-)
  • Psychologist, linguist novelist
  • Influenced by Barthes, Freud Lacan
  • Dismantles all ideologies, including feminism
  • Does not consider herself a feminist
  • Disagrees with patriarchal views of Freud and
    Lacan
  • Maternal body source of language and laws (not
    paternal anti-Oedipal drive)

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
136
Feminist Literary Theory
Madness, Holiness Poetry
  • Masculine symbolic order represses feminine
    semiotic order
  • Semiotic open to men and women writers
  • Semiotic is creative--marginal discourse of the
    avant garde
  • Raw material of signification from pre-Oedipal
    drives (linked to mother)
  • Realm of the subversive forces of madness,
    holiness and poetry
  • Creative, unrepressed energy

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
137
Feminist Literary Theory
I Am Woman
  • Challenges Judeo-Christian icons of woman
  • Balancing act live within Lacans symbolic order
    of patriarchal laws without losing uniqueness
  • Women can produce own symbols and language
  • Multiplicity of female expression
  • To break the code, to shatter language, to find
    specific discourse closer to the body and
    emotions, to the unnamable repressed by the
    social contract. --Kristeva

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
138
Feminist Literary Theory
Binary Equals
as
  • ALICE JARDINE, Gynesis (1982)
  • Woman as a binary opposition
  • Man/woman
  • Rational/irrational
  • Good/evil
  • Implied male logocentricism
  • The concept of jouissance

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
139
Helene Cixcous
The Joy of Jouissance
as
  • Critic, novelist, playwright
  • Picks up where Lacan leaves off
  • Denounces patriarchal binary oppositions
  • Women enter into the Symbolic Order differently
  • Deconstructs patriarchal Greek myths
  • Femininity (jouissance) unrepresentable in
    phallocentric scheme of things
  • Favors a bisexual view

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
140
Helene Cixcous
Deconstructing Sigmund
as
  • Women are closer to the Imaginary
  • Women more fluid, less fixed
  • The individual woman must write herself
  • Feminine literature not objective erase
    differences between order and chaos, text and
    speech inherently deconstructive
  • Admires Joyce and Poe
  • Men can produce feminist literature

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
141
Queer Theory
Queer Ideas
as
  • Gender and sexuality not essential to identity
  • Socially constructed
  • Mutable and changeable
  • Self shaped by language, signs and signifiers.
  • Self becomes a subject in language, with more
    multiplicity of meaning.
  • Western ideas of sexual identity come from
    science, religion, economics and politics and
    were constructed as binary oppositions

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
142
Queer Theory
Deconstructing Sex
as
  • Queer theory deconstructs all binary oppositions
    about human sexuality.
  • Encourages the examination of the world from an
    alternative view.
  • Allows for the inclusion of gender, sexuality,
    race and other areas of identity by noticing the
    distinctions between identities, communities, and
    cultures.
  • Challenges heterosexism and homophobia, in
    addition to racism, misogyny and other oppressive
    discourses while celebrating diversity.

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
143
Postcolonialism
The Myth of the Orient
as
  • Attempts to resurrect colonized cultures
  • Deconstruct Western view of third-world nations
    as otherness
  • Edward Said Orientalism was an artificial word
    constructed by the West to talk about and the
    East (Typical binary opposition)
  • Empire-building nations used literature as power
  • Ingrained Western myths phallic logocentricism
    in colonized people

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
144
So?
Now What?
  • The white-Western-male view of the world is dead
  • New Criticism, Marxism Structuralism are passe
  • We now have a new set of lenses to view the
    world
  • We understand the importance of being
    suspicious(literature is not necessarily
    sincere)
  • We recognize that truth, identity, gender, etc.
    are social constructs, contingent and local
  • We recognize the power of discourse
  • PM explains the global world in which we live

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
145
The Dangers of Postmodernism
Proceed with Caution
  • Can lead to intellectual nihilism cynicism
  • From the comfortable foundation of humanism to
    absolute relativism and pluralism
  • Whose lens is correct? Who says so?
  • Is humanism really all that bad?
  • Its all theory
  • How do we use theory? Apply all to all texts?
  • Glib, hip intellectualism

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
146
Where Do We Go from Here?
Proceed with Caution
  • Has the progress of history come to a
    dead-end?(as Foucault and Lyotard suggest)
  • Have we reached the point of self-defeating moral
    relativism?
  • Jameson
  • We need narratives, and some sort of history
  • We need to re-endow the individual
  • History, literature have important functions
  • Sarup
  • We need to keep the Enlightenment project alive

POSTSTRUCTURALISM
147
Different Ways to Read a Film/Novel
  • Archetypal
  • Freudian / Lacanian
  • Ideological
  • Deconstructionist
  • Feminist
  • Queer
  • Post-colonial
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