Title: Postmodernism
1Postmodernism
2What Exactly Do We Mean By Postmodern
- The Result of
- The Aftermath of
- The Afterbirth of
- The Development of
- The Denial of
- The Rejection of
3What is Modern?
- Modern means just now.
- History is divided into periods.
- In Western thought, Tradition defines itself
against its predecessors.
4What is Modernism?
- Refers to the changes wrought by the
technological effects of industrialization. - Technology- internal combustion engine, steam
turbine, telephone, tape machine, synthetics - Mass Media/Entertainment- advertising, mass
circulation newspapers, radios, movies - Science- Genetics, Freud (psychoanalysis),
Rutherfords model of the atom, Plancks quantum
theory, Einsteins Special and General theories
of Relativity
5Understanding the Shift to Postmodernism Through
Art
- Picasso- anti-representational model of
(de)form(ation) - The Crisis of Representation- photography and
mass production replaced hand crafted original
art. Realism was coming to an end.
Representation - Cezanne- creates uncertainty in perception.
Depict the effect of perceiving reality, rather
than reality. - Cubism- rejected the notion of a single
isolatable event, the view contains the viewer.
6The End of Original Art?
- Walter Benjamin argued that the aura of art (the
fetish of sacred uniqueness) is eliminated by
mass production. - This has a disintegrating effect on originality
itself.
7The Postmodern- Art
- When the modern is at war with itself, it becomes
post modern. - What, then, is the postmodern?... It is
undoubtedly a part of the modern. All that has
been received, if only yesterdaymust be
suspected. What space does Cezanne challenge?
The Impressionists. What object do Picasso and
Braque attack? Cezannes. What presupposition
does Duchamp break with in 1912? That which says
one must make a painting, be it Cubist. And
(Daniel) Buren questions that other
presupposition which he believes had survived
untouched in the work of acceleration, the
generations precipitate themselves. A work can
become modern only if it is first postmodern.
Postmodernism thus understood is not modernism at
its end but in the nascent state, and the state
is constant. Lyotard, 1979
8False Postmodernism
- Antimodernism- asks for an end to
experimentation. Tends to have conservative
tendancies. - Eclectic Postmodernism- degree zero of
contemporary general culture one listens to
reggae, watches a Western, eats McDonalds food
for lunch and local cuisine for dinner, wears
Paris perfume, wears retro clothes. All
tastes, like all needs, are attended to by
the market.
9Postmodernism
- Has three key items on the agenda
- 1) Reproducibility
- 2) A Consumerist Aura
- 3) Legitimation
10Reproducibility
- Everything is reproducible
- Reproducibility increases the value of the real.
11Consumerist Aura
- Extends to anything that has nostalgia value.
- Image Consumerism- the reproduced is taking the
place of the real, or replacing it as
hyper-reality. The reproduced is taking the
place of reality or replacing it as
hyper-reality. - We are living what has already been lived and
reproduced with no reality anymore but that of
the cannibalized image.
12Legitimation
- Whose power will legitimate what is done, and
the right way of doing it. - Why are some things in? Why are some things art?
- The Role of the Critic in the process of
legitimation. - The irony of postmodernist anti-art as becoming
legitimated as prized and highly priced
commodities.
13Jean-Francois Lyotard
- Jean-Francois Lyotard was born in 1924 at
Versailles - Taught philosophy in secondary schools from 1949
to 1959. He taught at universities at Nanterre
and Vincennes. - Later he secured a post as professor of
philosophy at the University of Paris VIII
(Saint-Denis) which he held until his retirement
in 1989. - He was also professor of philosophy at the
Collège International de Philosophie in Paris,
and professor of French and Italian at the
University of California at Irvine. - Active member of the radical Marxist group
Socialisme ou barbarie for some ten years from
1954 to 1964. - Then he joined another radical group, Pouvoir
ouvrier, only to leave two years later. - From 1955 onwards, while a member of Socialisme
ou barbarie, Lyotard was assigned responsibility
for the Algerian section. His accounts of the
anti-imperialist struggle in Algeria, as Bill
Readings (1993 xiii) argues, "provide a useful
empirical corrective to charges that
poststructuralism is an evasion of politics, or
that Lyotards account of the postmodern
condition is a blissful ignorance of the
postcolonial question". - After 1966 Lyotard discontinued his active
political affiliation with any radical Marxist
group and, indeed, this break, autobiographically
speaking, represents intellectually, on the one
hand, a break with Marxism and, on the other, a
turn to philosophy.
14Lyotards philosophical writings divide into two
main periods
- First Period- signaled a conscious shift away
from the doctrinaire praxis philosophy. - Second Period- An investigation into the
Postmodern Condition.
15The First Period
- He attempts to develop a metaphysics of truth
without negation - He attempts to substitute Freuds economy of
libidinal energy (and the notion of primary
process) for Marxist political economy. - In this situation there is no truth arrived at
through dialectics the supposed ethical and
social truths of Marxism, based upon an appeal to
an historical ideal, are no better than the
falsehoods it wants to overcome.
16Lyotards Critique of Dialectics
- Lyotard (1974) criticizes the underlying notion
of the dialectic. - He does not believe that a political,
philosophical, or artistic position is to be
abandoned because it is "sublated". - It is not true that the experience of a position
means its inevitable exhaustion and necessary
development into another position where it is
both conserved and suppressed. - Veerman (1988 272) suggests that the upshot of
Lyotards metaphysics in his first period is
simply that "we cannot take one political stand
rather than another, since the correct one cannot
be decided".
17Breaking with Marxism
- What if there wasnt any Self at all in
experience to synthesize contradictorily the
moments and thus to achieve knowledge and
realization of itself? - What if history and thought did not need this
synthesis? - What if the paradoxes had to remain paradoxes?
- What if Marxism itself were in its turn one of
those particular universals which it was not even
a question of going beyond?
18The New Realities Confronting Marxism
- Capitalism had survived. Modern capitalism, once
its market and production capacities had been
restored, had set up new relations of
exploitation and taken on new forms. - Lyotard lists the following the new realities
confronting Marxism - 1) The reorganization of capitalism into
bureaucratic or State monopolistic capitalism - 2) The role of the modern State in the so-called
mixed economy - 3) The dynamics of the new ruling strata
(bureaucratic or technocratic) within the
bourgeoisie the impact of the new techniques on
work conditions and on the mentality of workers
and employee - 4) The effects of economic growth on daily life
and culture - 5) The appearance of new demands by workers and
the possibility of conflicts between the base and
the apparatus in worker organizations"
19The Second Phase- Postmodern Lyotard
- He acknowledges his debt.
- the Marxian analysis of commodity fetish as it
applies to knowledge and education
(commodification thesis). - It is one of the main processes of
rationalisation which guides the development of
the system as a whole. - He recognizes the way in which the logic of
performance, aimed at maximizing the overall
efficiency of the system, generates
socio-economic contradictions, but he parts
company with Marxists on the possibility of
emancipation or of salvation expected to arise
automatically from these contradictions.
20Lyotards Project in Postmodernity
- "Our role as thinkers is to deepen what language
there is, to critique the shallow notion of
information, to reveal an irremediable opacity
within language itself". The issue for Lyotard is
one of understanding and providing a critique of
capitalist forms of the insinuation of will into
reason and the way this is manifest primarily in
language. (1993)
21The Modern and the Postmodern
- The Modern Condition
- to designate any science that legitimates itself
with reference to a metadiscourse . . . making an
explicit appeal to some grand narrative, such as
the dialectics of the Spirit, the hermeneutics of
meaning, the emancipation of the rational or
working subject, or the creation of wealth
(Lyotard 1984xxiii). - The Postmodern Condition
- "incredulity toward metanarratives" by which he
means to point to "the obsolescence of the
metanarrative apparatus of legitimation" to which
corresponds "the crisis of metaphysical
philosophy and of the university institution . .
."
22Lyotard- The Postmodern Condition
- What is the Postmodern condition-
- that the status of knowledge is altered as
societies enter what is known as the
postindustrial age and cultures enter what is
known as the postmodern age" (1984 3). - He uses the term postmodern condition to
describe the state of knowledge and the problem
of its legitimation in the most highly developed
societies. - It is the state of Western culture "following the
transformations which, since the end of the
nineteenth century, have altered the game rules
for science, literaure and the arts" (Lyotard,
1984 3).
23Transformations of the Postmodern Condition
- Lyotard places these transformations within the
context of the crisis of narratives, - Especially those Enlightenment metanarratives
concerning meaning, truth and emancipation which
have been used to legitimate both the rules of
knowledge of the sciences and the foundations of
modern institutions.
24The Role of Language
- Significantly, he maintains, the leading sciences
and technologies have all been based on
language-related developments -- theories of
linguistics, cybernetics, informatics, computer
languages, theories of algebra -- and their
miniaturization and commercialization.
25Language and Knowledge
- Lyotard argues that the status of knowledge is
permanently altered by the changes in language. - The availability of knowledge as an international
commodity becomes the basis for national and
commercial advantage within the global economy. - Knowledge has already become the principal force
of production, changing the composition of the
workforce in developed countries. - The commercialization of knowledge and its new
forms of media circulation will raise new
ethical-legal problems between the nation-state
and the information-rich multinationals, as well
as widening the gap between developed and Third
worlds.
26Lyotard on Politics
- Lyotard (1988b) suggests that "the essential
philosophical task will be to refuse . . . the
complete aestheticization of the political"
(ibid.) characteristic of modern politics. - By aestheticization Lyotard means an active
fashioning or shaping of the community or polity
according to the idea of reason. - He addresses the crisis of "the end of the
political", that is, "of all attempts to moralize
politics which were incarnated in Marxism"
(Lyotard, 1988b 300). - Lyotards political writings are characterized by
a "resistance to modern universalism" by an
argument against what may be called the "politics
of redemption". - What we are presented with in Lyotards work, as
an alternative, is a politics of resistance, a
form of writing which offers resistance to
established modes of thought and accepted
opinion.
27Jean Baudrillard
- Was born in 1929 in the northern town of Reims.
- Son of civil servants and grandson of peasant
farmers, Baudrillard was the first in his family
to attend university - His early life is influenced by the Algerian war
in the 1950s and 60s. - He taught German in a Lycée before completing his
doctoral thesis in sociology under the tuition of
Henri Lefebvre. - He then became an Assistant in September 1966 at
Nanterre University of Paris. - He was associated with Roland Barthes, to whose
semiotic analysis of culture his first book, The
Object System (1968) is clearly indebted. - He was also influenced by Marshall McLuhan who
demonstrated the importance of the mass media in
any sociological overview. - He became Mâitre-assistant at the University in
1970, and left the school in 1987.
28Is Baudrillard a Sociologist?
- According to him, NO. Much of his work is intent
on destroying the discipline - He also does not consider himself a philosopher.
- Perhaps, he is a moralist.
29Baudrillards Influences
- Lefebvres Critique of Everyday Life (1958) and
its analysis of structures beyond the workplace
including Marxs concept of Alienation. - Revolution of the Everyday- to resist the
bureaucratic society of controlled consumption. - Sartres creation of the intellectual as
independent from political parties, free to
build a dialogue with Marxism.
30Mass Consumption
- Baudrillard provides a critical account of the
emergence and effect of mass consumption. - Modernization leads to mass consumption.
- Baudrillard argues Marxs theories have stalled.
- Consumption, not production, is the basis of the
social order.
31Is He Influenced by Structuralism?
- NO
- He opposes structuralism because he sees it as a
system intent on classifying culture. This is
repressive.
- Yes
- Structural systems at work in consumption, and
structuralism could be used to expose its
dynamics.
32Jean Baudrillard- The Simulacrum
- Postmodernism as the end of theory.
- The border between art and reality has utterly
vanished as both have collapsed into the
universal simulacrum. - The simulcrum is arrived at when the distinction
between representation and reality- between signs
and what they refer to in the real world breaks
down.
33Simulations
- Reality no longer emits signs with guarantee its
existence. - Sings now construct the real as simulations.
- It is no longer relevant to say the real world
exists. No system of representation or
analysis can refer to the reality.
34The Four Stages of Images
- Images have Four Successive Historic Phases
- 1) It is the Reflection of a basic reality.
- 2) It masks and perverts a basic reality.
- 3) It marks the absence of a basic reality.
- 4) It bears no relation to any reality whatever-
it is its own pure simulacrum.
351) Symbolic Order
- Early stages in which hierarchical systems
predominate. - Signs are limited and fixed by rank, duty and
obligation. - Social mobility is not expected/possible and
wrongful use of signs is punished. - Reality is not an issue. Signs do not play with
social reality. They are dominated by
unbreakable and reciprocal symbolic order.
362) First Order of Simulacra (1400- 1800)- Signs
Pervert a Basic Reality
- This stage is dominated by counterfeits and false
images. - Ranges from the Renaissance to the Industrial
Revolution. - Fashion is born. Competition over signs succeeds
statutory order. - The sign is freed and refers not to obligation
but to produced signified (meanings like status,
wealth, prestige). - Most class enter this sign exchange.
- When signs are emancipated from duty, they can
pretend to be anything. - They dream of the symbolic order, but can only
feign it or falsify it. - Now signs take over all aspects of social life
and provide a schematic equivalent for it.
373) Second Order of Simulacra- Signs Mask the
Absence of a Basic Reality (Industrial Period)
- This period is dominated by the production and
the series. Signs are mass produced. - Signs are repetitive, systematic, operational and
make individuals the same (as in the system of
objects). - The sign is not a counterfeit of the original, it
refers indifferently to other signs in the
series. - Derived from Marxs commercial law of value
belong here.
384) Third Order Simulacra (Current Phase)
- Is dominated by simulation.
- Signs bear no relation to any reality whatsoever.
They are pure simulacra simulations. - The real returns but only in its simulation.
- Simulations are not appearances of reality-this
would leave the reality principle intact.
39Hyper-Reality
- Reality becomes redundant and we have reached
hyper-reality. - Images breed incestuously with each other without
reference to reality or meaning.
40The Nullification of Reality
- -For the sign to be pure, it has to duplicate
itself it is the duplication of the sign which
destroys its meaning. - And so Art is dead, not only because its
critical transcendence is gone, but because
reality itself, entirely impregnated by an
aesthetic which is inseparable from its own
structure, has been confused with its own image.
Reality no longer has the time to take on the
appearance of reality. It no longer even
surpasses fiction it captures every dream even
before it takes on the appearance of a dream.
41Understanding Simulations and Culture
- Culture is no longer a living body, the
presence of a collectivity (religion, feasts,
storytelling) producing signs. - Now signs produce cultures.
- Culture is described by the dynamics of
consumption-fashion cycles, ambience, codes. No
aspect of culture escapes this. - The main example of this is cultural recycling
ephemeral signs of past culture which are
produced as simulations.