Difference between revisions of "Postmodernism"

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'''Postmodernism''' is an [[antichristian]],<ref>John F. MacArthur, "Think Biblically!"[http://books.google.ca/books?id=TLHM6mM1KkYC]</ref> far-left, 20th century [[worldview]] and [[academic]] movement characterized by denial of objective truth, and which asserts that assertions of objective knowledge are essentially impossible.  A strong part of postmodernist thought is an intentional departure from traditional approaches that had previously been dominant. Postmodernity has influenced many disparate fields of study, such as architecture, history, literary criticism, art, and others.
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'''Postmodernism''' is recent movement in the humanities characterized by denial of the possibility of knowing objective truth, and which asserts that assertions of objective knowledge are generally impossible.  For example, the postmodern will look at a statement primarily in terms of the motives of the person making it. It emphasizes the role of language, and of power relations involved in being male (versus female), straight (versus gay), white (vesus colored), and imperial (versus colonial).
  
The term "postmodernism" comes from the causal relationship the movement has to [[modernism]], rather than a temporal relationshipBoth movements coexist today.
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Postmodernity has influenced many disparate fields of the humanities, such as literary criticism, linguistics, art history, and photography.  It promotes the study of gay culture (called [[Queer Theory]]) as well as Women's StudiesIt is weakly represented in historiography and the social sciences, and practically does not exist in the sciences or engineering.
  
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Postmodernist thought is an intentional departure from modern approaches that had previously been dominant.  The term "postmodernism" comes from its prejection of the "modern" scientific mentality created by the [[Enlightenment]].  Both movements coexist today, as does traditionalism.
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==History==
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Postmodernism emerged from "structuralism" and "poststructuralism" in French philsoophy of the 1960s, who were influenced by the German philosopher Nietzsche (1844-1900); it adopted a good deal of poststructuralism, but it broadened and extended poststructuralism to topics that focused on a wide-ranging critique of the modern world.<ref> Historian [[Arnold Toynbee]] first used the term "postmodern" in 1954, but in a very different sense.</ref>  Influential French postmodernists include
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Lyotard (who identified and rejected the master narratives of modernism), Derrida (with his notion of deconstruction if a texct to see what really motivated it), Foucault (who stressed that power creates or causes accepted knowledge)  and Baudrillard (who introduced notions of implosion, hyperreality, and simulacra).
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Other favorite terms are: '' Other terms associated with postmodernity include: spectacle, pastiche, ambiguity, doubt, contradiction, novelty, reflexivity, otherness, difference, identity, heterogeneity, upheaval, carnival, turbulence, instability, discontinuity, limitless choice, and flux.''<ref> Best & Kellner, (1997), p. 73</ref>
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==Ideas==
 
Some postmodernist ideas are:
 
Some postmodernist ideas are:
  
 
* Truth is a "[[social construct]]," rather than objectively provable.
 
* Truth is a "[[social construct]]," rather than objectively provable.
 
* A society's choice of language reflects their general perceptions of the rules by which the world operates (see [[political correctness]]).
 
* A society's choice of language reflects their general perceptions of the rules by which the world operates (see [[political correctness]]).
* There is no one superior culture; [[Western culture]] is no better than any other (see [[cultural relativism]]).  This often takes the form of ridicule of anything deemed to be part of [[traditional values]] or mainstream [[American]] culture.  
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* There is no one superior culture; it is a fallacy to presume that [[Western culture]] is somehow than other, a position often taken by people locked inside the culture who have not been able to take a broader viewpoint.  
* The frequent use of irony and humorous [[wordplay]] to shift the meanings of words is encouraged as this causes people to rethink their assumptions about culture and language.
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* Postmoderns often  use irony and [[wordplay]] to shift the meanings of words, so that readers can better realize the unspoken assumptions they have been making.
* [[Gender role]]s, [[sexuality]] and [[race]] are socially constructed, not [[inborn traits]].
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* [[Gender role]]s, sexuality and race are socially constructed, not [[inborn traits]] that are the same forever in all societies.
  
Critics of postmodernism include those who believe in an objective truth that can be explored by human means, among others.
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Critics of postmodernism include traditionalist who believe that truths from authoritative sources should always be believed, and moderns who believe that rational, scientific approaches can lead to the discovery of the truth.  
  
 
==Postmodernism, antiamericanism, and reverse racism==
 
==Postmodernism, antiamericanism, and reverse racism==
Postmodernism is routinely used by academics to attack American interventionist foreign policy, claiming that democratic society is only an aspect of western society, which should not be "forced" upon other peoples, whose cultures may be despotic or theocratic.  In this regard, postmodernism is simply a euphemism for [[moral relativism]] (itself a euphemism for [[sin denial]]).
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Postmodernism can be used to criticize interventionist foreign policy--especially U.S. policies--claiming that forcing other cultures into a Western democratic mold before they are ready for it is a bad idea.  
 
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It is likewise used to attack and condemn the work and culture of white males, by claiming that any such cultural output, be it art, music, literature, etc., is patriarchal and imperialistic. 
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== Antichristian ==
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Postmodernists seek to denigrate [[Christianity]] and its accomplishments by claiming that it is only an aspect of western culture, and not inherently true.  Likewise they denigrate the strong Christian [[scientific]] tradition, and attempt to marginalize Christian historical figures such as [[Isaac Newton]].
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Postmodernists rely on the antichristian and [[pseudoscience|pseudoscientific]] psychological theories of [[atheist]] [[Sigmund Freud]] to draw whatever meanings they want out of texts, in a method called "psychoanalytical criticism."
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A major theme is to attack the culture of "dead white males," by claiming that such cultural output was imposed by patriarchal or imperialistic forces.
  
 
==Postmodernism and immorality==
 
==Postmodernism and immorality==
As postmodernism teaches that there is no truth, it likewise teaches that there is no absolute [[morality]].  Within this worldview, any action is moral or justifiable, and postmodernism's spread among academia may go some way to explaining [[professor values]].
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As postmodernism teaches that there is no revealed truth, it likewise teaches that there is no divinely revealed absolute [[morality]].   
  
==Discredited==
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==Discredited in science==
Alan Sokal famously exposed postmodernism as deeply flawed in 1996 by successfully publishing nonsense in a postmodern journal.<ref>http://www.physics.nyu.edu/faculty/sokal/index.html</ref> Since then, postmodernism has largely been considered a laughingstock among all but the most liberal academics.
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Alan Sokal famously exposed postmodern approaches to the hard sciences is deeply flawed in 1996 by successfully publishing nonsense in a postmodern journal.<ref>http://www.physics.nyu.edu/faculty/sokal/index.html</ref>  
  
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==
 
* [[Deconstruction]]
 
* [[Deconstruction]]
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* [[Orientalism]]
 
* [[Queer theory]]
 
* [[Queer theory]]
 
* [[Nihilism]]
 
* [[Nihilism]]
  
{{liberalism}}
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==Further reading==
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* Best, Steven Best and Douglas Kellner. ''Postmodern Theory '' (1991) [http://www.amazon.com/Postmodern-Theory-Steven-Best/dp/0898624185/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1255660810&sr=1-1 excerpt and text search]
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* Best, Steven Best and Douglas Kellner. ''The Postmodern Turn'' (1997) [http://www.amazon.com/Postmodern-Turn-Steven-Best/dp/1572302216/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1255660575&sr=1-3 excerpt and text search]
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* Hutcheon, Linda. ''The Politics of Postmodernism.'' (2002) [http://www.questia.com/read/107450059?title=The%20Politics%20of%20Postmodernism online edition]
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 02:41, October 16, 2009

Postmodernism is recent movement in the humanities characterized by denial of the possibility of knowing objective truth, and which asserts that assertions of objective knowledge are generally impossible. For example, the postmodern will look at a statement primarily in terms of the motives of the person making it. It emphasizes the role of language, and of power relations involved in being male (versus female), straight (versus gay), white (vesus colored), and imperial (versus colonial).

Postmodernity has influenced many disparate fields of the humanities, such as literary criticism, linguistics, art history, and photography. It promotes the study of gay culture (called Queer Theory) as well as Women's Studies. It is weakly represented in historiography and the social sciences, and practically does not exist in the sciences or engineering.

Postmodernist thought is an intentional departure from modern approaches that had previously been dominant. The term "postmodernism" comes from its prejection of the "modern" scientific mentality created by the Enlightenment. Both movements coexist today, as does traditionalism.

History

Postmodernism emerged from "structuralism" and "poststructuralism" in French philsoophy of the 1960s, who were influenced by the German philosopher Nietzsche (1844-1900); it adopted a good deal of poststructuralism, but it broadened and extended poststructuralism to topics that focused on a wide-ranging critique of the modern world.[1] Influential French postmodernists include Lyotard (who identified and rejected the master narratives of modernism), Derrida (with his notion of deconstruction if a texct to see what really motivated it), Foucault (who stressed that power creates or causes accepted knowledge) and Baudrillard (who introduced notions of implosion, hyperreality, and simulacra).


Other favorite terms are: Other terms associated with postmodernity include: spectacle, pastiche, ambiguity, doubt, contradiction, novelty, reflexivity, otherness, difference, identity, heterogeneity, upheaval, carnival, turbulence, instability, discontinuity, limitless choice, and flux.[2]

Ideas

Some postmodernist ideas are:

  • Truth is a "social construct," rather than objectively provable.
  • A society's choice of language reflects their general perceptions of the rules by which the world operates (see political correctness).
  • There is no one superior culture; it is a fallacy to presume that Western culture is somehow than other, a position often taken by people locked inside the culture who have not been able to take a broader viewpoint.
  • Postmoderns often use irony and wordplay to shift the meanings of words, so that readers can better realize the unspoken assumptions they have been making.
  • Gender roles, sexuality and race are socially constructed, not inborn traits that are the same forever in all societies.

Critics of postmodernism include traditionalist who believe that truths from authoritative sources should always be believed, and moderns who believe that rational, scientific approaches can lead to the discovery of the truth.

Postmodernism, antiamericanism, and reverse racism

Postmodernism can be used to criticize interventionist foreign policy--especially U.S. policies--claiming that forcing other cultures into a Western democratic mold before they are ready for it is a bad idea.

A major theme is to attack the culture of "dead white males," by claiming that such cultural output was imposed by patriarchal or imperialistic forces.

Postmodernism and immorality

As postmodernism teaches that there is no revealed truth, it likewise teaches that there is no divinely revealed absolute morality.

Discredited in science

Alan Sokal famously exposed postmodern approaches to the hard sciences is deeply flawed in 1996 by successfully publishing nonsense in a postmodern journal.[3]

See Also

Further reading

References

  1. Historian Arnold Toynbee first used the term "postmodern" in 1954, but in a very different sense.
  2. Best & Kellner, (1997), p. 73
  3. http://www.physics.nyu.edu/faculty/sokal/index.html