The Death of Postmodernism And Beyond
Not my work - but I decided to keep this as it was the most commented-on article from the old version of State Your Position.
Alan Kirby
Philosophy Now
Nov/Dec 2006
Postmodernism is dead and buried. In its place comes a new paradigm of authority and knowledge formed under the pressure of new technologies and contemporary social forces.
I have in front of me a module description downloaded from a British university English department’s website. It includes details of assignments and a week-by-week reading list for the optional module ‘Postmodern Fictions’, and if the university is to remain nameless here it’s not because the module is in any way shameful but that it handily represents modules or module parts which will be taught in virtually every English department in the land this coming academic year. It assumes that postmodernism is alive, thriving and kicking: it says it will introduce “the general topics of ‘postmodernism’ and ‘postmodernity’ by examining their relationship to the contemporary writing of fiction”. This might suggest that postmodernism is contemporary, but the comparison actually shows that it is dead and buried.
Postmodern philosophy emphasises the elusiveness of meaning and knowledge. This is often expressed in postmodern art as a concern with representation and an ironic self-awareness. And the argument that postmodernism is over has already been made philosophically. There are people who have essentially asserted that for a while we believed in postmodern ideas, but not any more, and from now on we’re going to believe in critical realism. The weakness in this analysis is that it centres on the academy, on the practices and suppositions of philosophers who may or may not be shifting ground or about to shift – and many academics will simply decide that, finally, they prefer to stay with Foucault [arch postmodernist] than go over to anything else. However, a far more compelling case can be made that postmodernism is dead by looking outside the academy at current cultural production.
Most of the undergraduates who will take ‘Postmodern Fictions’ this year will have been born in 1985 or after, and all but one of the module’s primary texts were written before their lifetime. Far from being ‘contemporary’, these texts were published in another world, before the students were born: The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Nights at the Circus, If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (and Blade Runner), White Noise: this is Mum and Dad’s culture. Some of the texts (‘The Library of Babel’) were written even before their parents were born. Replace this cache with other postmodern stalwarts – Beloved, Flaubert’s Parrot, Waterland, The Crying of Lot 49, Pale Fire, Slaughterhouse 5, Lanark, Neuromancer, anything by B.S. Johnson – and the same applies. It’s all about as contemporary as The Smiths, as hip as shoulder pads, as happening as Betamax video recorders. These are texts which are just coming to grips with the existence of rock music and television; they mostly do not dream even of the possibility of the technology and communications media – mobile phones, email, the internet, computers in every house powerful enough to put a man on the moon – which today’s undergraduates take for granted.
The reason why the primary reading on British postmodernism fictions modules is so old, in relative terms, is that it has not been rejuvenated. Just look out into the cultural market-place: buy novels published in the last five years, watch a twenty-first century film, listen to the latest music – above all just sit and watch television for a week – and you will hardly catch a glimpse of postmodernism. Similarly, one can go to literary conferences (as I did in July) and sit through a dozen papers which make no mention of Theory, of Derrida, Foucault, Baudrillard. The sense of superannuation, of the impotence and the irrelevance of so much Theory among academics, also bears testimony to the passing of postmodernism. The people who produce the cultural material which academics and non-academics read, watch and listen to, have simply given up on postmodernism. The occasional metafictional or self-conscious text will appear, to widespread indifference – like Bret Easton Ellis’ Lunar Park – but then modernist novels, now long forgotten, were still being written into the 1950s and 60s. The only place where the postmodern is extant is in children’s cartoons like Shrek and The Incredibles, as a sop to parents obliged to sit through them with their toddlers. This is the level to which postmodernism has sunk; a source of marginal gags in pop culture aimed at the under-eights.
What’s Post Postmodernism?
I believe there is more to this shift than a simple change in cultural fashion. The terms by which authority, knowledge, selfhood, reality and time are conceived have been altered, suddenly and forever. There is now a gulf between most lecturers and their students akin to the one which appeared in the late 1960s, but not for the same kind of reason. The shift from modernism to postmodernism did not stem from any profound reformulation in the conditions of cultural production and reception; all that happened, to rhetorically exaggerate, was that the kind of people who had once written Ulysses and To the Lighthouse wrote Pale Fire and The Bloody Chamber instead. But somewhere in the late 1990s or early 2000s, the emergence of new technologies re-structured, violently and forever, the nature of the author, the reader and the text, and the relationships between them.
Postmodernism, like modernism and romanticism before it, fetishised [ie placed supreme importance on] the author, even when the author chose to indict or pretended to abolish him or herself. But the culture we have now fetishises the recipient of the text to the degree that they become a partial or whole author of it. Optimists may see this as the democratisation of culture; pessimists will point to the excruciating banality and vacuity of the cultural products thereby generated (at least so far).
Let me explain. Postmodernism conceived of contemporary culture as a spectacle before which the individual sat powerless, and within which questions of the real were problematised. It therefore emphasised the television or the cinema screen. Its successor, which I will call pseudo-modernism, makes the individual’s action the necessary condition of the cultural product. Pseudo-modernism includes all television or radio programmes or parts of programmes, all ‘texts’, whose content and dynamics are invented or directed by the participating viewer or listener (although these latter terms, with their passivity and emphasis on reception, are obsolete: whatever a telephoning Big Brother voter or a telephoning 6-0-6 football fan are doing, they are not simply viewing or listening).
By definition, pseudo-modern cultural products cannot and do not exist unless the individual intervenes physically in them. Great Expectations will exist materially whether anyone reads it or not. Once Dickens had finished writing it and the publisher released it into the world, its ‘material textuality’ – its selection of words – was made and finished, even though its meanings, how people interpret it, would remain largely up for grabs. Its material production and its constitution were decided by its suppliers, that is, its author, publisher, serialiser etc alone – only the meaning was the domain of the reader. Big Brother on the other hand, to take a typical pseudo-modern cultural text, would not exist materially if nobody phoned up to vote its contestants off. Voting is thus part of the material textuality of the programme – the telephoning viewers write the programme themselves. If it were not possible for viewers to write sections of Big Brother, it would then uncannily resemble an Andy Warhol film: neurotic, youthful exhibitionists inertly bitching and talking aimlessly in rooms for hour after hour. This is to say, what makes Big Brother what it is, is the viewer’s act of phoning in.
Pseudo-modernism also encompasses contemporary news programmes, whose content increasingly consists of emails or text messages sent in commenting on the news items. The terminology of ‘interactivity’ is equally inappropriate here, since there is no exchange: instead, the viewer or listener enters – writes a segment of the programme – then departs, returning to a passive role. Pseudo-modernism also includes computer games, which similarly place the individual in a context where they invent the cultural content, within pre-delineated limits. The content of each individual act of playing the game varies according to the particular player.
The pseudo-modern cultural phenomenon par excellence is the internet. Its central act is that of the individual clicking on his/her mouse to move through pages in a way which cannot be duplicated, inventing a pathway through cultural products which has never existed before and never will again. This is a far more intense engagement with the cultural process than anything literature can offer, and gives the undeniable sense (or illusion) of the individual controlling, managing, running, making up his/her involvement with the cultural product. Internet pages are not ‘authored’ in the sense that anyone knows who wrote them, or cares. The majority either require the individual to make them work, like Streetmap or Route Planner, or permit him/her to add to them, like Wikipedia, or through feedback on, for instance, media websites. In all cases, it is intrinsic to the internet that you can easily make up pages yourself (eg blogs).
If the internet and its use define and dominate pseudo-modernism, the new era has also seen the revamping of older forms along its lines. Cinema in the pseudo-modern age looks more and more like a computer game. Its images, which once came from the ‘real’ world – framed, lit, soundtracked and edited together by ingenious directors to guide the viewer’s thoughts or emotions – are now increasingly created through a computer. And they look it. Where once special effects were supposed to make the impossible appear credible, CGI frequently [inadvertently] works to make the possible look artificial, as in much of Lord of the Rings or Gladiator. Battles involving thousands of individuals have really happened; pseudo-modern cinema makes them look as if they have only ever happened in cyberspace. And so cinema has given cultural ground not merely to the computer as a generator of its images, but to the computer game as the model of its relationship with the viewer.
Similarly, television in the pseudo-modern age favours not only reality TV (yet another unapt term), but also shopping channels, and quizzes in which the viewer calls to guess the answer to riddles in the hope of winning money. It also favours phenomena like Ceefax and Teletext. But rather than bemoan the new situation, it is more useful to find ways of making these new conditions conduits for cultural achievements instead of the vacuity currently evident. It is important here to see that whereas the form may change (Big Brother may wither on the vine), the terms by which individuals relate to their television screen and consequently what broadcasters show have incontrovertibly changed. The purely ‘spectacular’ function of television, as with all the arts, has become a marginal one: what is central now is the busy, active, forging work of the individual who would once have been called its recipient. In all of this, the ‘viewer’ feels powerful and is indeed necessary; the ‘author’ as traditionally understood is either relegated to the status of the one who sets the parameters within which others operate, or becomes simply irrelevant, unknown, sidelined; and the ‘text’ is characterised both by its hyper-ephemerality and by its instability. It is made up by the ‘viewer’, if not in its content then in its sequence – you wouldn’t read Middlemarch by going from page 118 to 316 to 401 to 501, but you might well, and justifiably, read Ceefax that way.
A pseudo-modern text lasts an exceptionally brief time. Unlike, say, Fawlty Towers, reality TV programmes cannot be repeated in their original form, since the phone-ins cannot be reproduced, and without the possibility of phoning-in they become a different and far less attractive entity. Ceefax text dies after a few hours. If scholars give the date they referenced an internet page, it is because the pages disappear or get radically re-cast so quickly. Text messages and emails are extremely difficult to keep in their original form; printing out emails does convert them into something more stable, like a letter, but only by destroying their essential, electronic state. Radio phone-ins, computer games – their shelf-life is short, they are very soon obsolete. A culture based on these things can have no memory – certainly not the burdensome sense of a preceding cultural inheritance which informed modernism and postmodernism. Non-reproducible and evanescent, pseudo-modernism is thus also amnesiac: these are cultural actions in the present moment with no sense of either past or future.
The cultural products of pseudo-modernism are also exceptionally banal, as I’ve hinted. The content of pseudo-modern films tends to be solely the acts which beget and which end life. This puerile primitivism of the script stands in stark contrast to the sophistication of contemporary cinema’s technical effects. Much text messaging and emailing is vapid in comparison with what people of all educational levels used to put into letters. A triteness, a shallowness dominates all. The pseudo-modern era, at least so far, is a cultural desert. Although we may grow so used to the new terms that we can adapt them for meaningful artistic expression (and then the pejorative label I have given pseudo-modernism may no longer be appropriate), for now we are confronted by a storm of human activity producing almost nothing of any lasting or even reproducible cultural value – anything which human beings might look at again and appreciate in fifty or two hundred years time.
The roots of pseudo-modernism can be traced back through the years dominated by postmodernism. Dance music and industrial pornography, for instance, products of the late 70s and 80s, tend to the ephemeral, to the vacuous on the level of signification, and to the unauthored (dance much more so than pop or rock). They also foreground the activity of their ‘reception’: dance music is to be danced to, porn is not to be read or watched but used, in a way which generates the pseudo-modern illusion of participation. In music, the pseudo-modern supersedingof the artist-dominated album as monolithic text by the downloading and mix-and-matching of individual tracks on to an iPod, selected by the listener, was certainly prefigured by the music fan’s creation of compilation tapes a generation ago. But a shift has occurred, in that what was a marginal pastime of the fan has become the dominant and definitive way of consuming music, rendering the idea of the album as a coherent work of art, a body of integrated meaning, obsolete.
To a degree, pseudo-modernism is no more than a technologically motivated shift to the cultural centre of something which has always existed (similarly, metafiction has always existed, but was never so fetishised as it was by postmodernism). Television has always used audience participation, just as theatre and other performing arts did before it; but as an option, not as a necessity: pseudo-modern TV programmes have participation built into them. There have long been very ‘active’ cultural forms, too, from carnival to pantomime. But none of these implied a written or otherwise material text, and so they dwelt in the margins of a culture which fetishised such texts – whereas the pseudo-modern text, with all its peculiarities, stands as the central, dominant, paradigmatic form of cultural product today, although culture, in its margins, still knows other kinds. Nor should these other kinds be stigmatised as ‘passive’ against pseudo-modernity’s ‘activity’. Reading, listening, watching always had their kinds of activity; but there is a physicality to the actions of the pseudo-modern text-maker, and a necessity to his or her actions as regards the composition of the text, as well as a domination which has changed the cultural balance of power (note how cinema and TV, yesterday’s giants, have bowed before it). It forms the twenty-first century’s social-historical-cultural hegemony. Moreover, the activity of pseudo-modernism has its own specificity: it is electronic, and textual, but ephemeral.
Clicking In The Changes
In postmodernism, one read, watched, listened, as before. In pseudo-modernism one phones, clicks, presses, surfs, chooses, moves, downloads. There is a generation gap here, roughly separating people born before and after 1980. Those born later might see their peers as free, autonomous, inventive, expressive, dynamic, empowered, independent, their voices unique, raised and heard: postmodernism and everything before it will by contrast seem elitist, dull, a distant and droning monologue which oppresses and occludes them. Those born before 1980 may see, not the people, but contemporary texts which are alternately violent, pornographic, unreal, trite, vapid, conformist, consumerist, meaningless and brainless (see the drivel found, say, on some Wikipedia pages, or the lack of context on Ceefax). To them what came before pseudo-modernism will increasingly seem a golden age of intelligence, creativity, rebellion and authenticity. Hence the name ‘pseudo-modernism’ also connotes the tension between the sophistication of the technological means, and the vapidity or ignorance of the content conveyed by it – a cultural moment summed up by the fatuity of the mobile phone user’s “I’m on the bus”.
Whereas postmodernism called ‘reality’ into question, pseudo-modernism defines the real implicitly as myself, now, ‘interacting’ with its texts. Thus, pseudo-modernism suggests that whatever it does or makes is what is reality, and a pseudo-modern text may flourish the apparently real in an uncomplicated form: the docu-soap with its hand-held cameras (which, by displaying individuals aware of being regarded, give the viewer the illusion of participation); The Office and The Blair Witch Project, interactive pornography and reality TV; the essayistic cinema of Michael Moore or Morgan Spurlock.
Along with this new view of reality, it is clear that the dominant intellectual framework has changed. While postmodernism’s cultural products have been consigned to the same historicised status as modernism and romanticism, its intellectual tendencies (feminism, postcolonialism etc) find themselves isolated in the new philosophical environment. The academy, perhaps especially in Britain, is today so swamped by the assumptions and practices of market economics that it is deeply implausible for academics to tell their students they inhabit a postmodern world where a multiplicity of ideologies, world-views and voices can be heard. Their every step hounded by market economics, academics cannot preach multiplicity when their lives are dominated by what amounts in practice to consumer fanaticism. The world has narrowed intellectually, not broadened, in the last ten years. Where Lyotard saw the eclipse of Grand Narratives, pseudo-modernism sees the ideology of globalised market economics raised to the level of the sole and over-powering regulator of all social activity – monopolistic, all-engulfing, all-explaining, all-structuring, as every academic must disagreeably recognise. Pseudo-modernism is of course consumerist and conformist, a matter of moving around the world as it is given or sold.
Secondly, whereas postmodernism favoured the ironic, the knowing and the playful, with their allusions to knowledge, history and ambivalence, pseudo-modernism’s typical intellectual states are ignorance, fanaticism and anxiety: Bush, Blair, Bin Laden, Le Pen and their like on one side, and the more numerous but less powerful masses on the other. Pseudo-modernism belongs to a world pervaded by the encounter between a religiously fanatical segment of the United States, a largely secular but definitionally hyper-religious Israel, and a fanatical sub-section of Muslims scattered across the planet: pseudo-modernism was not born on 11 September 2001, but postmodernism was interred in its rubble. In this context pseudo-modernism lashes fantastically sophisticated technology to the pursuit of medieval barbarism – as in the uploading of videos of beheadings onto the internet, or the use of mobile phones to film torture in prisons. Beyond this, the destiny of everyone else is to suffer the anxiety of getting hit in the cross-fire. But this fatalistic anxiety extends far beyond geopolitics, into every aspect of contemporary life; from a general fear of social breakdown and identity loss, to a deep unease about diet and health; from anguish about the destructiveness of climate change, to the effects of a new personal ineptitude and helplessness, which yield TV programmes about how to clean your house, bring up your children or remain solvent. This technologised cluelessness is utterly contemporary: the pseudo-modernist communicates constantly with the other side of the planet, yet needs to be told to eat vegetables to be healthy, a fact self-evident in the Bronze Age. He or she can direct the course of national television programmes, but does not know how to make him or herself something to eat – a characteristic fusion of the childish and the advanced, the powerful and the helpless. For varying reasons, these are people incapable of the “disbelief of Grand Narratives” which Lyotard argued typified postmodernists.
This pseudo-modern world, so frightening and seemingly uncontrollable, inevitably feeds a desire to return to the infantile playing with toys which also characterises the pseudo-modern cultural world. Here, the typical emotional state, radically superseding the hyper-consciousness of irony, is the trance – the state of being swallowed up by your activity. In place of the neurosis of modernism and the narcissism of postmodernism, pseudo-modernism takes the world away, by creating a new weightless nowhere of silent autism. You click, you punch the keys, you are ‘involved’, engulfed, deciding. You are the text, there is no-one else, no ‘author’; there is nowhere else, no other time or place. You are free: you are the text: the text is superseded.



January 23rd, 2007 at 12:33 pm
Your point about Big Brother is interesting.
Big Brother pretends to be a ‘reality’ TV show.
But like all texts, what it’s creators leave out is as enlightening as what they include.
The board of Channel 4 met today to discuss the fate of Big Brother.
This discussion was not televised.
Therefore while we are shown the mundane and inane discussions of semi-celebrities, and sometimes glimpse dark social realities like racism and bullying (an event so disastrous that our politicians scream for it to be banned - social reality on a reality TV show!).
What we are not shown then is the mundane social realities of the programme makers and their accountants, the board and their minions.
Similarly with the trophy videos from wars and torture chambers - for the first time we are given glimpses of dark social realities, and the darkness within ourselves and politicians run screaming for censorship - of course what we are seeing is usually the consequence of decisions made by these very same politicians.
When Saddam was executed our politicians expressed shock about the mobile phone footage, rather than about what the footage was of (a barbaric execution engineered to prevent Saddam testifying about the US support he received while he was gassing the Kurds).
The problem may be that now we can control what we see (become the text as you put it), the urge only to see what we wish to see - already one of the most fundamental human urges, becomes totally dominant.
The contradiction is thus that in a society where there are more cameras than people, we end up potentially seeing less than we ever saw before.
January 24th, 2007 at 11:09 am
i agree for the most part but i think you have to look further than a pejoritive reading of culture to get a sense of what is really going on. pseudomodernism doesn’t cut it for me because i think one of the key elements that held modernism and post-modernism together , the notion of the avant garde, is gone. i think we can safely drop the reference to modernism. it is a ghost and we’re still living.
i think there are other more positive aspects to what you describe like the new/street/hipster art (all names so far really suck balls but you have to call it something) which comes from a DIY community spirit and a characteristic collapse of avant garde ideals. while quite a lot of it is trite and shallow (enough fucking monsters already) but you can’t paint it with the same brush as Big Brother or MySpace. I think there’s enough complexity and talent there to add some nuance to your arguement.
January 24th, 2007 at 11:28 pm
“The problem may be that now we can control what we see (become the text as you put it), the urge only to see what we wish to see - already one of the most fundamental human urges, becomes totally dominant.
The contradiction is thus that in a society where there are more cameras than people, we end up potentially seeing less than we ever saw before. ”
The problem becomes the division between those who see things as they want and those who see things as they are. There’s always been that division and nothing will change that. Those that choose to “see” all they can, and draw from it an independent interpritation. So the division splits further, those who see the whole truth and like it and those who see the whole truth and hate it, those who choose to do something, those who don’t, and so on.
What do I mean to say? Well, essentially, that it’s this constant division, this constant division on one side of the field (those who choose to see all as opposed to only what they want) is what causes the stagnation that we’re suffering at the moment. There are so many factions of ideas that no one group is large enough to really progress anything ( i mean things such as politics, art and literature)
February 10th, 2007 at 3:47 am
The general comments about novels as published texts are valid but Great Expectations (and the works of Charles Dickens in general) are not good examples. Dickens frequently responded to public opinion as his novels were being serialized and Great Expectations famously contains two endings. The original darker ending was superseded by a slightly more optimistic one due to public demand.
February 10th, 2007 at 10:44 am
Dr. Kelly could not be more wrong. Postmodernism is alive and well in the 21st Century.
See the following films:
Moulin Rouge,
Memento,
24 Hour Party People.
Big Brother is inherently postmodern. The housemates percepetion of reality is radically different from that of the TV onlookers. The self-awareness of the housemates and the resultant irony of their position reeks of post-modernism. The house is the ultimate panopticon, a motif espoused by postmodern writers since Foucault.
I rest my case.
February 11th, 2007 at 10:14 am
I agree with finick and Jibrial that your outlook on ‘pseudo-modernism’ is too bleak. I disagree with finick when (s)he says that there is no more avant garde; but it has changed a lot. The internet (Web2.0) has given underground counterculture a forum that is equal to mainstream culture - from Pink Floyd to my neighbours trashy experimental postrock guitar band, every band has its url.
I would also like to continue the theme touched in the final paragraph about the infantile playing with toys. We’re probably all thinking of the iPod here, which is the perfect example. The big, scary and complex technology is reduced to its most simple and elegant form, to serve us and nothing more. You don’t have to set its clock, it doesn’t eject something that could break off, and it does something we all want: it shields us from the dangerous world outside with a 110 dB wall of sound, creating our safe, private cocoon.
Pseudo-modernists are communicators, on blogs, email, sms, cellphones, … - but on their/our own terms. The thing to be avoided is being drawn into an unprepared discussion with a stranger on the bus. After all, you don’t know who (s)he is, you don’t know what you have in common to talk about (because of the gigantic diversity of entertainment available). But when you get home and after you’ve had some coffee and maybe a shower you log on and start talking about the previous (or next) episode of Lost, replying to a message on the board that may well be from the (wo)man who sat next to you on the commuter train.
But man is a social animal, so from time to time we find ourselves crawling back to the hive. We go to mass concerts, the bigger the better, even for bands we don’t like. When there is an emotion we can share with others, we do it in massive numbers. In my country, the shared grief over infants killed in violence is expressed in silent wakes. They have become a tradition (sadly). Another example are the Make Poverty History events, differing from the very postmodern Live Aid because the overwhelming feeling was not indignation or the cry for politicians to change all this - no, the common theme on these gatherings is being together for a shared value. In this way, the pseudomodern mass is very different from the postmodern mass, which is dumb and following. The pseudomodern mass is a conscious group, but is also temporary. After the concert, everybody goes his or her own way; badges and banners and bracelets are worn, without conviction, for a few more days. The moment is gone.
Pseudomodern people are aware of this fleeting aspect of their culture, and they have devised strategies to overturn this effect. Never before have boxed editions of tv series been so popular. Apart from the ‘reality tv’ group of programs, which is indeed very fleeting, there are also series like Lost, which is thoroughly pseudomodern: the writers changed their scenarios based on discussions of fans on internet forums. Needless to say, Lost is a huge hit in the DVD market.
But also old shows, like Cheers, MASH, the A-Team etc., which five years ago most people were glad to forget, have found new life on DVD. This is another pseudomodern strategy to shield oneself from a reality that is too complex. First of all, it looks back upon what is already known and familiar. You don’t watch the episodes for the first time, you re-watch what you saw as a kid. But there’s more to it than a classic regression to childhood comfort. It’s also a regression into a time when there were more shared emotions. When you came to school, everyone had seen yesterday’s episode of MacGyver and everybody talked about it. Today, the supply of entertainment is so overwhelming that you can only find someone to talk about the last episode of your favourite show on the internet.
February 14th, 2007 at 6:03 am
“Replace this cache with other postmodern stalwarts – Beloved, Flaubert’s Parrot, Waterland, The Crying of Lot 49, Pale Fire, Slaughterhouse 5, Lanark, Neuromancer, anything by B.S. Johnson – and the same applies. It’s all about as contemporary as The Smiths, as hip as shoulder pads, as happening as Betamax video recorders. These are texts which are just coming to grips with the existence of rock music and television; they mostly do not dream even of the possibility of the technology and communications media – mobile phones, email, the internet, computers in every house powerful enough to put a man on the moon – which today’s undergraduates take for granted.”
Those criticisms could be fairly leveled at the other books in the list, but certainly not Neuromancer. Neuromancer is *still* contemporary in a very real sense. There are a few niggling details in Neuromancer that aren’t correct, but it is still astonishingly relevant and forward-thinking. I was born in 1984, I’m from the culture. Trust me. It’s still relevant today, short of being cyberpunk. Then again, it’s really good cyberpunk, and there is still a market for that today.
There is no post-post-modernism that can be well-defined. Instead of there being anything resembling cohesive Western culture, society has fractured into subcultures, microcultures, and tribes. Each has a particularly distinct way of perceiving society. Some base themselves around music. Some base themselves around religion. Some base themselves around activities. Everything is customized, including social circles. There are some social circles that rarely ever mix.
The new generation explicitly resists easy definition, and will subvert any definition or categorization you try to place them in unless it’s one they adopt for themselves.
February 22nd, 2007 at 7:14 am
i am no philosophy student, but i am somewhat aware of the postmodern versus modern argument. and knowing what i know i would argue that we are still postmodern, not post-postmodern.
why? postmodernism focuses on the tensions of difference, it focuses on the rampant cross-cultural interactions, and it focuses the comingling of local and global information. it has an air of irony applied upon exsisting irony.
the notion that a tv program is no longer postmodern is absurd. the sheer fact that the fate of the show is decided upon by the viewers, by the market for which the show will survive, is postmodern. the notion that the cell phone companies make ten cents each time a viewer sends an SMS submission is postmodern. the reality that the show is dependant upon the viewer who is dependant upon the show’s gift of escapism is postmodern.
i don’t see where you get this pseudomodern concept. it just sounds like the further efflorescence of the postmodern thought, or a step back to modernism to describe postmodernism. incriminating or scary, yes? but there is a rise of seperate cultures as finick suggests. we see evangelicals who don’t actually follow the teachings of jesus, but fervently defend their message of anti-abortion/evolution/homosexuality. we see DIY communities where the idea of growing your own food supercedes the vulgar disney-land like visit to whole foods. and let us not forget the power of the web; google and wikipedia are veritable gods of the realm, permitting a platform for discourse and topical discussion that one might never have while riding the bus as steve suggests. the act of blogging or myspacing has transcended the modern notion of culture, society and networking.
it is a modern thought that the parts comprise the whole. it is a postmodern thought that the whole is greater than the parts.
March 13th, 2007 at 6:22 pm
An interesting article. There is a tendency though to choose whichever examples suit the story. To take your sitcom example - Fawlty Towers was not especially postmodern, it’s true (unless you count its playful comment on music hall farce).
But The Office and Extras are postmodern, and they’re post-2001. And, say, The Worst Week In My Life is not even postmodern and yet shows no signs of recipient interactivity (OK they’ll probably be some quiz or something on the DVD - but there were probably Fawlty Towers quiz books in 1977 as well). As the above blogger commented, if serialisers such as Dickens and Hardy had emerged to tailor their stories to public input, we’d all agree you’d got an excellent case for pseudomodernism, and that it hailed a new trend. Instead it all looks just a bit random to me.
March 14th, 2007 at 8:37 pm
Sturm und Drang time again on the “Is Pomo Dead (finally?)” issue. Quit trying to kill it guys, since postmodern in the Lyotard sense (he introduced it in 1979 in the sense we are talking about) in which he killed the supposition of the various flavours of modernism (ergo ‘post’) by pointing out the linguistic relativism (that means that words are too slippery to be used in manifestos) and that culture dominates our perceptions, remains valid for now until we invent a better word for the present condition.
So this “autistic pseudo-modernism” is really just so much nostalgia for the days of certainty when we could call on workers and cubists to change the world every few years ad infinitum.
I so do not miss the ’60’s in this respect (that being the last hurrah for that sort of thing) and we can all live happy now in the realization that Betties Boop and Venuses de Milo are both representations of feminine reality and not worry about issues regarding classicism vs. romanticism and any of them other ‘isms’ that were so popular in the years between Kant and Pollock.
April 29th, 2007 at 8:45 pm
When I read the article, I thought, “right on.” It’s been my conclusion for a long time that Postmodernism was dead. Why? Because it doesn’t make sense to say that people in the Western world are incredulous toward metanarratives (Lyotard) when it’s tacitly assumed by pretty much everybody that Capitalism is the only game in town, with various forms of fundamentalism being the only alternatives. So much for difference!
What marks “pseudo-modernism” is the shift back a sort of idealistic solipsism, i.e. the illusion that we as individuals now can create our own world through the magic of information technology (information fast eclipsing money as THE commodity fetish of the 21st century).
We may have our ethnic difference, local funky diy cultures, etc. but to what extent has this been coopted?
One of the (paradoxically) universalistic tenets of postmodernism has been that grand theory has no viability anymore, and that truth is only local. Even conservatives have jumped on the bandwagon by saying that global warming is nothing but a social construct. But of course, ecological disaster on the global scale is the ultimate proof that there is a reality “out there,” and all arguments otherwise can not but smack of smug narcissism.
But then again, I was born before 1980, quite the gen-x-er, and I have become a bit of a curmudgeon as of late.
February 4th, 2008 at 2:15 am
I’ve read what Alan Kirby says, I was born on march 1983, I am an italian junior designer. i just think his definition of pseudo_modernism it is really good, by myself I like to take it in a optimistic point of view, I am conscious of the Golden Age of the Past, I am Italian and I am proud of the Golden Age, but that kind of representation of the world, considering also that as been presented to us even better of what it was, cannot be considered as expression of the real world.
It is right that pseudo-modernism it is not so deep to bee considered a cultural movement or something that we can look at within the next 50 0 100 years, but it is true that it represents and shows an “average of reality” that has never been showeb before.
As meaning of the word “average” we are conscious we are loosing a bit of information, but at the same time we are gaining something, let’s face it we do not look like we are in a bad situation, we are happy with this, maybe we will pay the consequencies in the future.
For now it is nice to read things like this, because it gives to you a possibility to enrich your sens of counsciousness or your illusion to it
ciao!