Title: Postmodernism (1)
1Postmodernism (1)
- Image Society Postmodernism
Andy Warhol. Toy Paintings Four Monkeys. 1983.
2From Structuralism to Postmodernism
Poststructuralism
- -- ?????(Poststructuralism)?theories which
challenge the stable structure of language
(binaries) and traditional value systems sees
their meanings as slippery, multiple and
contingent (?????). - --?????(Postmodernism)?cultures which challenge
language and the other types of Truth,
foundation and tradition. (Poststructuralism as
one example.) - --?????(Postmodernity)?The socio-economic and
intellectual conditions which make postmodernism
possible.
Image society M Butterfly
3Why starts with image society
- --a continuation of semiotics from different
language forms to societys languages - -- one major pm phenomenon implosion (??), not
explosion or expansion, of floating signifiers or
simulacra, which are dissociated from their
signified. - ? Loss of meanings possibilities of
self-reflexivity. - -- Our classs uses of images (videos, pictures,
ppt files, etc.) Are we bombarded by images or
are we still active learners?
4Outline
- 1. Image, image everywhere.
- A. Causes
- B. Effects
- 1. Conformity and stereotypes
- 2. Loss of meaning/feelings/history
- 3. Self-reflexivity in the use of signs
- 2. Examples
- A. mixtures of images Music Videos MTV
channel - B. spectacles Living Mall (???)
5Different Kinds of Images
- Increasing domination of pictures in books,
newspapers, multimedia books, E-Text,
letter-writing, classrooms ? influence our
reading habits. - Rapid and wider transmission of images through
electronic means (computer, TV.) - Penetration of ads and commercials in every
corner of public spheres such as the streets,
buses, buildings, subway and highway. - Growing need of producing and using images of
the Other and of self (of a commodity or a
person).
6Causes 1 mechanical/electronic reproduction
- Mechanical and electronic reproduction of image
(photograph, photocopying machine, computer,
etc.) - Walter Benjamin
- -- Art used to be kept in sacred or private
spaces, to be viewed by a selective few. This
made it possess an aura (??) as if it were
sacred. - -- Aura has declined in this age of mechanical
reproduction, because Art is no longer unique it
is more easily available to the general public. - -- Autonomy denied Artistic autonomy is either
a-historical or counter-revolutionary.
7Examples of reproduction Creation of Adam
Creation of Adam in the Sistine Chapel in
Vatican (source)
8Examples of reproduction
Barbara Krugers political revision of Creation
of Adam Untitled 1982 The words are imposed on
the original image to intercept its
representation of power (of Mans).
9Causes 2 development of image
- Baudrillard the successive phases of the
image - 1. it is the reflection of a profound reality
--e.g. of Gods - 2. it masks and denatures a profound reality
--e.g. industrial revolution or early capitalism. - 3. it masks the absence of a profound reality
--e.g. the death of God or truth - 4. it has no relation to any reality whatsoever
it is its own pure simulacrum. - ? Hyperreality the only real is that which can
be reproduced.
10Causes 3 development of capitalism
- Jameson
- cultural logic of postmodernism
- Overall commodification Capital commodifies
everything. - On the one hand, art is commercialized on the
other, consumption can be aestheticized, too.
11Effects 1 Conformity and stereotypes
- Capitalism commodifies everything and emphasize
its symbolic value or value as an image. every
mass-produced images Conformity The consumers
identify with the images they buy with the
commodities and thus are massified by them
(become a mass). - ? Self flattened and collaged identity
- ? Other stereotypes
12Effects 2 Loss of meaning/feelings/history
- loss of meaning floating signifiers
- loss of feelings no sense of involvement
- loss of history history presented with
stereotypes.
13Effects 3 Self-reflexivity in the use of signs
- The destabilization of traditional meaning
structures also means freedom to create new
meanings - -- in art metafiction (e.g. M. Butterfly)
- -- in popular culture mix and re-mix parody
and pastiche - -- in consumption choice and combination of
style choice of leisure activities and routes to
travel.
14Music videos self-reflexive uses of video images
- Money for Nothing (1985)
- Losing my Religion (Out Of Time 1991)
- If (Janet 1993)
- Atom Bomb (1996)
- MTVs and Channel Vs commercials in 1999.
- ? Gradual loss of meanings?
151. Dire Straits
- -- took their name from their early financial
status - -- "Money for Nothing- chanting that pop stars
get their "money for nothing, and their chicks
for free" - -- But rather than causing a stir in the music
industry or unleashing a backlash by the video
community, MTV embraced the song as their new
anthem. The video, which featured sophisticated
(for the time) 3-D computer animation, went into
heavy rotation, and the band became international
superstars. The message of the song, meanwhile,
was evidently lost on everyone.
162. Losing My Religion video as metonymic
expressions of the lyrics
- 1. Lyrics struggle by oneself
- to communicate
- That's me in the corner
- That's me in the spotlight
- Losing my religion
- Trying to keep up with you
- And I don't know if I can do it
- Oh No, I've said too much
- I haven't said enough
2. Video a collage of singing, spotlight
scene, and Icarus scene
17Losing My Religion parodying the Icarus myth
Everything is just a dream.
18If by Janet Jackson
Video desiring and rejecting the male dancer
- Lyrics
- Oh the things I'd do to you
- I'd make you call out my name
- I'd ask who it belongs to
- If I was your woman
- The things I'd do to you
- But I'm not
- So I can't
- Then I won't
- But
- If I was your girl
19If Orientalism desiring the images on the
screen
Multiple choices of virtual sex single, double,
trio, two couples. Janet Jackson still the
central object of desire
20Atom Bomb by Fluke
Fluke, a UK electronic band
- Atom Bomb, a computer game (the Sony Playstation
game Wipeout 2097) sound track that brought to
life a Japanese Manga styled cartoon character in
the shape and form of Arial Tetsuo, aka Rachel
Stewart. (sources info, image.
21Atom Bomb pastiche of images and identity
- Lyrics
- Baby got a Nobel PrizeGiven for the perfect
crimeBaby got an alibiBaby got eight more
livesBaby got the purple hairBaby got a secret
lairBaby got an army thereI aint never seen
this baby get scared.
22MTVs and Channel Vs commercials in 1999
- -- The commercials are like the music videos
themselves with fast-changing images, only the
the commercials are shorter and even faster in
pace. - -- self-reflexive collage of recognizable images,
such as Munchs Scream. - -- self-reflexive showing of frames of TV set and
the multiple space in TV. - -- not completely without a sense of history
e.g. ???MTV.
23Example 2 the Living Mall
- Mall a spectacular and self-enclosed space
- which either hide or naturalize its commercial
reality by capturing the shoppers attention with
its multitude of signs. - the Living Mall ???
Capital as the Center of cultures, celebrities
and talents ? Supported by its spectacular design
natural
24The Society of the Spectacleby Guy Debord, 1967
- The spectacle presents itself simultaneously as
all of society, as part of society, and as
instrument of unification. As a part of society
it is specifically the sector which concentrates
all gazing and all consciousness. Due to the very
fact that this sector is separate, it is the
common ground of the deceived gaze and of false
consciousness, . . . - 4. The spectacle is not a collection of images,
but a social relation among people, mediated by
images. (source) ? We live out the spectacle
according to someone elses design, like actors
following a script.
25The mall commodification of everyday life
- to make it work 1) retail mix to attract the
desired mix of consumers 2) seductive to keep
the shoppers there. ? maze-like structure,
special design (of hallway and food court). - 3) a surfeit of signs, each of which, . .. ,
serves to actively hide or mask the malls
function, which is to make money. Or if it
doesn't hide that function, then it certainly
naturalizes it, such that the commodification of
reality becomes simply God-given (Mitchell
134-35)
26??? a self-enclosed spectacular world1.
Appearance 2. Entering by ascending
272. Allegories re-written
- --showing its story of construction-- street
names for each floor-- a space ship? ? soccer
28??? a self-enclosed spectacular world3. The
basement eating court-- like a theatre
29??? a self-enclosed spectacular world (4)
Circular structure supports the shoppers inward
and mutual gazes
30??? space of the spectacle commercial space
31??? space of the spectacle maze-like routes
of ascension
32??? space of the spectacle commercial space
33??? space of the spectacle commercial space
34Interchangeable signs
- Despite their colorfulness, the commodities as
signs are similar to each other, if not the same
in some cases.
35References
- Mitchell, Don. Cultural Geography A Critical
Introduction. Massachusetts Blackwell, 2000.