Title: Lecture 7: The Postmodern Turn
1Lecture 7The Postmodern Turn
- CRS 1001 Introduction to Cultural Studies
2Modernity
- Period after the 'Middle Ages' or feudalism
theorized by Marx, Weber - characterized by innovation, novelty, and
dynamism - The Enlightenment (about 1648 1781)
- Immanuel Kant
- Enlightenment is mans release from his
self-incurred tutelage.mans inability to make
use of his understanding without direction from
anotherSapere aude! (Dare to know)
3Cartesian Reason
- Reason ? autonomy, nature, progress
- Truth ? the foundation
- Modernization
- processes of individualization, secularization,
industrialization, cultural differentiation,
commodification, urbanization, bureaucratization,
and rationalization
4LEONARDO DA VINCI 1452-1519
- Last Supper, painted in 1495
5Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) The Ball at
the Moulin dela Galette, 1876
- Embody a most basic attitudes about art and life
- men and women together
- open and casual
- warm, radiant sunlight
- Figures blend softly into one another and into
their surrounding space - The world is pleasurable, sensuous
- Generously endowed with human feeling
6Juan Gris, a Spanish artist (1887-1927)together
with Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque the first
and greatest exponents of the cubist painting
Portrait of Picasso 1912 Oil on canvas, 93.4 x
74.3 cm (36 3/4 x 29 1/4 in) Collection of Mr.
and Mrs. Leigh Block Art Institute of Chicago
7Failures of modernity
- Aesthetic modernity
- rebelled against industrialization and
rationalization - failures of modernity
- economic disparity, gender discrimination,
imperialism
8The Search for Postmodern
- Ending of an epoch?
- new postmodern philosophy (Nietzche, Foucault,
Derrida, Baudrillard, Deleuze and Guattari,
Lyotard, etc.) - diversities between postmodern positions
9Postmodernism the beginnings
- Individual use in late 19th and early 20th
centuries - Gained significance in American criticism in 50s
and 60s - Classical texts
- Fredric Jamesons Postmodernism or the Cultural
Logic of Late Capitalism (1984) - Blade Runner (1981)
10Blade Runner (1981)
- A Ridley Scott adaptation of the Philip K. Dick
novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
11Postmodernity
- post as an epochal term, a rupture
- new forms of knowledge advanced information
?produce a postmodern social formation
(Baudrillard, Lyotard) - development of a higher stage of (consumerist)
capitalism (Federic Jameson) -
12Postmodern
- Conspicuous display of a formal
self-consciousness - Borrowing of texts and styles across all
boundaries - Listens to reggae, watches Westerns, eats
MacDonalds for lunch and local cuisine for
dinner, wears Paris perfume in Tokyo and retro
clothing in Hong Kong knowledge is a matter for
TV games.
13Challenges
- increased cultural fragmentation new modes of
experience, subjectivity, and culture - A world of floating images simulations
- Loss of the sense of originality
- Loss of authentic identity
- Loss of values and standards in art and morality
14The critique of modern theory
- Rejection of grand narratives from Descartes to
Marx, Weber for their - search for a foundation
- universalizing and totalizing claims
- apodictic truth
- fallacious rationalism
15Postmodernism
- The advancement of technology overtook the
advancement of industry in 1900s - Media images encourage superficiality rather than
substance, cynicism rather than belief, the
thirst for constant changes rather than security
of stable traditions, the desires of the moment
rather than the truths of history (Strinati 1991)
16Baudrillard
- Media-saturated consumer society
- Signifier detached from its signified
- World of floating images copies without
originals - Simulacrum simulations stand in for the real
17Andy Warhol, American Pop Artist (1928-1987)
- Campbell's Soup Can (1964) Silkscreen on
canvas 35 3/4 x 24 in - Leo Castelli Gallery, New York
200 Campbell's Soup Cans (1962)Oil on canvas, 6
ft x 8 ft 4 inLeo Castelli Gallery, New York
18Jean Baudrillard Simulations (1983)
- Simulation models of a real without origin or
reality ? hyperreal - The map precedes/engenders the territory
- Difference between the two has disappeared
- The real is produced from miniaturised units,
memory banks that can be reproduced an
indefinite number of times - Substituting signs of the real for the real itself
19Hyperreality
- A hyperreality of simulations in which images,
spectacles and the play of signs have replaced
the logic of production and class conflict - The model structures social reality erosion of
the distinction between the model and the real - The boundary between representation and reality
implodes - Signs and codes constitute the real
20Jean Baudrillard
- There is no clear appropriate answer to defining
postmodernism. Basically, if post-modernism
exists, it must be the characteristic of a
universe where there is no more definitions
possible. It is a game of definitions which
mattersthey have been deconstructed,
destroyedit has all be done. The extreme limit
of these possibilities has been reachedall that
are left are the pieces.
21The postmodern critique
- no rational, unified subject but a decentered,
fragmented one - ?provides a critique of representation
- not macroperspectives but microtheory and
micropolitics (Lyotard 1984a)
22Postmodern Culture
- A sense of fragmentary, ambiguous and uncertain
nature of living - An awareness of the centrality of contingency
- A recognition of cultural difference
- The collapse of cultural boundaries
- a bricolage, the blending and blurring of styles
and genres - An acceleration in the pace of living
23Lyotard Lets make war on Totality
- Five Major Characteristics
- Rejection of any unifying, grand narrative
- End of totalistic or unifying thought
- loss of confidence in causal relations,
predictability, controllability, etc. - A fundamental change of worldview crisis of a
mechanist world - disbelief in determinism, stability, order,
balance, progress etc. - Right to radical differences
- Pluralism in everyday life
24Wong Kar Wai Chungking Express (1994)